L i E A P E R

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L i E A P E R
America's
Vol. XXV, No. 12
Largest
Weekly
for
Public
Tuesday, November 26, 1963
South Conf. Legislative
Dinner
tmpioyees
See Page 3
Price Ten Cents
CSEA Chapter President's Statement
Niagara County Political
Shift No Danger To Most
Aides, Says Mrs. Heacox
MADAME PRESIDENT:
Mary Goode Krone, left, is seen
as she was sworn in as president of the State Civil Service Commission.
Giving the oath at right is John P. Lomenzo, secretary of State. Looking
on in the background are Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, left, and Attorney
General Louis J. Lefkowitz. The ceremony took place in Albany.
Feily At Hearing
Attendants
'Absolutely
(Special To T h e Leader
LOCKPORT, Nov. 25—"Niagara County e m p l o y e e s have b e c o m e u n n e c e s s a r i l y alarmed and c o n c e r n e d t h a t their jobs are in j e o p a r d y b e c a u s e of the s h i f t in political power as
a result of our r e c e n t elections", said Mrs. R u t h Heacox, president of the Niagara C o u n ty c h a p t e r of t h e 116,000 m e m b e r S t a t e Civil Service Employees Association, here last
week.
"The fact of the matter is,"
she asserted, " t h a t the vast per- ployees who are veterans or ex- coming legislative session.
centage of all county employees empt volunteer firemen that were
Summary of the Law
"So that all may know where
are permanent employees who appointed to various non-competiwere appointed to competitive tive and labor class positions they stand with respect to the
law which is pertinent to this
positions after having successfully throughout Niagara County."
passed
written
examinations.
"While it is true that there subject," continued Mrs. Heacox,
Many others are permanent em- are some employees who were "I would like to summarize exacthired on a seasonal, or per diem, ly the job protection that is proor temporary or provisional ba.sis vided by Section 75 of the Civil
and while it is also probably true Service Law.
"It provides i h a t employees
t h a t there are some non-competitive and labor class employees who are permanent employees
who are neither veterans nor ex- appointed to competitive positions
empt volunteer firemen, such and employees who are permanent employees and are either extotal number is very small.
(Continued on Page 3)
CSEA Concern
Upgrading Is
Necessary
"However small such a group
may be," she continued, "the
ALBANY, Nov. 25—Joseph F. Feily, p r e s i d e n t of t h e Civil Service Employees Associa- Niagara County chapter is very
tion, w a s the o p e n i n g speaker a t a h e a r i n g in Albany recently before t h e Division of Class- concerned that they should not
i f i c a t i o n and C o m p e n s a t i o n a t w h i c h CSEA's appeal for a broad salary reallocation of t h e be subjected to dismissal from
State's 23,000 D e p a r t m e n t of M e n t a l Hygiene a t t e n d a n t s w a s heard.
their jobs merely because of their
political affiliation.
The hearing was on an appeal
filed earlier this year with the personnel, said "We feel that an following reallocations: attendant,
"The CSEA has for many years
Division of Classification and upward adjustment in the salaries grade 5 to grade 7; staff attend- attempted to have legislation
J o s e p h F. Feily, p r e s i d e n t
Compensation through the De- for all classes of attendant posiant, grade 7 to grade 11; super- passed which woulcT guarantee to of t h e Civil Service E m p l o y e e s
partment of Mental Hygiene.
tions is long overdue and abthis category of permanent em- i Assn., h a s asked all m e m b e r s
vising attendant, grade 11 to
Feily, who led a delegation of solutely necessary."
ployees on non-competltlve and
I of t h e A s s o c i a t i o n to j o i n
grade 14; head attendant, grade
Association members and staff
The CSEA appeal calls for the
labor class positions the same
14 to grade 16; chief supervising protection against arbitrary dis- him in prayers for t h e l a t e
attendant, grade 17 to grade 19. missal or discipline that the Civil President, J o h n F. K e n n e d y ,
The Employee's Association is Service Law gives to permanent for m e m b e r s of his f a m i l y In
also seeking the reclassification employees on co'mpetltive posi- "this t i m e of terrible grief"
of some attendant positions to tions and to those who are veter- a n d for t h e n a t i o n .
ans or exempt firemen.
Feily said that "in this time of
(Continued on Page 16)
"Last year our efforts to ex- crisis we are all of one faith and
( S p e c i a l to T h e Leader)
tend this job protection resulted one belief — the welfare of our
in a bill which passed both houses country."
ALBANY, Nov. 25—The Civil Service E m p l o y e e s Associaof our Legislature only to be
The CSEA president said also
t i o n " w h o l e h e a r t e d l y opposes probationary periods for emvetoed by the Governor because "we must lend our prayers to
p l o y e e s a c c e p t i n g promotions," the S t a t e Civil Service Deof a legal technicality. We have President Lyndon Johnson as he
p a r t m e n t was Informed l a s t week.
every reason, however, to believe assumes the grave responsibility
Joseph F. Felly, CSEA presithat similar legislation will be- of leading our nation through this
dent, last week told the departin them; the appointing authorcome a law during the forth- terrible tragedy."
ment's coordinator of Recruitity's discretion of choosing one
ment, Stanley Kollin, that CSEA
of three from promotion lists;
feels "appointing authorities althe fact that the appointing
ready have sufficient discretion
authority usually is consulted in
as to who shall be promoted."
advance as to content of exCSEA Board Against Move
(Coiitinued on Page IG)
The matter arose Oct. 31 at
a meeting of CSEA's Board of
Directors at which a member
L B A N Y , Nov. 2 5 — A special election for Executive
brought attention to a proposed
C o m m i t t e e r e p r e s e n t a t i v e of t h e D e p a r t m e n t of
rule relating to probationary
ELIOT K a p l a n ' s retireterms for certain positions In the
T a x a t i o n a n d F i n a n c e h a s been autliorized by t h e B o a r d
• m e n t f r o m t h e presiDivision of Employment.
of Directors of t h e Civil Service Employees Association,
d
e
n
c
y of t h e S t a t e Civil S e r v After discussing the proposed
Mrs. Mildred Meskil, c h a i r m a n of CSEA's Board of C a n ice C o m m i s s i o n s o m e three
rule, the board indicated strong
vassers, h a s a n n o u n c e d .
weeks ago has caused that
oppo.sition to such a procedure.
C a n d i d a t e s are S a m u e l E m m e t t of New York City
In his letter transmitting the
A 24-grade, f i v e - s t e p salary favorite political g a m e — s p e a
n
d
B e r n a r d S c h m a h l of Albany.
board s disapproval. Feily pointed
s c h e d u l e for e m p l o y e e s of the c u l a t i o n o n filling a v a c a n c y
out that several changes in proB a l l o t s for t h e special election will be m a i l e d o n
City of U t i c a h a s b e e n pre- — t o go i n t o f u l l swing.
motion procedures In the past
Nov. 26th f r o m CSEA Headquarters. T h e y m u s t be r e s e n t e d to Mayor D u l a n by
As was reported in this newslew years had given appointing
t u r n e d to the Board of Canvassers at Headquarters, 8
t h e Civil Service E m p l o y e e s pai>er earlier, Mary Goode Krone
authorities more than sufficient
Elk
Street, Albany, or to Post Office B o x 7121, Capitol
Association,
Complete
d e - has moved from a oommissioner«ay as to who shall be promoted.
S
t
a
t
i
o n , Albany, by 6 p.m., Dec. 16.
tails,
Including
t
h
e
proposed
shlp
to
the
presidency
and
her
Among the points he mensalary
s
c
h
e
d
u
l
e
,
will
appear
post
is
now
open.
It
will
go
to
a
B
a l l o t s received a f t e r this t i m e a n d d a t e will n o t
tioned were the increased use of
in n e x t week's Issue of T h e Republican, of course, since the
oral examinations and the apbe c o u n t e d .
ouiuting agency s participatiuu
Leader.
(Continued ou Page 2)
Feily Asks Prayers
For President, His
Family, The Nation
CSEA Hits Proposal On
Probation In Promotion
Repeat This!
CSEA Gives Pay
Proposals To
Utica Mayor
Gordon Howe Said
To Be Choice For
Civil Service Comm.
H
Special Election Set
For Tax Representative
A
Page Two
CIVIL
SERVICK
Ta€«Jay, NovemWr 26, 1963
LEAOBK
Pre-Filed Bills Before
Steno & High School
Legislature; Half Affect Spanish-Passport To
Civil Service Employees 20 Yrs. Of Adventure
The Women's Angle
(Special To The Leader)
A L B A N Y , Nov. 25—Of t h e f i r s t 70 b i l l s p r e f i l e d f o r c o n s i d e r a t i o n by t h e 1964 L e g i s l a t u r e , h a l f a r e civil s e r v i c e m e a s u r e s a f f e c t i n g s t a t e a n d l o c a l e m p l o y e e s or public
school teachers.
T h e prefiling opening date was
Nov. 15th and within a week 70
T h e interest shown by individual tween Apr. 1, 1956 and Apr. 1,
proposed laws h a d been placed in legi.slators, who have taken the 1958 shall be deemed to have cont h e legislative hopper, with a effort to prefile bills, h a s been tinuous service, with all rights and
significant proportion dealing with heavily on the civil service side.
benefits.
government employees.
Another Dominick bill affects
T h e No. 11 bill in the Senate
seeks liberalization of the New new and old State Correction DeYork City Teachers' Retirement p a r t m e n t uniformed employees,
providing for retirement a f t e r 25
program.
Sponsored by Senator
J o h n years of service or a t age 60 with
Marchi, the measure would permit pension a n d annuity.
A second Marchi measure would
members of this retirement system,
on application, to be granted a allow a civil service employee up
leave of absence with full pay for to $500 in attorney fees, if restorthe period of accumulated unused ed to his position by a Supreme
sick leave, instead of the one-half Court order.
Senator William Condon h a s
provision, now in effect.
Another
bill, sponsored
by prefiled a measure liberalizing the
state's vested pension law, while
(Continued from Page 1)
Senator D. Clindon Dominick,
Democratic slot on the board JS provides t h a t any competitive another by Senator William Conklin amends the New York City
filled by Alexander Falk.
class employee who resigned and administrative code, providing for
At this writing, rumor h a s it
(Continued on P a g e 15)
that Monroe County Manager Gor- was reinstated within the years be-
Don't
Repeat
This
don Howe has the inside track on
the $20,475 job. Howe is well known
a n d well liked by G O P county
leaders and was a popular contender for the Comptroller slot at
the last Republican gubernatorial
convention. (The place on t h e ballot went to a fellow Monroe County resident, Judge J o h n P. Lomenzo, whom Rockefeller recently
named Secretary of State to succeed Caroline Simon, appointed to
the bench.)
Wilcox In Race
Said to be a close favorite behind Howe is another upstater,
Assemblyman Orin Wilcox of J e f ferson County. Wilcox is a popular
legislator with public employees;
he h a s introduced a good number
of i m p o r t a n t bills for the 115,000—
member Civil Service Employees
Assn.; he is highly respected in the
Assembly,
Robert H. Miller, Chautauqua
County treasurer who also sought
the Comptroller slot in the 1962
race, was one of the first names
mentioned for the post and he is,
by all means, very m u c h in the
picture.
Still another upstater. G r a n t
Daniels of Loudenville, is also
being talked of for the commisBionership. Daniels is a former
Assemblyman, deputy budget director and S t a t e Liquor Authority
member. At present h e is a n area
administrator for the Workmen's
Compensation Board In Albany.
One of his qualifications is the
personnel work he once did for
ALCOA.
Your Public
Relations IQ
By LI-0 J.
MARGOLIN
'mmmm
Mr. Margolin is Adjunct Professor of Public Relations in the
New York University School of Public Administration and is Vice
President, Public Relations, of A. J. Armstrong Co., Inc.
The views expressed in this column are those of the writer and do
not necessarily constitute the views of this newspaper.
Ethics Are Not Reserved
For Civil Service Aides
W E P O S E T H I S v e r y s e r i o u s public r e l a t i o n s
W h o t h r e w t h e dirty o v e r a l l s i n t o Mrs. M u r p h y ' s
T H E Q U E R Y c a n be p u t i n still a n o t h e r w a y :
n o n - e x i s t e n c e or f l e x i b i l i t y of e t h i c a l s t a n d a r d s
h a n d f u l of l e g i s l a t o r s — b o t h F e d e r a l a n d S t a t e ,
g e n e r a t i n g b a d p u b l i c r e l a t i o n s f o r civil s e r v a n t s
ing a general disrespect for g o v e r n m e n t ?
problem:
chowder?
Isn't the
among a
unfairly
by c a u s -
B y MARY A N N
lANKS
Most people take a vacation w h e n they w a n t to travel;
A d e l e L e e t o o k a job. A s a m a t t e r of f a c t , h e r t r a v e l i n g
s t a r t e d i n 1944 w h e n a c a s u a l r e m a r k a t a c o c k t a i l p a r t y
caused her to trade the lease on her Los Angeles a p a r t m e n t
f o r a s e t of l u g g a g e a n d a S t a t e D e p a r t m e n t a p p l i c a t i o n
blank.
It so h a p p e n e d t h a t a f t e r a hectic day as a secretary
in the Southern California Gas Company offices, Miss Lee
was up-ending champagne glasses at a bon voyage party
f o r a girl w h o w a s e n t e r i n g t h e f o r e i g n s e r v i c e . T h e d e p a r t ing guest casually reminded t h e group t h a t being a secr e t a r y i n S t o c k h o l m Is n o m o r e d i f f i c u l t t h a n b e i n g a
s e c r e t a r y In L o s A n g e l e s .
I n addition to t h a t bit of casual
insight, Miss Lee felt the prevailing war time spirit b u t couldn't
imagine herself answering t h e
call to a r m s at a WAC camp.
And so, high school Spanish a n d
s h o r t h a n d paved t h e way for a
twenty-year career t h a t ha.s been
both stimulating and exciting.
Mummy-digging
Since 1944, Miss Lee has sei'ved
tours in eight different countries.
I n most cases, she h a s served as a
secretary in t h e local office of
the American consultate or e m bassy. Each of the eight tours
' ha.s had a special significance
such as mummy-digging in Lima,
Peru.
According to Miss Lee, Lima
offered a wealth of f u n on week! ends when side-trips could be
I taken. Often, a n embassy group
I would take off on a Sunday a f t e r noon, via t h e ancient Peruvian
roads, bound for t h e old I n d i a n
burial
grounds.. T h e
grounds
could only be located by driving
along until the car clunked and
scrunched u p against
"something." T h e "something"
was
usually an old m u m m y f r o m "Godonly-knows" w h a t ancient civilization.
During another tour in far-off
Mascow, Byzantine towers, m a r ble-walled subways, a n d ankledeep mud became familiar sites.
Miss Lee felt particularly lucky
when she discovered that her Russian maid was an ex-member of
the Bolshoi until she learned that
most Russian maids claim to be
former p r i m a donnas or, at least,
atti-ibute their gracefulness to
Bolshoi training.
T H E O V E R W H E L M I N G m a j o r i t y of civil s e r v a n t s m a i n t a i n t h e h i g h e s t s t a n d a r d s of e t h i c a l c o n d u c t . S o m e of t h e s e
s t a n d a r d s a r e f o r m a l l y d e c r e e d by l a w or by s t r i c t a d m i n And so, steno p a d in h a n d ,
i s t r a t i v e rule. More o f t e n , t h e s e s t a n d a r d s a r e p r o m p t e d by Adele Lee h a s worked in G u a t common decency and high morality.
emala, Vienna, Stockholm and
T H E R E A S O N w h y s o m e of t h e dirt s t i r r e d u p by a more recently, Managua, Nicarf e w l e g i s l a t o r s Is r u b b i n g o f f o n civil s e r v a n t s Is s i m p l e agua. M a n a g u a was listed as a
e n o u g h : M o s t p e o p l e d o n o t d i f f e r e n t i a t e t>etween o n e b r a n c h h a r d s h i p post b u t the h a p p y
wanderer loved it. Her air-condiof g o v e r n m e n t a n d a n o t h e r .
tioned quarters on the shore of
T O U N T H I N K I N G people " g o v e r n m e n t i s g o v e r n m e n t "
a volcanic lake helped.
a n d t h e y w o u l d p r e f e r t o t h i n k t h e w o r s t , r e g a r d l e s s of w h o
Trades Swim Suit
Other Possibilities
i n w h i c h b r a n c h of g o v e r n m e n t s l i p p e d o n t h e e t h i c s ' b a n Her next move resulted in t r a d There h a d been some reports a n a p e e l a n d i s t h e s u b j e c t of t h e i r c o n t e m p t .
ing her bathing suits for a m u f f t h a t a prominent Harlem attorney
CIVIL S E R V A N T S , w h o h a v e m a d e i m p o r t a n t c o n t r i b u - ler, warm gloves, and a n a p a r t would get the job but no specific
t i o n s t o t h e g o o d p u b l i c r e l a t i o n s of g o v e r n m e n t , h a v e d o n e m e n t in a 400-year old carriage
name h a s been heard to date.
house in Bern, Switzerland. By
(Continued on Page 6)
Should t h e Governor bypass a
political appointment a n d n a m e
C I V I L 8ERTICB LEADER
a career employee to t h e post,
America'i Leading Weekly
lor Public Employeet
word h a s it t h a t J. Earl Kelly.
LEADER PUBLICATIONS, INC.
Director of the S t a t e Division of
97 Duao* St., New York, N . i . . l 0 0 0 7
XeJeplionei 212-UEekinan 3-tiOlO
Compensation a n d Classification
Pablliiied Each TuMday
would be t h e leading nominee.
Eutfred at aecoud-claM matter and
TROY'S F A M O U S FACTORY STORE
•et-ouU-claBa postage paid, October 8,
Note: T h e Administration h a s
183» at the pott oHice at New York,
N.Y. and at Bildgeport. Conn., under
let it be known privately t h a t any
the Act of March 3. 1879. Member
candidate for the post must be, In
of • Audit Bureau ot Circulation*.
the main, acceptable to the Civil
AT A SAVING T O Y O U
Subicrlptlon Price fS.OO Per Tear
Individual coplca. 10«
Service Employees Assn., which re621 RIVER STREET, TROY
presents the vast m a j o r i t y of State
employees and 32,000 local em2 Blocks No. of H o o i l c k St.
Tel. AS 2-2022
TO BUY, RENT OR
ployees.
REAL ESTATE ~ PAGE 11
KELLY CLOTHES, INC.
MEN'S & YOUNG MEN'S FINE CLOTHES
this time, she could speak excellent Spanish and, w h a t t h e Dep a r t m e n t calls " k i t c h e n " Russian,
F r e n c h and G e r m a n .
(Continued on Page 8)
heirloom^
steklijvg
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SILVERSM^HS
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5-Piece "Informal"
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N e w Yorh
CIVIL
TuescTav, 1V«vemT>er 26, 1963
Proposed Amendments For
Work Performance Rules
Are Criticized By CSEA
ALBANY, Nov. 25 — The
Civil Service Employees Association has voiced criticism
of certain proposed amendments to the work performance rules as developed recently by the staff of the
Civil Service Department. At
the same time the Association
submitted a list of preliminary recommendations to modify the Department's proposals.
CSEA's recommendations were
contained in a letter from Joseph
F. Feily, CSEA president, to Edward D. Meacham, director of
Personnel Services for tlie Civil
Service Department, following a
meeting last montli to discuss the
proposed amendments.
The Association .said in the letter that the departmental proposal suggests a separate evaluation system for each of the following major purposes: eligibility
for increments and promotion;
improved work performance, and
added credits on promotion examinations
In filing its recommendations.
CSEA made the following points:
1. With respect to eligibility
for increments and promotion,
discretion should not be left to
agencies to establish rating sys-
tems of their own design.
2. If employees are not rated
"unsatisfactory," they should be
considered "satisfactory."
3. Concerning a separate rating
system to improve work performance, prescribed forms .should
be made available to give uniformity.
4. Regarding added credits on
promotion examinations, the r a t ing should be submitted to the examination division for approval
before use in the examination,
5. Candidates should have the
right to appeal to an Agency Appeal's Committee.
Feily said that the first stated
objective of this promotion r a t ing program is "to give the individual agency a greater voice
in determining who will be promoted in the agency." He criticized this goal, saying t h a t it
would encourage "biased
and
subjective ratings of the employees whom the
appointing
authority desires to promote." He
said "We do not believe t h a t the
appointing authority should be
given any greater voice than he
already has in determining who
will be promoted in the agency."
Feily said he was appointing a
CSEA committee on Work Performance Rating to study the
proposal f u r t h e r .
SERVICE
LEADER
Pag« Thre«
Niagara CSEA Head Warns
Against Promises Of Job
Protection In County
(Continued from Page 1)
empt volunteer firemen or honorably discharged veterans shall
not be terminated from employment or be given disciplinary
penalty unle.ss they are found
guilty of stated written charges
during the course of a prescribed
disciplinary hearing."
"It has been brought to my
attention." asserted Mrs. Heacox,
" t h a t spokesmen for a group
seeking to proselytize Niagara
County Employees into joining
their organization have stated
they can absolutely guarantee
that no one who joins their group
will lose his job under any condition."
"Phony Propaffanda"
"When a.sked how this was to
be accomplished, they reportedly
said that they will bring pressure
on the Democratic supervisors
directly and through their affiliated units throughout the county
area."
"Such
statements
are,
of
course, just plain phony propa-
ganda," she said.
"In the first place, the only
bsolute guarantee against arbitrary dismissal is Section 75 oI
the Civil Service Law; and, in the
second place, knowing the calibre
and character of our elected
county officials, I am certain that
any attempt to 'pressure' them
will be immediately and unequivocally rejected.
"The Niagara County chapter
will continue to exercise the same
kind of responsible, mature, r a tional, sensible and effective representation and assistance with
regard to this situation 'i,hat il;
has to all other matter-s during
ALBANY ,Nov. 25—The Nation- the past years."
al Safety Council has given its
The Record
$500 award of merit to Dr. Willam Haddon Jr., acting assistant
"After
all,"
Mrs. Heacox conALBANY, Nov. 25—Lt. Gen.
commissioner for public health cluded, "the CSEA is now in its
Manuel J. Asensio, U.S. Air Force research in the State Health
53rd year of service to all civil
Retired, is the new State director Department.
servants throughout the state of
of civil defense. He succeeds Lt.
The award was made in recog- New York. Our membership of
General Francis W .Farrell, who,
nition of a study of skiing In- over 116,000 State and county
resigned.
juries, which found a high rate employees powerfully testifies ta
General Asensio Is a graduate of
of injury among female skiers the effectiveness of our aims,
the U.S. Military Academy and
and novices.
policies, objectives and our many
until recently was manager for
pa-st accomplishments. There is
Assisting
Dr.
Haddon
In
the
Latin America for the Stauffer
no other organization of civil serChemical Company. His salary study were Dr. Robert E. Carroll,
department resident in epidemiol- vice employees any where in New
will be $25,200 a year.
ogy and Dr. Arthur E. Ellison of York State which can truthfully
say this of Itself."
Williams College.
Dr. Wm. Haddon
Earns $500 Award
Asensio Named
Makdm Wilsoiir State Legislators
Invited To Southern Conference
Legislative Dinner, December 3
Four Members Honored
Syracuse State Chapter
Holds22nd Annual Dinner
The Southern Conference, Civil Service Employees Association, has scheduled Its anSYRACUSE, Nov. 25—The 22nd annual dinner-dance of
nual legislative dinner at the Colonial Terrace Peeksklll for December 3.
the Syracuse State School chapter of the Civil Service EmInvitations for the dinner have
ployees, Association was held on November 16, in the grand
been sent to Lieut. Gov. Malballroom
of the Onondaga Hotel in Syracuse.
meroy, Daniel Becker, Wilson C.
The purpose of the meeting
com Wilson, and to Important
legislators in the Southern Confei^nce area. State Senators
Hunter Meighan, E. Ogden Bush,
George W. Cornell, William F.
Condon, Ernest I. Hatfield and
D. Clinton Dominick III are
among the invited guests.
Assemblymen R. Watson Po-
VanDuzer, Willis H. Stephens,
Joseph F. X. Nowiski, Hyman E.
Mintz,
Kenneth
L.
Wilson,
Christian H. Armbruster, P. Boice
Esser, George E. Van Cott, Anthony B. Gioffre, John J . S.
Mead and Bernard G. Gordon
have also been extended invitations.
Onondaga Chapter
Honors 5 Retirees
SYRACUSE, Nov. 25—A past president, an officer and
three members of the board of directors of Onondaga
County chapter, Civil Service Employees Association, were
honored at a retirement dinner in Yates Hotel here recently.
will be to give the legislators the
opportunity to hear the CSEA
legislative program this year and
to stress the importance of specific measures. CSEA representatives include Joseph F. Feily,
president; Harry W. Albright,
counsel; Solomon Bendet, chairman of the Salary Committee
and Grace Nulty, chairman of
the Legislative Committee.
The program for the dinner
has been handled by Merton
Gamble and Peter Garamone,
co-chairman, Robert Budd, Lym a n Connors, Felice Amodio,
William Forsbach, George Halbig, James Lennon, Emil Bollman and Vincent Maybe, members.
Guests of honor include, David
Rogers, past president of the
chapter; Eleanor Rosbach, treasurer for several years, and Winifred Johnson. Edith Schroeder
ALBANY, Nov. 25 — The complaints from members who
and Hector MacBean, all board
Civil Service Employees Asso- took the te-st. He asked the Civil
members.
ciation has protested to the Service Department to review the
Honored
State Civil Service Commis- examination and its policy with
MacBoan was formerly Ononsion a promotion examination respect to the relationship of the
daga County comptroller. Miss
total who took the examination
Johnson and Miss Rosback were given earlier this year which and total wlio qualified.
employed in Syracuse City Hall resulted in as few as 12 perFelly pointed out that of the
departments. Miss Schroeder was cent passing the test for 1,773 who took tlie principal clerk
an employee of the Public Lib- principal clerk.
exam (option A), only 214 or 12
rary and Rogers was in the
The protest i,s contained In a percent pissed. He said that of
county Welfare Department.
letter from Joseph F. Feily, CSEA 747 who were examined for prinChairman for tiie dinner was president, to Mary Goode Krone, cipal stenograplier (option F),
Robert Clift. He was assisted by president of the Civil Service 178 or 24 percent qualified.
Arthur Ka.s.son, chapter presi- Commission. It refers to examHe pointed out that from a
dent, and the following members, ination 9108 given on May 4, for morale standpoint, for SO percent
J o h n Bachman, Rae Scharfeld. principal clerk with various op- of the participants to fall "cerLeona Appel, Marion Klotz. Mil- tions, including principal stenog- tainly is not conducive to their
dred McElroy, Lee Crowley. Ray ' rapher and other titles.
wanting to participate in examBchumaciior.
Florence
Barnes.
In his letters. Feily said the inations."
J o h u Riley and Genevieve Paul., Association has been recelvitig
(Cuatinued ou ifas« 16)
CSEA Asks Review Of Steno Examination
Lloyd E. Watts, assistant director of the Syracuse State School,
acted as toastmaster and presented 25-year pins to: William
J. Cunningham, Industrial Shop
worker, S. Leslie Mafcomber,
principal static«ury engineer and
Maria Naples-Sarno, M.D., supervising psychiatrist. John E.
McDonald, attendant, was presented with a Certificate of Merit
and a key case from the New
York S ^ t e Civil Service Commission, State Employee Suggestion Program. The 1963 Syracuse State School retirees were
also guests of the chapter.
John H, Terry, State assemblyman from Onondaga County,
served as the principal speaker.
The president of the Syracuse
State School chapter, Charles J.
Ecker, who was recently elected
as one of the CSEA mental
hygiene representatives was surprised with gifts from Marcy
State Hospital chapter as well as
his qwn chapter.
Honored guests at the dinnerdance included Raymond G.
Castle, CSEA first vice president; Vernon Tapper, CSEA second vice president; Claude Rowell, CSEA fourth vice president;
Tom Ranger, president of Central
Conference; and S. Samuel Borrelly, chairman of the County
Workshop.
Co-chairman for the affair
were Howard T. Gray, Clarence
M. Laufer, Jr., and Margaret L.
Whitmore, Other members of the
co;iimittee were Vera H. Adams,
Carolyn A. Bell. Jean M. Biliado,
Charles T. Bosworth,
Joyce
Branca, Jane Dankow. Chaiie)*
J. Ecker, Ellen V. Griffith, K a t h leen M. McCann, Rosalie M.
Nave, Neal H. Sheedy, Fred
Thoma and Evelyn Tierman.
CSE/I Urged
4 New Guard Towers
Built At Sing Sing
ALBANY, Nov. 25 — The
State Correction Commission
reports that four new guard
towers have been erected at
Sing Sing Prison to replace
"the four outmoded and inadequate ones now in use."
Th« new towers had been
sought by the Civil Service Employees Association.
In an inspection report on the
prison, the commission said the
new towers would be placed in
regular use as soon as they had
been approved by the department.
The towers are provided with
electric heating units, and combination aluminum sanitary fixtures with drinking fonts, and
the commission added "are a
commendable improvement over
the old towers, which were devoid of water or sanitary fixtures
of any kind."
The new towers were constructed higher than the old ones and
afford greater visibility.
The commission recommended
that a new kitchen, dining room
and bakery be provided at the
pcisoa.
CIVIL
Page Four
Where fo Apply
For Public Jobs
The following directions tell
where to apply for public Jobs
and how to reach destination« in
New York City on tht transit
system.
NEW YORK CITY-The Applications Section of the New York
City Department of Personnel is
located at 96 Duane St., New York
7, N.Y. (Manhattan). Ii is two
blocks north of City Hall, Just
west of Broadway, across from
The Leader office.
Hours are 9 A.M. to 4 P.M
Monday through Friday, and
Saturdays from 9 to 12 noon.
Telephone COrtland 7-8880
Mailed requests for application
blanks must include a stamped,
self-addressed business-size
envelope and must be received Uy
the Personnel Department at least
five days betore the closing date
for the filing of applications.
Completed
application
forms
which are filed by mail must be
sent to the Personnel Department
and must be postmarked no later
than twelve o'clock midnight on
the day following the last day of
receipt of applications.
SERVICE
LEADER
U.S. Service News Items
By MARY A N N BANKS
No Action On Pay
Raise Until Rules
Committee
With only about four weeks left
before the Christmas recess, Congress has not taken any steps to
step up enactment of the Federal
employee pay raise bill. Before
any House action can be taken,
the Rules Committee will have to
take a stand.
FREE BOOKLET by U. S. Government on Social Security. Mail
only. Leader. 97 Duane Street.
New York 7, N. Y.
Tuesday, NovemlMT 26, 1963
More Appeals
Ruled
Two Postal
In Employee's
Favor
Delay Dues
In the not too recent past, only
one Federal Government
employee out of 88 was winning appeals on agency firings and suspensions. Latest reports revealed,
however, t h a t one out of five appeals have been ruled in favor of
the employee.
Civil rights legislation, however,
is the big topic on the Rules
Committee agenda. Heading the
Rul&s Committee is Representative Smith (D-Va.) who, it is
The change is attributed, to a
rumored, is opposed to both the
great
degree,
to
Commission
civil rights legislation and the
action. The three Commissioners.
civil service salary increase.
John Macy. Robert Hampton, and
The Rules Committee report Lud Andolsek have recently reon the issue, including Congres- versed a number of decisions
sional raises, Is expected soon. made by the CSC's pro-agency
After the release of the report. board of appeals. It was learned
Smith will ls.sue a hearing date. t h a t Andolsek was the m a n to
Until then, there is little to re- start the ball rolling in this direction.
port.
As a result, the National Association of Postal Supervisors
has decided to defer its deductions until July of next year and
the National Association of Letter
Carriers will wait until January,
1965.
The Post Office predicts t h a t
everything will be in operating
order by February 15 in most
areas.
is plate ^Jass so tempered that ivhen
broken, it cwvihlcs into S7nall rounded pieces.
La7/ilnated i^lassj iiivcuted in 1909 by the Frenchwan Benedictus, is viade of tu'o sheets of glass
cemented together by a plastic that prevents the
pieces from scattering ichen the gkss is broken.
Both inventions have saved thousands of motorists fro7n mishaps vchich othernise nrould have
killed or viaimed them.
SAFETY GLASS
Any of these addresses m-ay be
used for jobs with the State. The
State's New York City Office is
two blocks south on Broadway
from the City Personnel Department's Broadway ent»-ance. so the
same transportation instructions
apply. Mailed applications need
not include return envelopes.
Candidates may obtain applications for State Jobs from local
offices of the New York State
Employment Service,
FEDERA*. — Second U.S. Civil
Service Region Office. News Building. 220 East 42nd Street (at 2nd
Avo.). New York 17. N. Y.. Just
w^£/t of the United Nations building. Take the IRT Lexin^'ton Ave.
Line to Qrend Central and vvalk
two blocks east, or take the shuttle
from Times Square to Grand
Central or the IRT Queens-PlushIng train from any po.nt on the
line to the Grand Central stop.
Hours are 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m..
Monday through Friday. Telephone number is YU 6-2026.
Applications are also obtaintble at main post officea. except
the New York. N.Y.. Post Office.
Boards of examiners at the particular installations offering the
tests also may be applied to for
further Information and appllcacion forms. No return envelopes
are required with mailed requeste
for application forms.
FREE BOOKLET by D. 8. G.vernmeni on Social Security. Mall
•niy. Leader. 17 Duan* Street,
-ew York 1, N. Y.
Pioneers in Protection
Just as Bcncdictus and other scientists ^vc^c
iirst to protect the motorists of the 20th Century
from the dangers of flving g l a s s . . . so the STATE•\VIDE P L A N was tlie first program of protection
against the costs of hospital and medical care
for the employees of the State of N e w York.
This three-part program — Blue Cross, Blue
Shield and Major Medical — offers most State
employees, active or retired, the most liberal
benefits at the lowest possible cost. That's w h y
more than 480,000 State employees and their
dependents arc»now subscribers.
If you are not a subscriber and would like
all the facts on the STATEWIDE P L A N , see your
payroll or personnel officer.
BLUE CROSS'
AUAMY
• FIUFFALO •
JAMESTOWN
Sr.,lo,
• Nr\v
YORK
of security
• RocH£STEK •
BLUE SHIELD*
SYAACVSS
Deduction
Although
the
Civil
Service
Commission has authorized e n actment of the Federal union
payroll dues check-ofi system for
J a n u a r y 1, the Post Office c a n
not be ready to handle the additional accounting by t h a t time.
The Applications Section of
the Personnel Department is nea.T
the Chambers Street stop of the
Biain subway lines that go through
the area. These are the IRT 7th
Avenue Line and the IND 8th
Avenue Line. The IRT Lexington
Avenue Line stop to use is the
Brooklyn Bridge stop and the BMT
Brighton local's stop Is City Hall
Both lines have exits to Duane
etreet, one block from the Personnel Department.
STATE — First floor at 270
Broadway, New York 7. N. Y.,
corner of Chambers St., telephone
BArclay 7-1616, Governor Alfred
E. Smith State Office Building and
The State Campus, Albany; State
Office Building, Buffalo; State
Office Building. Syracuse; and
500 Midtown Tower, Rochester
(Wednesdays only).
Unions
• VllGA • WJUIZOWV
Tupsflay, November 26, 1963
CIVIL
Bus Driver
\Questions
An analysis of the key answers as they were given for t h e
surface line operator test in a past issue of The Leader
will now be applied to the e x a m as it was given. 23,425 persons
took the e x a m November 2, 11,702 in the m o r n i n g period
a n d 11,713 in the a f t e r n o o n session. There were t e n sabbatical
observers. Protests for these tests were allowed to a be subm i t t e d until m i d n i g h t , November 22 along w i t h evidence of
s u b s t a n t i a t i o n . The analysis of a number of questions in the
m o r n i n g session follow below. The questions will continue in
t h e n e x t issue of The Leader.
24. At terminals in residential
areas where a bus remains for
more than three (3) minutes, operators are required to turn off
I their engines. The least importa n t reason for stopping the engines is to:
(A) reduce noise. (B) conserve fuel. (C) reduce air pollution. <D) minimize engine wear.
(The others could have serious
side effects. Engine wear would
be infinitesimal.)
25. Statistics show that automobile accidents occur most frequently:
(A) in the morning rush hour.'?.
(B) around noon. (C) soon after
sunset. (D) near midnight. (Visibility is poorest at dusk.)
28. A bus operator is liable
under the law to receive a traffic
ticket for:
(A) double standing when a bus
stop is occupied by a car. (B)
not taking on all people waiting
at a stop. (C) passing a preceding
bus on a grade. (D) discharging
a passenger at other than a bus
stop. (Others drivers are accustomed to buses stopping at the
' designated Interval and spots.
Stops other than these are quite
likely to cause accidents.)
27. A bus operator approaching
a green light sees a pedestrian
crossing his path against the
light. If the pedestrian is two or
three lengths' away, the operator:
(A) Is required to make a complete stop. (B) should swing his
bus closer to the curb. (C) Is required to report the pedestrian
to the nearest police officer. (D)
should reduce his speed and blow
his horn. (Common sense here.
Both actions should help to eliminate the chance of hitting the
passenger.
28. One New York State vehicular rule that drivers In New
York City are exempt from following Is the requirement:
(A) to stop when a school bus
is receiving or discharging school
children. (B) not to make a right
turn on a red light. (C) to make
a complete stop at a stop-sign.
(D) not to cross a double-solid
line marked on the road. (School
children must be protected.)
29. The power to revoke a license to drive a motor vehicle is
In the hands of the:
(A) Police Commissioner, (B)
Traffic Commissioner. (C) Commissioner of Motor Vehicles. (D)
Mayor. (A matter of jurisdiction.)
SERVICE
LEADER
Begin Study Now
For Fireman Test
Filing is expected to open during t h e D e c e m b e r filing period for the fireman e x a m ination w h i c h is tentatively set for Spring.
As an assist to readers. The Leader will publish past e x a m i n a t i o n s and answers so
t h a t applicants c a n see w h e t h e r or n o t they are adequately prepared for t h e e x a m i n a t i o n .
The first group of questions are taken from the last e x a m i n a t i o n in November, 1962,
The answers will appear in n e x t week's edition.
consist of fom* sentences lettered ning to catch the bus caused the
A, B, C and D. One of the sent- accident.
ences in each group contains an
error In grammar or punctuation.
Fill in the space on your answer
sheet. In the row having the same
number as the question number,
the letter corresponding to the
N.Y. FIRE DEPT.
incorrect sentence of that group.
46. (A) Give the message to
43. (A) calendar. (B) desirwhoever Is on duty. (B) The
able. (C) familiar (D) vacuum.
A YIAR
44. (A) deterloate. (B) eligible. teacher who's pupil won first prize
AFTER 3 YEARS
presented the award. (C) Between
(Including Annuol
(C) liable (D) missile.
Uniform A l l o w a n c e )
45. (A) amateur. (B) competent, you and me, I don't expect the
program to succeed. (D) His run- Excellent Promotional O p p o r t u n i t i c i
(C) mlschelvous. (D) occasion.
PENSION AFTER 20 Y I A R S
Questions numbered 46 and 47
Questions numbered 43 to 45
Inclusive contain words, one of
which Is misspelled. Fill In the
space on your answer sheet, In
the row having the same number
as the question number, the letter corresponding to the misspelled word.
COPPER
flREMAN
'7,978
Ages 20 thru 2 8 — O l d e r f o r Vets
Visual Training
Fireman Answers
o r CAKDIDATKS FOR
These are the official key answers for the questions which The
Leader has been running duiing
the past few weeks for the last
test which was given by the New
York City Department of Personnel to candidates for the position
of fireman. The answers are:
1,D; 2,A; 3.D; 4,B; 5 , D ;
7,C; 8,C; 9 3 : 10,C; ll.A;
13,B; 14,D; 15,B; 16,B; 17,C;
19,C; 20,B; 21,D; 22,D; 23.D;
25,C; 26,B; 27.D; 28.B; 29,B;
31,A; 32,B; 33,D; 34.C; 35,0;
37,A: 38,D; 39,B; 40,C; 41,D;
6,C;
12,C;
18,B;
24.C;
30,C;
36,A;
42,C.
T h e c l e a n ^ n e w l o o k in C o o k w a r e
REVERE
WARE
CORE STAINLESS
STEEL
PATROLMAN
FOR THE EYESIGHT TEST OF
CIVIL SERVICE REQUIREMENTS
DR. JOHN T. FLYNN
Optomctrlgt • Ortliopist
16 PARK AVE.. N. Y. C.
(SW Cor. 35tli Street)
MU f . 2 3 3 3
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START PREPARATION FOR C O M I N G EXAMS:
METER MAID (Parking Meter Attendant)
POLICEWOMAN
F I R E M A N — N . Y . Fire Dept.
CITY PLUMBER — Exam Jan. 18
MASTER ELECTRICIAN LICENSE
MASTER PLUMBER LICENSE
REFRIGERATION OPERATOR LICENSE
STATIONARY ENGINEER LICENSE
HIGH SCHOOL EQUIVALENCY DIPLOMA
NEW CLASS FORMING—Start Week of Dec. 16 for
P A T R O L M A N — N . Y . Police Dept.—Exam M a r . 14
• PRACTICAL VOCATIONAL COURSES:
Licensed by N.Y. S t a t e — A p p r o v e d for
Veterans
AUTO MECHANICS SCHOOL
5-01 46 Road a t 5 St., Long Island C i t y
Complete Shop Training on "Live"
Cars
with Speelalltaflon
on Automatic
Transmissions
DRAFTING SCHOOLS
M a n h a t t a n : 123 East 12 St. nr. 4 Ave.
J a m a i c a : 89*25 Merrick Blvd. a t 90 Ave.
Architectural—Mechanical—Structural
Drafting
Piping, electrical
and Machine
Drawing.
RADIO. TV & ELECTRONICS SCHOOL
2-Ql. Cov«r«d Double Boiler
Covered Sauce Pot
S-Qt. Covered Dutch Ovtn
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8-Cup P«rcolator^
2-Qt. Whistling Tea KettI*
Whisriing Tea Kttt(«
HOUSE OF ABRAMSONS
1395 FLATBUSH AVENUE
117 l a s t 11 St. nr. 4 Ave.. M a n h a t t a n
Radio and TV Service & Repair,
Color
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%AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAiiii i14
<
CIVIL
Page SI*
9
L E A D E R
SERVICE
LEADER
This Week's
Civil Service
Television List
Television programs of interest
are
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations
broadcast daily over WNYC. Channel 31.
Published
every Tuesday
by
This week's programs telecast
LEADER PUBLICATIONS. INC.
over
New York City's television
97 Duan* Street. New York. N.Y.-IOOO?
212.BEekniaii 3-6010
Include:
Jerry Finkelstein, Publisher
Paul Kyer, Editor
Joe Dcasy, Jr., City Editor
Tuesday, Nov. 26
James T. Lawless, Associate Editor
Mary Ann Bunks, Assistant Editor
N, H. Mager, Business Manager
9:30 p.m. — Career
DevelopAclvertisinf Representatives:
ment—Police Dept. promotional
ALBANY — Joseph T. Bellew — 303 So. Manning Blvd., IV 2-5474
course. "Witnesses, Subpeonas,
KINGSTON. N.Y. - Charles Andrews - 239 Wall Street, FEderal 8-8350
and Cond. Exams."
10c per copy. Subscription Price $2.55 to members of the Civil
*3:30 p.m.—Army Special—
Service Employees Associtaion. $5.00 to non-members.
U.S. Army film series.
~
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2 6 , 1 9 6 3
4:00 p.m.—Around the C l o c k Police Dept. training
course.
"Auto Larceny."
4:30 p.m.—The Big P i c t u r e Army film series.
*5:00 p.m.—Nutrition and You
—Nutrition Bureau series, with
Iva Bennett and guest.
6:30 p.m.—Air Force Story—
Films on the Air Force.
L T H O U G H he belonged to all America and even to the
8:00 p.m.—Nutrition and You—
whole world. President Kennedy held a special place Nutrition Bureau series.
8:30 p.m.—Army film series,
in the heart of the civil service community.
10:30 p.m.—Operation AlphaNot only was he Number One Boss of two million public bet —-Labor Department series
employees, but he was, in a real sense, the First Civil Servant promoting literacy.
America^g
Largest
Weekly
for PiibUe
Employees to civil service employees
'A Last Full Measure
Of Devotion...'
A
of the land. And it was in that capacity that he gave his
life for the American people.
Wednesday, Nov. 27
2:30 p.m.—Nursing
Today—
NYC Dept. of Hospitals series on
Like Lincoln a century before. President Kennedy made nursing care. "The Patient Rethe supreme sacrifice as a full measure of his devotion to qy^j.^^g ^
Maker."
duty—fighting for the principles of the American way of
^.qq p.m.—Around the Clocklife in the fullest meaning of public service.
Police Dept. training
course.
Tuegday, Nov^mfirr 26, 196S
Civil Service
LAW & YOU
By Stanley Mailman
Mr. Mailman is a member of tlie New York bar.
(The views expressed in this column are those of the writer
and do not necessarily constitute the views of this newspaper
or of any organization.)
IN ACCEPTING THE invitation to write this column, a
space so ably filled for many years by the late Harold L.
Herzstein, I was struck by the challenge involved. The stimulating eflect of Mr. Herzstein's column, the interest with
which it was read and the importance of his role in developing and expounding the law of civil service are well known.
THAT STANDARD aside, the writing of a periodic legal
column for civil service employees would still present a n
implicit challenge to any lawyer who attempts being Informative to an extremely well inforhied group. Many of
our readers, themselves involved in the application of law
on their jobs, approach civil service problems not only with
interest but a good deal of background and knowledge.
THE SUBJECT-MATTER of civil service law, as well as
the litigation dealing with it, has over the years, expanded
in quantity and variety. This results naturally from our
growth of population, governmental functions and public
employee rolls. It is also related to the enactment and application of legislation to attract the best people to public
service and to protect them in their employment. How beneficially those laws work depends in large measure on
the alertness of civil service employees themselves.
THIS COLUMN WILL try to call attention to matters of
civil
service law which are of interest or importance to
The hazards of the Presidency are, of course, unique in
many
readers. Comment, criticism and suggestion are n o t
every way—in the relentless pressures and public exposure,
only welcome but expected from a knowledgeable readerin the creation of overzealous friendships and vitriolic
ship. The scope of discussion will Include federal, state, and
enmities.
local jurisdictions. Coming up from time to time will be
All of us share a little of the shame that our nation
problems In pension and retirement, disciplinary actions,
grievance procedures, performance ratings, job classificacould have produced a fanatic capable of this highest of all j ^^p^ training course,
tre.-'-ons. In our sorrow, we can only dedicate ourselves anew
io:30 p.m. — Operation Alpha- tions, and examinations.
lo the service of progress toward freedom and equal oppor- bet—Labor Dept. series promoting
FOR A FIRST topic, I believe that the subject of oral
tunity for all—the American way of life which John Fitzgerald literacy.
examinations
continues to be important and controversial.
Thursday,
Nov.
28
Kennedy sought for our nation to the last ounce of his
4:00 p.m.—Around the C l o c k - The necessity for such examinations, together with inevitstrength.
Police Dept. training
course. able lack of perfect objectivity in their administration, preWe ask our readers to say a prayer — for the late "Traffic Safety."
sent some of the real problems of civil service law under
6:30 p.m. — Air Force S t o r y - the merit system. Illustrating the conflict are two statements
President, John F. Kennedy, for his gallant family and for
U.S. Air Force film series.
the nation.
appearing in the basic case of Fink vs. Finegan (270 N.Y. 356)
7:30 p.m.—On the Job—Fire
decided by the New York Court of Appeals in 1936.
Department training course
One is:
10:30 p.m.—Operation Alphabet
"Traffic Safety."
*5:00 p.m.—Nutrition and You
—Nutrition Bureau series, with
Iva Bennett and guest.
6:30 p.m.—Air Force Story—
U.S. Air Force.
, 7:30 p.m.—On the Job — Fire
Ik.
P. R. Column
(Continued from Page 2)
—Labor Department series.
Friday, Nov. 29
1:30 p.m. — Nursing Today —
New York Department of Hospitals series on nursing care. "The
Patient Requiring a Pace Maker."
4:00 p.m.—Around the Clock—
SO laboriously and painfully. It was and still Is an uphill | Poh^e Department training pro-
The keynote of civil service is merit and fitness, comprising not only efficiency but character and loyalty to duty.
This must be ascertained, as far as practicable, by examination which, as far as practicable, shall be
competitive,
{page 361)
The other is:
Some positions in the civil service may require that the
person who fills them have certain qualities which cannot be
measured by existing objective tests, {page 362)
battle, because people are always suspicious of somethmg
5:00 p.m.—Nutrition and You
like government, which exerts such tremendous influence —Iva Bennett, Nutrition Bureau
in their daily lives.
and guest.
THE DETERMINATION against oral examination in the
6:00 p.m.—The Big Picture— Fink case has often been misunderstood.
THUS DEDICATED, hardworking civil servants have had
to be twice as dedicated and work doubly hard to achieve U.S. Army film series.
THE ACTUAL holding of the case, its application in re10:30 p.m.—Operation Alphacent decisions and the significance to public employees will
even a modest measure of good public relations.
bet—Labor Dept series promoting
be discussed in the next column.
THESE CIVIL servants have every right to be deeply literacy.
resentful when some free-wheeling-dealing legislator, devoid
Saturday, Nov. 30
even of spelling knowledge of e-t-h-i-c-s, comes along to
7:30 p.m.—On the Job —Fire
6:30 p.m.—Career Development
Department
training
course.
louse up the good public relations of government.
—Police Department promotional Six Scouts Attend
IN FACT, the civil servants of the nation—on both a "Rescue Breathing."
course.
"Vagrants.
Disorderly Genesee Training
8:00 p.m.—Citizenship Educa- i Persons and
Juvenile
Delinnational and on a state-by-state basis—could be a powerful
tion— Film lectures in civic quents."
Six scouts from Troop 83 atforce in putting an end to some of this astigmatism In leg- studies.
tended
the Junior Leader Train10:30
p.m.
—
Operation
Alphaislator ethics.
Sunday, Dec. 1
bet—Labor Dept. series promoting ing Course conducted recently by
THERE ARE 9.5 million civil servants in the United
4:00 p.m.—Citizenship Educaliteracy.
the Genesee Council, Hoy Scouts
States on the Federal, state, county and municipal rolls. tion—Film lectures on civic •—May be pre-empted by U.N.
of America. Troop 83 Is sponsored
That's a lot of political muscle and an enormous power 1 studies produced by the N.Y.
session.
by Craig Colony and Hospital and
State Education Department.
*or good.
is composed of male patients who
6:30 p.m.—Air Force Story —
THEY WILL have the active support of the nation's Film series on the U.S. Air Force. New York City Chap.
are interested in the Scouting propress, as for example the highly respected "Providence Jour7:00 p.m.—The Big P i c t u r e gram.
James V. Grillo, assistant
To Meet December 12
nal", which said: "Isn't It about time that it (Congress) Army film series.
cook, is Scoutmaster and accommeasured its own standards of conduct against the stand8:30 p.m.—City Close-up—SeyThe New York City chapter. panied the junior leaders for the
ards It Insists upon for the other branches of government," mour N. Siegel interviews Julius Civil Service Employees Assn., will
training session. The entire troop
CIVIL SERVANTS have banked enough good public re- C.C. Edelstein, executive assistant hold its next chapter meeting on recently participated in the NunThursday, Dec. 12, at 6 p.m. at
lations to be able to look straight into an errant legislator's to Mayor Robert P. Wagner.
Da-Waga District Camporee and
Monday, Dec. 2
Gasner's Restaurant at 76 Duane
eyes and say:
4:00 p.m.—Around the . C l o c k - St., New York City, according to during the summer the unit also
STOP THIS nonsense! And while you're at it, take those Police Dept. training
couise. Seymour Shapiro, chapter presi- attended a week of summer camp
dirty overalls out of "Mrs. Murphy's chowder."
at
Stim Wood,
^
"Traffic Safety."
dent.
Tuesday, 1Vovemf>rr 26, 1963
CIVIL
SERVICE
LEADER
printed In both English and Span- tional water-saving campaign.
ish by the Housing Authority In
The ten guides are: Report any
an effort to reach 125,000 Hous- leaking faucet: limit use of water
ing Authority tenants. HA Chair- to essential purposes; do not wash
man William Reld and Water dishes under a n open faucet; do
Supply, Gas and Electricity Com- not leave faucets or showers open
missioner Armand D'Angelo made when not in use; do not r u n water
Employees in the Traffic De- special visits to several tenants contlnously while shaving; do not
partment have a big CThristmas last week as part of the educa- heat or cool baby's bottle under
project planned . . . they are t r y ng to save the lives of some of
the 60 New York pedestrians who
SPECIAL L O W RATES FOR
will be killed in jaywalking acciSTATE EMPLOYEES AT
dents during the holiday shopping
season, according to historic statistics.
They plan to save these lives
by passing some of these helpful
hints to fellow citizens: Don't
cross on a red light; obey the
DAILY PER PERSON
police officers; don't cro-ss In the
* Right a t G r a n d C e n t r a l
middle of the block.
* G a r a g e service available
What's Doing
In City Departments
•
•
•
Aqua, H-2-0, or water . . .
Mayor Wagner's ten guides for
water conservation have been
WHY PAY MORE?
BUY DIRECT
AND SAVE
.1 p r . MMN<1 KOOM
HIHTKS WITH
COXVKRT.MILK BKO
Monthly
*
*
All transportation nearby
A i r l i n e biises a t d o o r
Have your family Join you at gpeelal Week-End rale« (Frt. thro S u u . ) —
$7 0 0 per adult ( 2 adults In room: clilldren under 14 free In w m e r o o m ) .
Inelndet private bath and full breaUfaat (BOo f o r each child's b r e a k f a s t ) .
THE HOTEL COMMODORE^",- S
o e''^''
Page Seven
a running faucet; do not use over-rinse If using a non-autotoilets for disposal of cigarettes, matlc washing machine or washashes, etc; use automatic wash- tub.
ing machines at rated capacity;
place container of water In rePass your copy of the Leader
frigerator for cool drink; do not
To » Non-Member
•
•
l Y O U CAN COMPLETEI
•HIGH S C H O O L
•
N o w — A t H o m e — L o w Payments
All Books Furnished—No Classes
•I
I
I
Diploma o r EquiYalency C e r t i f i c a t e
Awarded
If you liave not finished H I G H S C H O O L a n d a r e 17 y e a r s or
send f o r f r e e 5 6 - p a g e B O O K L E T .
FREE SAMPLE LESSON
American School. Dept. 9AP-25. 130 W . 42 St.
N.Y. 36 or Phone BRyant 9-2604, Day or Night
Please send me Free 56-page High School Booklet
Name
Address
City
Age.
Apt..
State.
M
I
C^'SO A A
>4CZT.VU
Payments $10.55
CONVKRTABLK SOI A
Monfhfy
Payments
$8,83
S R ( T I O \ A L ( OI t il WITH
AC
COXVKKTABLK BK»
^ZHY.Vl)
Monthly
Payments
$11,63
I''re« DiTorator Hrrrire. Our
RpprfseiiliUivp Will Call At Your
Home With Fabrir HamplM.
H.I.P. WIDENS AREA
Phone YO 8-5609
MANOR CORP.
3B0 M C L E A N A V E N U E
YONKERS. N . Y.
OF ENROLLMENT
YOU
AEE
BUREAU
PAY A M / O W R R RATES
A u t o Insurance
S TAT E -W I D E
INSURANCE
COMPANY
CITY HALL OFFrCE
326
BROADWAY,
N.Y. C.
HfG/fSCmi
OmOMA
If j(»u lire over IK, you cuii »i>riire
a Ilieli 8clioiil Iliploina!
Acirptpd
for
Civil
Service
positions. Our
course will prepare you in a short
time—ont^tiiniliiiK farnlty—low rutes
—call Mr. Jerome at Kl '.i-SUOO.
M O N R O E S C H O O L O F BUSINESS
E. T r e m o n t & Boston Rd., Bronx
Kl 2 - 5 6 0 0
SPECIAL HOTEL RATES
F O R STATE E M P L O Y E E S
IN
N E W Y O R K CITY
AND
ROCHESTER
• •
'V
'I' 'I''I'
'''''' "J*
NEW YORK
•a.OO
single:
*14.00
CITY
Tlie Health Insurance Plan of Greater New York has extended its area of enrollment to permit eligible city and state employees to join the plan even though
ihey live outside the areas in which H.I.P. Medical Groups make home calls.
Employees living in Westchester, Suffolk, Rockland, New Jersey or other
areas outside New York City and Nassau can now enroll in H.I.P. and select any
medical group to serve them and their'families. With the exception of home
calls,
this medical group will provide them with comprehensive medical, surgical and
special care without any charges beyond the premium.
Employees enrolling for this extended-area coverage will receive all medical
group services except home calls and be entitled to cash payments by H.I.P. to-
twin
ward doctor services provided in cases of hospitalized emergency illness or acciPARK AV£NUE if-i 34(1 STREET
Every room with private bath, radio
and television; most air conditioned.
(IRT subway at door)
100 W«tt Mtn S'.'««t at
i»f t>i« Am«ric«»
Every room with private bath, radio
and television. 100% Air-Conditioned.
•
"t*
'''
'J* 'J* 'J*
ROCHESTER
• r.OO tlnglm;
dental injury, when they cannot be transported to a hospital within the area where
their medical group can take care of them.
They
will also be entitled to payments
for emergency treatment during the first 2 4 hours following an accidental injury
occurring outside a hospital.
SEE YOUR PAYROLL CLERK OR PERSONNEL OFFICER
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
( f l . O O twin
^{oMq&LiitM
Rochtjter'» iifjest best locittd hutel. Every
r94m with privita bith. t v. ind rtiiio miny
«ir -conditioneil.
FOR RCSCRVAflONS Ar AIL
In NgW YORK CITV -c«"
Mill 3-400(1
In AUBANY - c»i.
••••
(0 (1 Om'XD'
'(r numM'!
In ROCHESrcR HA>niiton • FaOO
f
FREE BOOKLET bf U.S. Goreminent on Social Security. Mail
•nljr. Leader. 97 Duane Street,
New York 7. N.Y.
1
HEALTH INSURANCE PLAN OF GREATER NEW YORK
625 MADISON AVENUE, NEW YORK, N. Y. 10022
PLaza 4-1144
CIVIL
Pflf^e Fourteen
SERVICE
LEADER
Steno & High School Spanish—Passport To Adventure
(Continued from Page 2)
Twenty years and thousands of
adventures later, Adele Lee is asBigned to our own New York as
a recruiting officer for the Department of State. She is a natural for the job because she really
can't stop selling the State Department.
She finds her work interesting;
the people, delightful; and the
travel, fascinating. Right now,
ihe is looking foi-ward to her next
loreign
secretarial
assignment
which (fingers-crossed) may be
London.
Atop a Mountain
Someday, from a mountain-top
home in California, Adele Lee will
take a long view of an exciting
life and possibly write her memoirs. I n fact, the thought of
memoirs have played an important part in Adele Lee's life. Even
thou!,'h the feeling occurs infrequently, whenever she becomes a
little homesick or depressed, she
simply inquires of herself, "How
would giving up this wonderful
For members of Civil Service Associations
and their immediate families only.
The Most
Incredible
Miami Beach
Offer
Ever Made!
W i n t e r H o l i d a y , Jan. 2 f o J a n . 10
Spend 9 days and 8 nights in one of the most
glamorous deluxe oceanfront hotels in
M i a m i Beach. The super, luxurious
CASABLANCA
But, please, know how to type.
Filing R e o p e n e d
The New York City Department
of Personnel has announced that
the position of fingerprint technician has been reopened for filing.
The filing will remain open until
Friday, Nov. 29. Applicants who
have filed during the previous
two months filing period need not
file again.
LEUAL
NOTICR
SKCOND SIIJ'PLEMENTAI^ — CIT.'VTION
— KILE No. P'.'!);(5. l!)t!:{ — T H E I'KOPI.E OF T H E STATE OF NEW YORK,
By the Grace of (ioU Free and InUeppnilenl, To Olea Booth Caincg, aii<l Ihe unknown Iipiis a t hiw, next of kin of
Miii'.v A. Caini's, decf-Hfifd. the iianios of
whom are u n k n o w n , and if anj- of tlioni
bo dead, t o their rpspective heirs a t
law, next of kin. surviving spouses, personal representatives,
devisees, legatees,
and supceseors in intei'est, all of whom
and whose names are u n k n o w n and cannot be aseertainecl aCler dlllgrent inoiiiry.
YOU ARE HEREBY CITED TO SHOW
f.'VT'fE before the Surroirate's Court, New
York County, a t Room ."«04 in the Hall
of Reeords in tlio County of New York,
New York, on December .3()th. Ifteil. a t
1 0 : 0 0 A.M., why a certain wiiting- dated
March .'trd, lit.'irt which has been offered
for probate by J o h n ('.lines, residinsr a t
'.JSl) Convent Aventte. New York, New
York, should not Ije probated as t h e last
Will and Testament, relating to real aiul
personal property, of Mai'y A. Caines.
Deceased, who was a t the time of her
death a resident of
West 144 th
Street, in the Cotinfy of New York,
New York. Dated, Attested and Sealed,
November llilnd. l!)t)3.
HON. ,rOSEPH A. COX, Surrojra.te, New
York County. Philip A. Donahue. Clerk.
tL.S.)
SERVICE
N O W
FOR
EMPLOYEES
THE
FIRST
"ST4Tr
AT THE
FORGET
THE
TIME
BEST
REST"
$150.
INCLUDES EVERYTHING!
Washington. Avenue ^ f A l b a n y
R O U N D T R I P P U R E F A N JET t r a n s p o r t a t i o n f r o m N e w York to M i a m i B e a c h .
Mile from^Hruway Exit"' #24
OPPOSITE
Round t r i p t r a n s p o r t a t i o n f r o m a i r p o r t
to hotel.
STATE
DINING ROOM
COCKTAIL LOUNGE — W I T H
ENTERTAINMENT
NIGHTLY!
Pirfit Run Motion Pictures At Adjacent
Hellmnn Tneatro on the
Premises.
•
OFFERS S P E C I A L
LOW
T6
CIVIL
7
1
Miini Benzell-Jan. 6
1-2596
or
'N A ROOM
Per Person
NG
GL E
SSIIN
OCCUPANCY
SgOO
Per Person
SPECIAL RATES
for Civil Service Employees
coupon.
STATE
TV
RADIO
AVAILABLE
BANQUET FACILITIES TAILORED
T O A N Y SIZE PARTY
FRKR TKLKTYI'K KK.SKKV.\TIO\S
TO A M ' KNOTT IIOTKI., IN(1,1 n i N G
(nt Stntf Kiites)
New Weston, NYC.
C a l l A l b a n y HE 4 - 6 1 1 1
THOMAS H. GORMAN, Gcii. Mgr.
SCHOOL
YOUR H O S T MICHAEL FLANAGAN
PETIT PARIS
RESTAURANT
Sub Lease - Loudon Arms
BUSINESS M E N ' S L U N C H
11:30 T O 2 : 3 0 — $ 1 . 0 0
First F l o o r
3 BR APT. - I'RIVAT l>00L - ELEC.
STOVE - R E F R r O E K A T O R - H E A T &
n o r WATKil - TRASH COLLECTION AirrOMATlO
WASHER,
DRYER
AVAILABLE. SHOPPING CENTER AD,IA('ENT. $10H.00 ppr Mo. Dee. 1 - J u n e
1. ](Mi4. CAN E.XTKXn.
HO
or
C o c k t a i l Lounge • D a n c i n g N i g h t l y
517 W. 57th St., New York 19
PLaza 7-0300
Please send me F R E E information.
HSL
Name
Mdress
:ity
Ph.
Albany,
SrECLVLIZINO, A.S AI.WAVS, IN
PARTIES, BANQUETS & .MEETINGS.
COSIFORTAIILE ACC«»MMODATION8
FROM 10 TO ;:oo
OPEN
S-2578
DAILY
SUNDAY
EXCEPT
1
I'd like t o g o on your
full infornnation.
W i n t e r t o u r . Please send
N o , in p a r t y .
— F R E E P A R K I N G IN R E A R —
The
1060 MADISON AVE.
ALBANY
TEN EYGK
Hotel
Phone
IV 2 - 7 8 6 4
LXDKR THE NEW MANAGK.MENT
OF SCHINE HOTELS WILL
CONTINUE TO HONOR
FOR N.Y.S.
PLUS
IV
HOTEL
Wellington
ORIVE-IN QARAQE
AIR CONDITIONING . T V
No parking
problami
at
Albany'i ior^Mt
hot»l
FACILITIES
• Free Parking
• F r e e Limousine Service f r o m
Albany Airport
• Free L a u n d e r i n n L o u n g e
• Free C o f f e e M a k e r s in flie
Rooms
• Free S e l f - S e r v i c e Ice C u b e
Machines
• Free Use of Electric S h a v e r s
In Time of Need, Call
M. W . T e b b u t r s Sons
Make Your Reservation
Early By Calling
HE 4-1111
176 State
12 Colvin
Albany
Albany
HO 3-2179
459-6630
420 Kenwood
Delmar HE 9-2212
In N.Y.C. Call MU 8-0110
SGHINE
TEN EYGK HOTEL
Over 113 Vcai'8 of
DifttinguiNlieU ruiiciiil Service
s t a t e & C h a p e l Sts. A l b a n y . N.Y.
ALBANY
MAYFLOWER - ROTAL COUR'l
APARTMENTS - Furnished, Unfurni.shed. and Rooms. Phone HE.
4-1994. (Albany).
BRANCH OFFICE
r O R INFOK.MATIUh rucanling aUvertlslnf
Please write oi call
JOSEPH T B E I X E V
3 0 3 SO MANNING BLVD.
ALBANY 8. N V
Phuorje IV 2-5474
PHONE-A-LOAN
FOR
FAST
SERVICE
YOU
NEED A
PERSONAL LOAN
DIAL HE 4-5131
. . . with
. . . a n d ask for
Albany'i only driv«-in
Phone-A-Loan
goroge. You'll Ilk* the coi»-
Pomlly ratal. Cocktail loung*.
O f f O S i T I
HI'LHAl
—
Phon«.
tlATI CAFITOl
SM jrovr friMdIy
FOH
Addft«,
2-9881
CIVIL SERVICE BOOKS
ond all tests
PLAZA BOOK SHOP
380 Broadway
Albany, N. Y.
Mail & Phone Orders Filled
EMPLOYEES
ALL THESE
or
ARCO
SPECIAL RATES
WHEN
1 3 6 8TATK 8 T R E B T
me
MONDAY,
AT 2 P.M.
fort and convtnlcnca, lo«l
N a s s a u C o u n t y Civil Service Assoc.
Park S h e r a t o n H o t e l
55th St. a n d 7th A v e n u e . N.Y." 19, N.Y.
ALBANY
$7 SINGLE
$12 DOUBLE
ilS 5 WEEKS
Tel.
STS.,
STATE RATE
GET your High School
Eqnlvrtlency
Diploma which U the legal oqulva
lent ol 4-year8 of High School Thi»
Diploma la acceptcd for Civil Service
positions and e t h e r purposea.
ROBERTS
& EAGLE
A KNOTT HOTEL
A F.WORITK FOR OVKR .^0
YE.\K8 WITH STATK T R \ \ K M ; I { S
^ t E 0
Sponsored by Nassau County Civil Service Assoc.,
Irving Flamenbdum, President
LT
TRAVELERS
W R I T E OR P H O N E 4 5 9 - 3 1 0 0
1<'0K KKSEUVATION8
three fabulous meals every day.
^
Free cocktail parties every night.
Deluxe twin-bedded rooms.
Free golf. Greens fees included.
_
No ext_ra^ plane charge for golf clubs.
Golf tournaments and trophies.
Gala banquet with open bar.
Free chaise lounges and mats.
Free sight-seeing tours.
Huge Olympic pool with sun-swept
pool terrace and private beach.
Free TV in every room.
DEWITT CLINTON
Tonr
NEW
RATES
SERVICE
S 7 0 0 2
Call in New York
HIl'E
ALB.WY'S PKKSTIGK HOME
AWAV I'UO.M UO.UK
F r e e shows by Americans g r e a t e s t ent e r t a i n e r s a t t h e Cavalcade of S t a r s i
George Jessel-Jan. 2
CAMPUM
'
For
$35- HIGH -$35
SCHOOL
DIPLOMA
2626.
•Pi'o rate if 150 IIU MIIK I - M- NIOIC tiavel in one (RI'oiip.
* p e r person
Third occupant in room
rrepara
life sound In those memoirs?"
Next question: How would her
wonderful life sound in your
memoirs? All you have to do is
ask; Adele Lee, State Department
Recruitment Officer, U.S. Civil
Service Commission, Daily News
Building, New York City, YU 6-
CIVIL
$175
Tuesday, November 19, 1963
U tLKLi
EXTENDED
i f ^
travW ogtitt.
n s T
fiRST T r v s t
O F
HATES
Company
A i u B A w i r
STAYS
* Use postal zone numDers on
rour mail to insure prompt
delivery.
Membtr
Federal
Deposit
Insurance
Corporotion
Service
Tiiesflay, November 26, 1963
CIVIL
SERVICE
Page Nin«
LEADER
BENRUS
INCLUDED IN THIS
FABULOUS PREVIEW ARE:
• Self'Winding
Watches
• Waterproof* Watches
• Diamond Dial Watches
• Diamond
Watches
• Fashion Watches
• Calendar Watches
• Embraceable
BENRUSJ
EVERY BENRUS
WATCH MOVEMENT
MUST
Watches
Priced from
P E R F O R M
%
PROPERLY FOR
3 FULL YEARS
OR
BENRUS
WILL
REPAIR
O R R E P L A C E IT
FREE.
YEARS
$S050
Yoyf CholM Of A
Whon You6«t. A
^
V
-
BiwuiWitcfc
ForYourOMWUcl
5 9 5 0
TABCO
1 225 B R O A D W A Y
N E W YORK 1. N. Y .
MU 6 - 3 3 9 1
CIVIL
Page Ten
The Veteratu Administration
hospitals treated 712,800 patients
iurinr the past fiscal year. It Is
Ihe third consecutive year VA
hospitals hare treated an increased number of patients without a corresponding increase in
the number of hospital beds.
Shoppers Service Guide
Appllanca Services
M a l e & Female
Sales & S e m e *
recond Refrict. Storea.
NKKI) KXTIIA INCOME?
IT'S Y D I H S ! — It you have stronif Wnah Machines, combo ainki Uuaranteed
TRACY REFRIGERATION—CV 2 51)00
contaois with people who travel, here
o r abroail — business firms, s r o u p i , 240 B 140 St. * 1204 Castl* Hilln Ar Bs
TRACT SERVICING CUKP.
loiiristH. etc. T r a v e l a«:enc7 m New
Jersey Iimh at tractive commi.'taion arInstruction
ranirfnictil* for rirlit men and women.
WRITK NOW. P.O. Bo* 80, Bayonne. E A R N $170 A WEEK AND U P IE YOU
New .lersey.
ARE 1 8 — A N D O V E R — Y o u may q u a l i f y
l o r i m m e d i a t e field training
heavy
equipment o p e r a t o r
or
nu^cii.inic in
hiifhway
and
construction.
one
of
Help W a n t e d - M a l e
America's f a s t e s t growing- industries. No
BULLDf)'/i:u — Motor (frader and rubberprevious experience or special educatired s c i a p e r trainees. See o u r ad under
tion iieedetl. Men in this field aie earnInslrui'tion.
entitled
"Earn
$170 a
imr exceptional weekly wa?e«. You'll
. weelt . "
learn
on
bulldozers,
cranes.
motor
(Traders, self-propelled scrapers and o t h e r
Rubber Stamp Service
man-sized equipment now used by inRUBBKK STAMPS OOc PLUS lV4c P E R
d u s t r y . Complete 2 2 0 - h o u r course. NaLETTIOU. .J. E. Capen. Atwood St..
tional, original school of he.avy equipPlainville, Conn.
ment is not a correspondcHfe school.
It s (Tovernment approved and budget
terms are available. Free job placement
Acquire Peace O f Mind!
service upon grraduation. Get full deDISCOVKIt I'le basie principles of livinic
tails now on higrh pay and job security.
conientmefit : Order the new 3 3 1 / a
Send name, address. a?e. phone n u m b e r ,
RPM Hpiiken le-son record to learn. Send
h o u r s home to Box I t t l . c / o The
$6.50 and tlilH ad to the I n s t i t u t e of
Leader, 97 Duane St., N.Y. 7, N.Y.
Oxford. I ' D . Box 1813. Clevelaini 0.
Ohio. I'uM refund if not completely
Batinficd. Dealers s o u g h t .
Novelties
"GOOFIEST SIGNS'• . . . Craziest Novelties." Assorted samples & lisiiiiifi . . .
$!:.00. "Ace" Mad House—Box
875.
Galveston, Tex.
RAISE SUCCESSFUL
CHILDREN!
Auto Emblems
J u s t released It.T 1 / 3 RPM spoken lesson
record teaelies how to raise exceptional CSEA AUTO EMBLEM, Attractive Bluechildren. n n U r now. Send $6.80 and
Silver.
Reflective Scolchlite.
3 inch
t h i s ad to the Institute of Oxford. P.O.
Emblem, $1.00. Discount To Chapters
Box lHt;t. Cleveland 6. O. Full r e f u n d
F o r Resale.
Inkwell
Printers,
1"20
If
not
fonii>Ietely aatisfled. Dealers
Hertel, Buffalo 18, New York.
•ourht
Tuesday, IVovemLer 26, 1963
LEADER
REAL ESTATE
ALBANY
ATTRACTIVE
HOMES
CALL
W. F. B E N N E n
MHltiple
Lfsfing
Photos
1672 CENTRAL AVE.
ALBANY
U N 9-5378
For Rent — Albany
EXECrTTIVE a p a r t m e n t , new building, oft
Washinirton Ave., n e a r Campus, 2 bedrooms, larce livinqr room, modern k i t c h en-dining: room, tiled b a t h , r a r b a ^ e disposal. laree jalousie porch, l a u n d r y
hoolt-up in kitchen, larpe s f o r a p e room
on level. Near 3 iiusses Available Dee.
I s t . $ 1 4 5 . Call 4 5 0 - 4 0 8 7 .
$14,990
St. Albans
OWNER RETIRING
Detached 6 room Ranch, all moms
on one floor, 8 bedrooms. fnniMl
dining room, carage. open
patio,
large landscaped rrounds, fiui8li:«l)le
basement. Many ertraa.
MANY
1 ft 2 F A M I L Y H O M E S
G.I. N O CASH D O W N
CASH
Opportunity for sincere individual
to own yiiur own business. Leading
distrilxitor of Coin Operated equipinent is sreklne applicants who
can devote .'t to 4 honrs weeiily
(o seiiMitlonnl newsneld. Opportunity
to sensiiilonal new field. Opportunity
$ 1 0 0 riiNli investment required. Call
M f .^-^mo — !J4 l»r. service or
write iCox 010, The Leader, 97
Duune SI., X.Y. 7, N.Y.
Adding Machints
Typewriters
Mimeographs
Addressing Machines
Guaranteed. Also Kenv«(*, Kepairt
ALL LANGUAGES
TYPEWRITER CO.
CHelsea S-80K6
119 W. SSrd ST.. NEW VUKK I. N 1
only
large
wall
Call
$22,990
AVAILAILE
F H A $690 D O W N
QUEENS HOME SALES
NOTICB
CITATION. _
T H E P E O P L E OP T H E
STATE O P NEW yORK. By the Grace
of God. Free and Independent, To Attorney General of the S t a t e of New
> o r k ; and to " J o h n Doe" t h e n a m e " J o h n
Doe- beimr
fictitious,
the alleged husband of Catherine T a m u l . also known as
Catharine T a m u l and Cathrine T a m u l , deceased. if livin? and if dead, to t h e
executors, administrators, dietributees and
assigns of " J o h n Doo" deceased, whose
names and post office addresses are unitnown and cannot a f t e r diligent inquiry
be ascertained by t h e petitioner herein.ind to the distributees of Catherine T a m u l ,
Catharine T a m u l and Cathrine T a m u l , deceased, whose names and post office addresses are u n k n o w n and cannot a f t e r
diligent inquiry be ascertained by t h e
petitioner herein: bcingr the persons interested as creditors, distributees or otherwise in the estate of Catherine T a m u l . also
known as Catharine T a m u l and Cathrine
T a m u l , deceased, who at the time of h e r
death was a resident of 314 West 3 0 t h
Street. New York. N.Y.
$18,990
TO SETTLE ESTATE
Detched brick St atone Cape Cod.
9 years old, plaster walls, 4
l>edrooma. modem throughout,
to wall carpeting, all appliancea.
for appt.
L E G A L 2 F - A M I L T BRICK
WIDOW'S SACRIFICE
Legal S-family w i t h 3 ultra modern Located in one of the finest areas,
apts., 5 rooma plua fini<<hable Ksnit. with S large modem a p t s . Large 5
for owner and a lovely
room a(>i. rooms, for owner and a large S'/j
for income. Fully detaohed witu room apt. for income. L^ively landloads of shrubs, f n i i t trees. A ojujV scaped rarden. garage, conr. to everything.
to see at thle price.
170-lS
UEflAL
Springfid Gdns
$22,490 C a m b r i a H g t s
St. Albans
Hillside Are. —
4emetcs
OL 8-7510
C A L L FOR APPT.
O P E N EVERY DAY
MOVE RIGHT I N
NO CASH Gl's
BAISLEY PARK AREA
DETACHED
3
Coleniol.
bedrooms,
tiled
6
rooms,
baih.
MOLLIS
BRICK & STONE
MANSION
full I H U G E R O O M S , m o d e r n k i t c h en, H i t i l e d b a t h s , 4 m a s t e r
bedrooms, g a r a g e , extra large
garden.
$ 1 9 , 7 9 0
$990 C A S H OTHERS
basement, g a r a g e , large garden.
Many
extras.
S 1 S . 9 9 0
$590 C A S H OTHSRS
JAXMAN
BIG NEWS!
T U R N SPARE TIME I N T O
SERVICE
AX 1-7400
Send G R E E T I N G ;
Upon the petition of T h e P u b l i c Admini s t r a t o r of the f ' o n n l y of New York, h a v insr his office at Hall of Records, 'Room
M 9 . Borouffli of M a n h a t t a n . City a n d
1169-12 H I L L S I D E A V E N U E , J A M A I C A ]
County of New York
as a d m i n i s t r a t o r
of the goods, chattels and credits of
said deceased:
You and each of you are hereby cited
CAMBRI.l HTS
»'!I.OIM»
to show cause before the Surrosrate's
MOTHER & DAUGHTKil
Court of New York County, held at the
Detached brick English Tiui «r. ft
Hall of Records, in the County of New
h u s e rm3 plus
rm apt.
U t•liYork, on the I.'Uh day of December, 19G.3.
ens, 3 b a t h s . 8 p a t i o s . Many exti:(™?
at ten o'clock in tlie forenoon of that
Convenient t e r m s arranged.
day, why the account of proceedings of
SPLIT LEVEL
The Public Administrator of the County
L O N G ISLAND H O M E S
of New York, as a d m i n i s t r a t o r of the
BEAUTIFUL
bHilders
model,
6
. lO.S-13 Hillside Ave. . . RK H
,
goods, chatteLs .-ind credits of said deceased, s h o u l d not be Judicially settled.
years eld, corner p r o p e r t y of
I^f TESTIMONY WHEREOF." We h a v e
SufFolk County, L.I.. N.Y.
l a r g e 75x100. deluxe r e c r e a t i o n
caused the seal of the S u r r o g a t e ' s Court C E N T R A L
ISLIP,
4 family,
}-.:i
of tlie said County of New York to be
(1 .'0.x'.!75), a p t . f o r owner. I.x onie
room, landscaped professionally,
h e r e u n t o affixed.
$4,080, cash down $4,000 (Rr.iUi'iWITNESS, HON. S. SAMUEL
oil h o t w a t e r h e a t , m o d e r n e l e c *
P r o t e c t e d ) . McLAUGHLIN RKAi.TV.
DiFALCO, a Surrogate of our
First Ave., Brentwood. 516 BR ."-"^il.").
t r i e k i t c h e n , a i l storms, screens
(Seal)
said County, at the County of
New York, t h e 2 0 t h day of
a n d V e n e t i a n blinds. A s t e a l a t
October, in the year of o u r Lord
Priced For Quick Sale
one thousand nine h u n d r e d and DEER PAUK, L o n g Island, a li • ir .om
$ 1 8 , 5 0 0 . Seen b y a p p t . o n l y .
si.tty-three.
R a n c h , f u l l basement, atlaclied iru i:;".
O T H E R PROPERTIES
IN
Philip A. Donahue.
lot tiO by 170, oil and hot water i i - d .
Clerk of the S u r r o g a t e ' s Court
city-water, w i t h storms scn-vii- ;cii>t
QUEENS & NASSAU
blinds: close t o Dix Hill S.lu.ol. l.'v
CITATION. — T H E P E O P L E OF T H E
taxes. Newly decorated.
I'lei-.c.iH
STATE OF NEW YORK. By t h e Grace of
TU
8 - 7 0 9 7 a f t e r 6 : 0 0 p.m. or wr>-l< nl^.
God Free and Independent.
A P T S . F O R RENT
TO: BESSIE V. SHOEMAKER. LUCILLE
GLOVER.
ROGER
W.
SHOEMAKER
C O - O P A P T S . FOR SALE
Retire In Florida
RICHARD AVERY SHOEMAKER, JAMES
MORTGAGES ARRANGED
ROBERT
GLOVER,
GALE
VIVIAN 2 BEDROOMS. 1 b a t h , wood i . . i i l e d
GLOVER, an i n f a n t over the age of 14
F l o r i d a room, larga over sizeil si i-• •ii'-.i
years: DAVID CLYDE GLOVER, an inporch, lot 7 5 x 1 2 5 , a m i n u t e inl- id
fant under the age of 14 years; RICHARD
beach, 1 block l a r g e e h o p p i i u fi-iiier t
SHOEMAKER, an i n f a n t under the age of
t r a n s p o r t a t i o n . Reasonable, e o u t a i t M.
14 years: DAVID SHOEMAKER, an inK. Wiener, 3 0 5 3 A l a m a n d a Diiv.'. Key168-33 LIBERTY AVE.
f a n t under the age of 14 yeare; CAROL
stone Point, N o r t h Miami. Florida.
JAMAICA
ANN CORREI.V. an i n f a n t over t h e age
of 14 y e a r s : LINDA SHOEMAKER BRYNER, an i n f a n t over the age of 14 years,
Farms & Acreages
and all persons and parties interested in
the estate of Cl.vde Henry Shoemaker, deColumbia County
ceased, late of the Borough of M a n h a t t a n , STI-XNING Colonial on 2 countr,v ses.
City, County and State of New York, as
Eitfi.v c o m m u t i n * t o A l b a n y . Coiiniry
For Sale - Florida
creditora, legatees, devisees, beueficiarie.s.
kitchen,
artistically
decoraie.l.
Cozy
trustees, next
of
kin, distributees
or
f a m i l y room w i t h fireplace. Fii-t tl ior
N o r t h - W e s t Section M i a m i
otherwise.
bedroom and b a t h ; 3 ix-droonw i;;iBlairs. Outbuildings, $ 0 1 , 7 0 0 . A U T H l / i t
SEND G R E E T I N G S :
For gracious living or
invest*
LKK OP R E D ROCK, E u t i Ch.uliani.
Upon the petition of M a n u f a c t u r e r s HanN.Y., CH 2-7342. I t no answer, cull
over T r u s t Company, a b a n k i n g corporment, located
in a
beautiful
CH 2 - 6 2 6 1 o r 2-625-:.
ation organized and existing u n d e r the
neighborhood,
3
bedrooms,
2
laws of tlie Slate of New York, having
baths, concrete, brick and stucco,
its principal office at No. 40 Wall Street,
fully furnished
plus
additional
in the Borough of M a n h a t t a n . City, CounM o r t g a g e Loans
ty and Slate of New York, as executor
room
for
extra
bedroom
or
of the
last
will
and
testament
of
t h i d y . C a r p o r t you c a n
mako
Clyde Henry Shoemaker, deceased.
a d d i t i o n a l r o o m 14x24, b e o H t l *
You and each of you are hereby cited
to show cause liefore the
Surrogates'
fully landscaped, awnings
and
Court of New York County, held at the
sprinkler. G o o d
transportation.
Hall of Records in the County ot New
Asking^
$24,000.
Terms.
CaH
York, on the 3rd day of December, 1963,
C O «-9120.
at ten o'clock in the forenoon of that
day. why the first and final account of
the proceedings ot Manufaeturera HanLOANS TO ANY H O M E O W N E R
over Trust Company, as executor of the
1ST A N D 8 N D MORTGAGES
last will and testament of Clyde Henry
Farms & Acreages - N.Y. S t a t «
P e y all Mortgagee
Shoemaker, deceased, for the period from
Pay all your bills
10 ACRES eyerrreeus, 2 acres fieldi. Cai>«
November
2. 1938 to and
including
Pay all your taxes
Cod tjrpa 8 room home, elec., hardwood
October 25. lOR*:. should not be Judicially
Pay all your loani
floors. Henhouse. Wallc to lake, atore.
settled and allowed;
why said ManuPay all your repairs
$3,900. $ 1 , 5 0 0 down. WIMPLE, R E facturers Hanorer Trust Company ahould
NO DELAY
ALTOR, Sloansrllle. N.Y.
not be permitted to abandon as worthless
1 LOW MONTHI.Y PAYMKNT
the eecurities listed in Schedule B-1 of
AVAILABLE TO REDUCE UILL>»
HI!:MP8TE.\D ft TIC.
the account: why said Manufacturers HanAmount
10
1">
-.'O
LOOKING? CALL
over Trust Company ahould not be allowof loan
yra.
yr^
yi-n.
ed the commission* to which it ia en$1,000
11.11
8.44
7.1:
H O M E F I N D I N G SERVICE
titled upon said accounting: why aaid
$3,000
22.81
19
I t a.;
A N Y W H E R E I N NASSAU
Manufaeiurers
Hauover Trust Company
$3,000
33.31
85.;f:
•:i.r»i)
should not be directed to transfer, pay
Tell a t where rou want to bur a<>4
$':5,000
277.57
210,73
17!»,r:
over and distribute the balance of funda
t
h
t monthly iia.vineiit you raa ^ o r d .
LOANS ON ANY AMOI NT
and ssseU ot the estate remaining in its
RE-SALKS OK NEW
$:J;J,OOO ON EQUIPMENT AND
haudt ia such manner, to auch persons
V*nr Telephone Call Is I i i v I M
FARM.
or parties and subject to auch condi$ 3 1 6 , 0 0 0 ON MACHINKRV.
HAVENDALE
IV 9-3?35
tions
may be decreed by thia Court:
$50,000
2 N D MORTGAGii
ON
why auch decree should not l)e made
Central Loration For All N u s u u
OFFICE BUILDINGS
and why such other and further relief as
SI'j FULTUN AVK., HKMFSTEAD
AND MANY HOUSE LO.VNS
to this Court may seem Just and proper
•hould not be granted.
Suffolk County. L I . . N . Y .
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, we
BRENTWOOD — ioreclusure. $200 down,
have Caused the aeal of the Surrauch, 3 bedrooms, $8,000. Many olbera.
rogates' Court of said County
MeLaurhlin Realty, H". Kirst A r t , (open
of New York to be tiereunto
Suudays), 6 1 0 BR 3-8413.
affixed.
Lie.
Mortgage
Broker
(Seal)
W I T N E S S : HON. S.
SAMUEL
DiFALCO, a S u r r o g a t e of our
54 W A L L ST.. R M . 700
Farms & A c r e a g e
aaid County at the County of
New York 5. N. Y,
New York, the 23ra day of
O r a n g e County
October, 196S.
ft (tlmulatiiiK a<'s. 4 rm. $ 9 , 9 0 0 .
H
A
5-8765
/ # / Philip A. Donahue.
ti rui v i l l a r t hoiuf. Iri>U>. $.j.500.
Clerk of lUe MurroireUt' Courl
Cliel Duun, Ukr,. WalUou, NY. Ptt ii-:>0S4
Sat., Hri. 9-5
ROOSEVELT
HAZEL
B. GRAY
AX 1-5858 . 9
Home-Owners
Business Owners
Refinance Plan
The SHELDON M o d e l TIOOOI
Long rangs turret tuner with
preset fine tuning (or vivid color
pictures p/ui sharp, deer bleckend-white TV. Front controls.
Charcoal finish on metel. Base,
opt., eKtre.
0
MCATER
DEPENDABILITY
SMORE
NATURAL COLOR!
Admiral Gold Prscltlon
WIrtd Chaiils
t micia IncliM ol pur* t4-lil.
sold appllta (o pr«cltlo«
wirint by •Icclradspositlen.
EVERY
ADMIRAL
With N*w Admiral
Eltctroflle Color Balancsr
COLOR
TV
HAS
PROVISION
d ] EASIER
TUNING!
with ftow Admiral
Contrast/Brightnati
Control
FOR
UHF
TUNING'
BROOKS on Broadway, Inc*
2271 BROADWAY. N X
TR 3-3232
BEN FRANKLIN
Commercial C'rp
CIVIL
Tiiciday, Noveitifier 26, 1968
SERVICE
LEADER
REAL ESTATE
INTEGRATED
•
V A C A N T for quick possession by quick handy buyer.
Owner sacrificinq a t only $15,000 full price. Only $450
down needed. Gl No Cash Down.
LIVE RENT FREE
J A 9-4400
NO
i
•
5
S
CIVIL SERVICE
SPECIAL
•
5
H U G E 10 R O O M S , . 2 spacious
c a b i n c t lined kitchens, 2 b a t h s ,
full b a s e m e n t , a u t o m a t i c h e a t ,
t r e m e n d o u s suburban p l o t has
2 e x c e l l e n t s t r u c t u r e s f o r ext r a income. Full p r i c e f o r e v e r y t h i n g only $ 1 5 , 5 0 0 w i t h only
$ 5 0 0 d o w n f o r c i v i l i a n . G . I . no
cosh.
BRING DEPOSIT
IL 7-3100
159-12 HILLSIDE AVE.
103-09 NORTHERN BLVD.
JAMAICA
CORONA
Roosevelt and Hempstead OfFices Ad on This Paqe
Mollis
5
SOLID BRICK
5
SPACIOUS ROOMS
Q
OVERSIZE GARAGE
•
NEAR SCHOOLS.
•
SHOPPING
•
TRANSPORTATION
BETTER REALTY
FHA SPECIAL
$250 FULL DN. PAYMENT
so.
OZONE
PARK,
1-fomily
i h i n g l e , g a r a g e , gas h e a t , SV2
rooms, plus f u l l b a t h . M a n y ext r a s . such as s t o v e , r e f r i g e r a t o r , washing machine, etc. C a l l
to-day, vacant, $13,500.
MOVE IN 3 WEEKS
ALL 5 O F F I C E S O P E N 7 D A Y S A W E E K
G.I. No Down
P.M.
1-FAMILY, brick, a t t a c h e d gar a g e , 3 b e d r o o m s , oil h e a t , l o w
m o r t g a g e payments, clean and
immaculate,
beautiful
land*
scaped
enclosed
bock
gord.
G l $100 down, F H A $750 full
down payment.
THANKSGIVING
GIVEAWAY
Gl or FHA
EXTRA SPECIAL
G l or FHA
1 - F A M I L Y , stone a n d
shingle,
d e t a c h e d , g a r a g e , oil h e a t , ext r a l a v a t o r y , finished b a s e m e n t .
G . l . no d o w n p a y m e n t ,
FHA
$ 3 0 0 on c o n t r a c t signing. Full
price $15,900.
J A M A I C A
1 - F A M I L Y , modern Colonial, 7
rooms, 4 b e d r o o m s , full basem e n t , g a r a g e , oil h e a t . A r e a l
buy. G o o d f o r income. G . l . no
down
payment,
FHA
small
down payment.
HEMPSTEAD
JA 9-5100
" '^hemp^TETL'
J
IV 9-8814.8815
160-13 HILLSIDE AVE.
JAMAICA
•
•
OPEN 7 DATS
OL 7-3838-1034
A
WEEK
AGATE RLTY S
BETTER T H A N RENT
COUNTRY
$390 TOTAL CASH
W I L L give your family
for
Christmas
in
a
one
finest a r e a s of Nassau
$6,500
home
of
SET BACK on huge t r e e
the
County.
Vacant.
plot
in
North
This
4
room
morveleous
CALL
18«-18 Linden Blvd.
St. Albans, K.Y.
Open 7 Days a Week
9 AM to 0 PM
Plenl.v of Parking- Space
COTTAGE
this
NOW
ofFers
bargain.
JAMAICA
a
repoir.
IV 9-5800
MA 3-3800
17 South Franklin Sf.
277 NASSAU ROAD
HEMPSTEAD
ROOSEVELT
BETTER REALTY
ALL 5 OFFICES OPEN 7 D A Y S A WEEK; 9:30 A . M . T O 8:30 P.M.
CAMBRIA HEIGHTS
$900
I A>t forced to sell 6 room h o u s e : wallto-wall carpet, p a r t fin base, p a r a s e .
$17,090.
H O M E FINDERS
Fl M 9 5 0
DOWN
NO CASH DOWN
TO GIs
SPRINGFIELD GARDENS
2-FAMILY
ROOMS
2 Baths — 2 0 ' Living Room
4 Bedrooms, L a n d s c a p e d .
5 & S Room A p a r t m e n t s A v a i l o b l e on T i t l e — 5 0 x 1 0 0 G r o u n d s
—
Garage
—
Oil
Heating
System.
$89-00
SMALL
MONTHLY
TO
BANK!
DOWN
TO NON
PAYMENT
GIs
B U T i m V 8 GREEN
168-25 Hillside Ave.
Jamaica, N.Y.
BAISLEY PARK
IXTEGR.ATED
JA 6 - 6 3 0 0
F o r k i n g F a c i l i t i e i A a v a i l a b l e —^ O p e n 7 D a y s a V / c e k
$14,000
G.I. N O
For Rent
, i'
«
.
,
.
-
CAMBRIA HEIGHTS
4 ROOMS lUnvn, 3 up, siucco, oil heat.
flT,!»()((. $ 8 0 0 cabh.
H O M E FINDERS
PI M 9 5 0
EXTRA LARGE ROOMS.
GAS HEAT
GARAGE
N O CASH G l
CASH
Corfier Plot
4 Bdrms.
.AiaKnilicent buiiKalow, fraliireN
:iOxMMI plot, garage, t-ytlone
fence,
rooniN in Hn. bsnit.
with kltfhen and batli, refrigerator pliiw all extras,
fcleal
at «10.9i)0.
G.I. N O
CASH
FHA
4 Bedrooms
TAKE OVER EXISTING
16»-11 HillsUle Ave., J a m a i c a , N.Y.
Open 7 Days a Week 9 A.M. to ft P.M.
Plenty of f'arUinir Space
$16,500
MOVK K U a i T IX — v . \ « . \ \ r
IMai'lied, t-fanUly with ganige,
newly decorated, eat-In kilclicn,
good neighborhood, move in immediately and pay low rent
iintil closing.
FHA $600
G.I. N O C A S H
6 Years Old
JA 3-4521
Ranch
U rooniH, detached,
bedrooniN,
landscaped,
10x100
iilot,
'i
rooms, in fln. nite clnb bsmt,
oil heat. Located in Kaisley
Turk, nr. all schools and sluipping, l.ow cash and terms urranged for all.
BRITA HOMES
AX 7-1440
1 3 5 * 1 8 LIBERTY AVE.
Richmond H i l l 1 9 , N . Y .
aiVEKSIDB D U i y a ,
•partmenU Intarraclal
(alcw 7 - i l l f
MORTGAGE
AGATE REALTY
$700
Rentals also available
Open 0 AM-0 I'M . 7 Uuyi
INTE(iRATKI), SI. Albunn. S-5 rotmi apt*
f r o m ¥!!•? $125.
H O M E FINDERS
Fl 1 - 1 9 5 0
$ 14.990
2 STORY DETACHED
COLONIAL
HANDYMAN
SPECIAL 2-FAMILY
Two larKe U room aptH, pluti 3
room studio npt. in bsnit, detiH'hed witli giUHKe. Walk to
(tiibwuy Hiul Mliopping. Call now.
Tills won't luNt.
INTEGRATED
7V2
4 BEDROOMS
LARGE LIVING ROOM,
D I N I N G ROOM. AND KITCHEN
N O CASH G l
FHA $500
C A M B R I A H E I G H T S — $25 W e e k
BRICK, 3 family, finished baee, ^I-car garae^e. wall-to-wall carpet. $900
cash.
H O M E FINDERS
Fl M 9 5 0
12 Rooms
HOLLIS
$16,150
ALL BRICK
with
Needs
i
MOVE IN THREE WEEKS
AR 6-3233
Freeport.
opportunity
fantastic
tome
East
home
studed
k.
EXTRA G O O D BUY
135-30 ROCKAWAY BLVD.
SO. OZONE PARK
••
Payment
POCKET"
LIST REALTY CORP.
•
•
RENT
G.I. NO DOWN PAYMENT
CIVILIAN LOW DOWN PAYMENT
•
•
TO FIT YOUR
FAYING
i
STOP! LOOK NO MORE!
$16,990 i
FULL PRICE
9:30 A . M . T O 8:30
S
HOLIDAY
PARK
JA 3-3377
FROM
HOMES
•
•
SOLID BRICK
LEGAL 2-FAMILY
CASH
SPECIALIST
QUEENS &
""^SSAU
STOP
B
135-19 ROCKAWAY BLVD
G.I.
•
•
LEGAL
2 - F A M I L Y
12 ROOMS — DETACHED
T W O FAMILY d t t a c h e d , 2 apts.
• a c h , 5 rooms, 1 o p t . now vo*
c a n t f o r quick possession. O w n e r pressed f o r cash. M u s t sell
a t once. Full d o w n
payment
only $ 1 , 0 0 0 c i v i l i a n .
CONVENIENT
OFFICES AT
B
• INTEGRATED ••
•
HOME
•
OFFICES
READY
TO
SERVE
YOU!
Call For
Appointment
EXCLUSIVE W I T H US
MOVE RIGHT IN
LIVE RENT FREE
Long Island
rjtrjFjtrjfrjgrj^^jgFjfrjfr^
•••••••••••••fl
INTMRATEO
SO. O Z O N S
VALVES
Long Island
LONG ISLAND
5
Page Elevf
*
prtrau
rurnlthbd
INTEGRATED
^
E
^
2 FAMILY WALK TO SUBWAY
NO CASH Gl
REDUCED TO $13,000
S
I
g
^
=
=
10 Rooms—Both Apartments Vacant
Modern Kitchens & Baths
Keyi In our office
No. 1250
g
S
£
I E-S-S-E-X
143.01 HILLSIDE AVE.
£
JAMAICA
^
Take Utb hve. 'E' Train tu Mutphiii Blvd. Station. OffiM 7 U^^YH A WKEK
AX 7-7900
S
.'age Twelve
CIVIL
TOASTS ANYTHING!
Bakes like an Oven Too!
SERVICE
LEADER
Tuesday, November 26, 196$
NEW STAINLESS STEEL
COFFEEMAKER COUNTS
J H E CUPS
I P Deluxe
$
TOAST* R* OVEN
• Trademark of General Electric Company
Toasts breadf muffins or rolls —
any shape or thickness — bakes tool
Fully Automatic Toasting — Place bread in and start —
when done, door opens and toast slides out automatical!/..
Bakes Like an Oven — Perfect for Brown N' Serve rolls,"
frozen meat pies, dessert pastries, baked potatoes, melted
cheese sandwiches.
Versatile Heat Control — Select easily for toasting, baking
or top side browning operation. Toasts nine different shades.
Bakes from 200» to 500».
N e w Safety Heating Elements — Heating coils are com«
pletely enclosed in glass tubes. Eliminates shock hazard.
Revolutionary D M i g n — There's plenty of room so extra
thick slices of bread or muffins will not jam inside.
Automatic Toast Shade Control — Sensing device gives samo
shade of toast each time whether bread is fresh or stale.
•
•
•
•
•
•
Model
P33
Delicious
Coffee Flavor
O
I f s Stainless
spout, lid, pump and basket are
stainless for perfect coffee
flavor everytime—easier clean*
ing too.
0
It Counts The Cups—Builtin gauge tells you how many
cups are left or how much
water to put in.
Q
New Modem DaiilsliSt)rnii0,
Everyfimel
O
Aotoaatic Brew Control^
When coffee's done it stops perk*
ing and stays hot automatically.
@ Antonatfe S ^ l Light Tells you when coffee's ready.
0
Mates 3 ! • 10 Cups.
PRODUCTS
THE THRIFTY
BUYER CAN
SAVE and STILL
BE sm
IF HE SHOPS
AT
BUY WISE
DISCOUNT
CENTER
AS/( TO SEE
THESE AND
MODEL 170
•
Fabric Dial Settings
• Large Soleplate
• Deep Down Steam
Penetration
DELUXE SPRAY,
STEAM AND
DRY IRON
Automatic Power
Sprinkler
Water Window
Wash & Wear Settings
I MODEL F0I
ONLY
• Large Fill Funnel
• Built-in Cord Lift
• Contoured Hand Grip
BUY
WISE
115W.45thSt. D I S C O U N T
NEW YORK
CENTER
ALL
omit
DEPENDABLE
mm
PL 72974
Tuesday, Novemlier 26, 1963
CIVIL
SERVICE
LEADER
Page Thirteii
BENRUS WATCHES
Page Fourteen
CIVIL
SERVICE
LEADER
TuesfTay, Nov<?mber 19, 1963
11 Promotion Examsjl
Offered By State
Until December 9
E l e v e n p r o m o t i o n a l e x a m i n a t i o n s h a v e b e e n a n n o u n c e d by t h e N e w York S t a t e D e p a r t m e n t of Civil Service for t h e f i l i n g period b e t w e e n n o w a n d D e c e m b e r 9. T h e p o s i t i o n , |
the r e l a t i n g d e p a r t m e n t , t h e e x a m no. a n d t h e salary is l i s t e d below. F o r - f u r t h e r i n f o r m a t i o n a n d a p p l i c a t i o n f o r m s c o n t a c t t h e D e p a r t m e n t a t 270 B r o a d w a y , N e w York C i t y ;
or T h e S t a t e C a m p u s , A l b a n y .
FLAG PRESENTATION
New SOstar US. flaff was
Toll traffic supervisor, East
presented recently to County Executive Edwin G. Michaelian by the
Police Benevolent Association of the Westchester County Parkway Hudson Parkway Authority, exam
Last Call Nears
,
Police. Shown (left to right), are Chief Marvin Ericson of the Parkway no. 1120, $5,910 to $7,205.
Senior
toll
audit
clerk,
East
Police; Parkway Patrolman William DeBrocky, PBA secretary; Parkway Patrolman Albert Bolwell, president of the Association who pre- Hudson Parkway Authority, exam
sented the colors on behalf of the entire PBA; Michaelian; and Parkway no. 1121, $4,450 to $5,510.
Over
250
members
and
Senior tax valuation engineer,
Patrolman Edward Berletic of Ardsley, PBA treasure.
Office for Local Government, ex- f r i e n d s of t h e R o c k l a n d Org a n i z a t i o n for M e n t a l l y 111
am no. 1119, $9,480 to $11,385.
(ROMIC
gathered
Assistant valuation
engineer, C h i l d r e n
Public Service, exam no. 1052, r e c e n t l y a t t h e L a m p l i g h t e r s
L a s t call is n e a r for a g a l a
$7,740 to $9,355.
Hall in N e w City, for t h e o r Assistant sanitaiy engineer (De- g a n i z a t i o n ' s a n n u a l d i n n e r - C h r i s t m a s cruise to B e r m u d a
a n d N a s s a u . I t is o p e n to
sign> Public Works, exam no. 1117, d a n c e .
m
e m b e r s of t h e Civil Service
ALBANY, Nov. 25—The E a s t H u d s o n P a r k w a y A u t h o r i t y $7,740 to $9,355.
Dr. Paul Lindenberg of New
Senior sanitary engineer (De- City served as toastmaster. The E m p l o y e e s Assn. a n d b o o k i n g s
c h a p t e r of the Civil Service E m p l o y e e s A s s o c i a t i o n h a s
once.
a c h i e v e d a t w o - p o i n t t r i u m p h in its c o n t i n u i n g drive for sign), Public Works, exam no. Very Rev. M-sgr. James F. Cox, s h o u l d be m a d e a t
1118, $9,480 to $11,385.
b e n e f i t s a n d improved c o n d i t i o n s for its m e m b e r s .
Oatholic chaplain at Rockland Prices s t a r t a t $185.
Supervising stenographer. Dis- State Hospital and a director of
The seven-day cruise, sponThe Board of the East Hudson
(Kings ROMIC, gave the invocation. Mrs. sored by Knickerbocker Travel
'arkway Authority, responding to for its employees and at the same trict Attorney's Office
V request from the CSEA chapter, time agreed to provide travel and County), exam no. 1128, $5,450 to Adam E. Skrzec, president of Service in cooperation with the
Civil Service Travel Club, will be
ROMIC,. welcomed the guests.
las adopted a grievance procedure moving expenses for employees $6,890.
Supervising hearing reporter.
promoted or transferred.
During the dinner. Fred Leiper, aboard the air-conditioned, staOther benefits won by CSEA District Attorney's Office (Kings past president of ROMIC, pre- bilized, one-class pleasure ship
for employees of the Parkway County), exam no. 1129, $7,250 to sented Dr. E. R. Clardy with a S.S. Olympia of the Greek Line
Authority in the past year include $9,250.
plaque in recognition of his ser- fleet.
Supervising
clerk.
County vices to ROMIC. Dr. • Clardy, a
unemployment insurance coverage
CSEA members will receive
and semi-annual posting of ac- Clerk's Office (New York County), member of the Advisory Board, land tours free (these must be
crued vacation, sick leave and exam no. 1130, $5,150 to $6,590. volunteered his services to screen paid for by others taking the
Supervising stenographer, Dis- children for the first two pilot cruise) and a full program of acF i n a l p l a n s h a v e b e e n c o m - personnel leave credits.
A spokesman for the Employees' trict Attorney's Office (Queens summer programs of the ROMIC tivities.
Appropriate
religious
pleted for the a n n u a l C h r i s t Association said efforts are con- County), exam no. 1131, $5,450 program. Dr. Clardy, a native of services will be held on board
m a s party for the Newark
tinuing to achieve additional em- to $6,890.
Tennessee, is associated
with ship on Christmas day.
State School chapter, Civil ployment rights and safeguards
These positions are open only Rockland State Hospital as supThe Olmpia will leave New
Service E m p l o y e e s Assn., ac- for employees of the Authority. in the department or promotional
ervising
psychiatrist
of
the York City on December 19 and
cording to Albert
G a l l a n t , Among* the items being sought unit t h a t is indicated.
return there on December 26.
Children's Unit.
general c h a i r m a n . T h e party are a survivors death benefit,
Dr. Paul H. Hoch, New York Participants will have full run of
of
out-of-tltle
v h i c h will be h e l d D e c e m b e r discontinuance
State commissioner of Mental the ship, including Its thres
schedules
for
pools, card
rooms,
'2 at t h e Elks Club will begin work, vacation
Hygiene, was honorary chairman swimming
maintenance personnel, job spefor the dinner-dance, at which a bars, dance floors and game
vlth t h e dinner a t 7 p.m.
A gift exchange is plamied to oifications, work clothing and
souvenir journal was distributed rooms.
include the dinner and dancing I
weather gear, adequate overEarly reservations are urged as
which included future plaixs for
The annual Christmas party of
ill follow from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. time pay meal allowances and im»
the ROMIC Day Training Center. this is one of the most popular
the Oneonta County, chapter of
cruises of the season and space is
Dex" Morrison's orchestra will proved coverage for employees in- Civil Service Employees Assn. will
limited.
rovide the music for the even- jured in the line of duty.
be held on Saturday, December 14
In the Metropolitan New York
ig.
at the Elks Club in Oneonta at
area, bookings may be had by apSheeder Named
Marie Donaldson and Harry
6:30 p . m . The evening will conlying to Mrs. Adrienne Rich,
ALBANY,
Nov.
25—Thomas sist of dinner of prime ribs of
labat are the ticket chairmen,
Knickerbocker
Travel
Service,
'hey announced t h a t the final Sheeder, associate dean at the beef, followed by dancing.
Time
&
Life
Bldg.,
New
York
20,
Gary P e r k i n s o n , public relay to purchase the tickets is State University College at FreN.Y., or by calling her at PLaza
donia,
has
been
named
chairman
)ecember 9. Rose Pettrone, publ a t i o n s director for t h e Civil
7-5400.
• Use postal zone numbers on
icity chairman, announced that of the College Division of the
Service
E m p l o y e e s Assn., w a s
your mail to insure prompt
In Albany Area
Harriet Sistek will handle the Western New York Personnel and
the guest speaker at a recent
delivery.
leoorating again for the chapter. Guidance Association for 1964.
In the Albany area, contact
c h a p t e r m e e t i n g of t h e M a n h a t t a n S t a t e Hospital c h a p t - Miss Hazel Abrams, 478 Madison
Ave., Albany.
er. P e r k i n s o n also c o n d u c t e d
Note: Miss Abrams, in the near
a q u e s t i o n a n d a n s w e r sesfuture, will also announce plans
s i o n c o n c e r n i n g public r e l a - for a Mediterranean cruise.
t i o n s of t h e Assn. f o l l o w i n g
h i s address.
Charles Loochs, of the chapter,
announced at the meeting that Celeste Rosenkrani
the chapter had set plans for a Wins Recruiting Priie
M a r c h ' dinner-dance. He also
BUFFALO,
Nov.
25—Celeste
mentioned t h a t a land mark at
Rosenkranz,
a
senior
interviewer
the hospital on Ward's Island
In the Buffalo office of the State
was being torn down. In addition,
Division of Employment, won fir.st
he mentioned that the construcprize in an achievement award
tion for the new staff house and
contest for her work In recruiting:
nurse's home was well underway.
employees for a new shopping
Ben Sherman, New York City
mall that opened this year in subfield representative, urged memurban Amherst.
v..4 bers at the meeting to start cor- Harvey Shaver, an employment
respondence with their respective
PROBATION INSTALLATION — (left), director of Probation, are: Herman Grackin. State legislators to support the Interviewer, won a cash award and
an achievement certificate for his
ihowa at the recent iustallatiou luncheoti are the president; George Proteres, flrst vice president;
^ c r e a s e proposal.
work in the high school drop-out
lew officers of the Probation Department unit, Suf- Elizabeth Walsh, second vice president; Catherine | ^ ^ ^ ^
Dlk County chapter of the Civil Service Employees Wulf, recording secretary; Rose Shain, correspond- | pj^j^j, BOOKLET by uTs Gov- program.
\ssn. The installation was held at the Indian Head ing secretary; Eleanor Marshall, executive repre- emment on Social Security. Mail
Miss Rosenkranz and Shaver
»staur:<
' ^Muniack. From k-i't ta right, the of- sentative, and .loseph M'• m*, treasurer. Not s ' l c w n „ „ i y . Lcari,.,. 97 I)uane Street, are members of Buffalo chapter.
'New York 7, N.Y,
.'r«
iii:>tallin£ officer Uu..aid J. Edeen, is George Walil, e.xecutike representative.
Civil Service Employees Assn.
250 Attend ROMIC
Annual Dinner-Dance Gala Christmas
Cruise; Prices
Start At $185
Two-Point Victory Won By
Hudson Pkwy. Employees
lewark State Plans
For Christmas Party
Oneonta Chapter
Christmas Party
Perkinson Speaks
At Manhattan State
CIVIL
Tuesday, Novemlier 26, 1963
SERVICE
Pre-Filed
I
Before
Christmas Gift!
Page Fifteen
LEADER
Bills
Legislature
On the Assembly side, Assembly(Continued from Page 2)
additional interest to annuity sav- man Anthony Barbiero has proposed, in the fourth bill to be
ings accounts.
prefiled t h a t state employees be
granted free health insurance,
with no employee contributions.
The measure also would authorize
local government units to take over
the full cost of such programs.
Assemblyman Louis DeSalvio is
seeking
passage of a bill to provide
This N . Y. S f a t . d l - J
t ^lOH SCHOOi I
I jUlIk, tquivalencii 3
.~thMur
t Wf^^nomh 3
M m
f
5
A "convertible'' Fountain Pen
with a 14K gold point
SET
IN ATTRACTIVE
GtFT BOX
$8-95
t h a t a f t e r June 30, 1964 t h a t regular interest on pension funds of
the New York City retirement
system shall be pegged at four percent a year, compounded annually
for all members, instead of three
percent, now in effect for some.
A measure by Assemblyman Robert Kelly has been prefiled to
allow civil service employees a
third additional Increment a f t e r
completion of 15 years of service
In the same salary grade.
Senator Pred R a t h has Introduced a bill to permit a salary
raise for grand jury stenographers
in Oneida County. Senator Simon
Liebowitz wants the New York
City Administrative Code amended
to increase death benefits for city
employees.
In another bill, Senator William
Rosenblantt asks t h a t the finar
retirement allowance for New York
City employees and policemen be
based on highest three,. Instead of
five years service.
Finally, Senator Jack Bronston
has proposed extension of the present law permitting retired members of state, New York City retirement systems to be employed
as substitute teachers in public
schools and college without suspension or loss of pension rights.^
The present law expires in June,
1964.
ploma
is
th«
legel^
LKUAL NOTICB
^
equivalent
of
qradu-^
• a t l o n from a 4-year High SchooL^
T
H
E
P
E
D
P
L
R OP T H E STATE OF NEW
^ I t is valuable fo non-graduates o f ^
YORK. By t h e Ga.^ of God Free and
• High School for:
^ Independent. To H E R B E R T W I L L N E R and
^
• Enfiployment
• Promotion
^ KARL STRAUSS.
Send G R E E T I N G :
^ • Advanced Educational Training ^
Tpnn
the
petition
of
IRMGARD
•
• Personal S a t i s f a c t i o n
^
STRAUSS, who resides a t 7 1 5 P a r k Ave•
Our Intensive 5-Week Course pre--^ nue, Borotigh of M a n h a t t a n , City
and
^pares for official exams conducted^ State of New York, you and each of
• at regular intervals by N . Y. State'4 you are hereby cited to show cause before
the Snrropate's
Court of
New
Y'ork
• D e p t . of Education.
J County, held a t the Hall of Records in the
• Classes in M a n h a t t a n o r J a m a i c a - ^ County ol New Y*ork on t h e 17th day
•
E N R O L L N O W ! S t a r t Classes ^ of December, 1063, a t ten o'clock in
the forenoon of t h a t day, why the peti• In M A N H A T T A N , W E D . , N O V . 27-4 tioner should not be adjudpetl to the
•.Meet Mon A WVd o :\0 or 7 30 PM'^ owner and an titled to t h e posscp-iion of
^
O r J A M A I C A . FRI., N O V . 2 9
J the securities referred to in E x h i b i t " B "
^
Meet Tiips & TliiirH at 7 FM
^ .innexed to the petition o r the proceeds of
and of any
Be Onr Ciurst at an Opening Clasa ^ the Investment, retention
c h a n c e or sale of said securities inchul• _ _ _ _ S^'i'i'L
Bring Coupon
inp all income received thereon and t h e
sum of $.50,000.00 plus all income and
I DELEHANTY INSTITUTE.
h l l Q 9 1 increment on said sum f r o m the executor
I lir» East l.n St., Manhattan or
| of the estate of A L F R E D B. STRAUSS
. . ...^VICE COACIIIXG
j SO-'JS Merriok HIviI., Jamaica
| who, at t h e time of his death, rrcidcd a t
City, State, Fed & rromntinn Exams
140 Riverside Drive, Borouph of M a n h a t J L M O R ASST CIVIL MECHANICAL
} Name
j tan. Cily and County of New York.
ELECTRIC EXGLNKER
IN TESTIMONY W H E R E O F , we h a v e
High School EqulTnlenoy Diploma
j AUdresa
I
caused the seal of the Surropate's Court
FEDERAL E N T R A X t E EXAMS
• City
Zone
I of the said County of New Y'ork to be
Civil Service ArUhmetle-rrep English
• Admit FREB to one H.R. Equiv, Clasi I h e r e u n t o affixed.
.Ainrhlnist
Tostal Clerk Carrier
WITNESS,
Hon. S. SAMUEL
Elertrlral Insp.
Patrolman-Fireman
Di FALCO, a S u r r o e a t e of o u r
Crane Englnenian
Meter Maid
LEGAL NOTICE
county, a t t h e County of New
Foreman Carpenter
File Clerk
(Seal)
Y'ork. t h e 1st day of November.
City
Plumber
Acctnt
Ruokkeeping
S U P P L E M E N T A L — CITATION — File
in t h e year of otir Lord one
Drafting, Surveying, Teeli Illustration
No. r 3 1 6 8 . 19(5:} — T H E PEOPLE OK
thousand
nine
hundred
and
Math, Alg, Geom, Trig. Calo, I'liyslcs
T H E STATE OF NEW YOKK, By the
eixty-ihree.
Licenses. Stat. Refrig. Elect, Portable
Grace ol God
Frpp and
Independent.
Philip A. Donahue.
Instruction Days, Evenings, Satiirilays
To Mrs. P a t s y Herring, Mik. Carlolta
Clerk of t h e S u r r o e a t e ' s Court
R o r a r and Mr<i. Mnrtlia Grant, Jf livinp,
MONDELL INSTITUTE
and if any or all of them be dead, to CITATION. — T H E P E O P L E
OP
THE
l.%4 W 1 4 ( 7 Av)CH 3-387W \VI 7-'i08«
h e r heirs at law, next of l%ia and Uivtri- STATE OF NEW YORK. By t h e Grace of
Over OS Years Civil Service Training
biitecs whofM? names and plao*" «t res- God. Free and Independent, To .attorney
idence a r e u n k n o w n and if she died f u b - General of the State of New Y o r k ; Elizasennent to the d r c e d r n t herein, to hep beth Gray, also k n o w n as Mrs, Gray and
executors,
administrators,
lepatees,
de- Reverenil Gray: M a r t h a Lyie: Cit.v of New
visren, a^'sitrnees ami 6UC(.e>sorti in interest Y'ork, D'i>artnicnt of W e l f a r e ; Marie Boswhoi«e names and places of residence are t o n : lole Small, also k n o w n as Mrs.
u n k n o w n and to all o t h e r heire nt law, Small; Henry Small, l o l e Brown: Rev.
next of kin and di-ttribuiees of
I n a T.J, J o r d a n : Louise B. H a r t F u n e r a l Home;
Sig:rid L i n d m a n , also known nj« I n a 9, and to ".Mary Doe" t h e n a m e " M a r y Doe"
Lindnian,
t h e tlecedcnt
herein,
whose beinp ficlitin\i»i, the alleged widow of
names and places of residcin'e are un- Nelson S, Hill, deceased, if liviuc and if
k n o w n and cannot, a f t e r dilitrint inriuirv, dead, to t h e executors, a d m i n i s t r a t o r s , dishe
ascertained.
YOr
ARE
H E R E B Y tributees and assigns of "Mary Doe" deCITED TO SHOW C A I S E before
the cease<l, whose names and post office adSurrot-atCH C o n n . New York Count.v, a t drestes are u n k n o w n and cannot a f t e r
for civil service
Room 504 in t h e Hall of Records in the dilipent inquiry be a.scertained by t h e petiCounty of New York, New York, on tioner herein: and to t h e distributees of
for personal satisfaction
December 27, 100.1, at 1 0 : 0 0 A.M., why NeKon S, Hill, deceased whose names and
a certain writing: d a t e d Aupnst 17th. 1961, po«t oflice addresses are u n k n o w n and
Tues. and Thurs., 6:30-8:30
which h a s been offered for p r o b a t e by cannot a l t e r diligent inquiry l>e ascerMilo Miloradovi<h, re^idinp at '.135 E a t t tained by the petitioner herein: brinR
Write or Phone for Information
73rd Street, New York. N.Y., should not t h e persons interested ae creditors, disbe probated as the last Will and Testa- tributees or otherwise in t h e estate of
ment, i-elating- to real .ind personal prop- Nelson S, Hill, deceased, w h o a t the time
erty, of INA S I G R i n LINDMAN, also of his de.iih W,TO a resident of 108 BradEastern School AL 4-5029
k n o w n as INA S. [,1NDMAN, Deceased, h u r s t Avenue, New York, N. Y.
721 Broadway N.Y. 3 (at 8 St.)
who w a s at the time of her death a
Send G R E E T I N G :
resident of 53 Grammercy P a r k N o r t h ,
Upon t h e petition of The P u b l i c AdPlease write me tree a b o u t t h e Bigb
in t h e County of New York, New York. m i n i s t r a t o r of the County of New Y'ork.
Dated. Attested and Sealed,
November h a v i n g his otlice a t Hall of Records, Room
School Equivalency clasa.
2 0 l h . infi3.
309. Boroueh of M a n h a t t a n , City and
Name
HON. J O S E P H A. COX, Surropate. New County of New York, as adminijitrator of
York County, Philip A, Donahue, Clerk. the poods, c h a t t e l s and credits of said deAddress
(L.S.)
ceased :
Boro
PZ, , , ,L3
Y'ou and each of you are hereby cited
CrrATTON. — T H E
PEOPLE
OF
T H E to show cause b e f o r e t h e
Surropate's
STATE OP NEW YORK, By the Grace of Court of New Y'ork County, held at the
God, Free and Independent. To Attorney Hall of Records, in the County of New
instructions
General of t h e S t a t e of New Y'ork: Lies- York, on the '.20th day of December. 1983.
INTENSIVE T R A I N I N G
betU B r i t t : Consul General of the German a t ten o'clock in t h e forenoon of t h a t
Federal Republic; and to " M a r y Doe" t h e day, why the account of proceedings of
S h o r t h a n d , Typing, Brush-Up, E t c .
n a m e " M a r y Doe" beinp
fictitious,
the T h e P u b l i c A d m i n i s t r a t o r of t h e County
ABC BUSINESS SCHOOL
alleged widow of Frerd Mar, deceased, if of New Y'ork, as a d m i n i s t r a t o r of the 130 W. 4U St.
iith Floor
OX S-TS-iO
l i v i n r and if dead, to the executors, a d - goods, c h a t t e l s and credite of said deministrators, distributees and ae«i(ns of ceased, should n o t be judicially settled,
" M a r y D o e " deceased, w h o t e names and and
why t h e t e s t a m e n t a i T
instrument
post office Rtldresses w e u n k n o w n
and dated November 10, 1861, filed in this
c a n n o t a f t e r diligent inciniry be ascertained Court under File No. P 2 0 2 7 - 1 9 0 3
Avallabl*
by t h e petitioner h e r e i n ; and t o the dis- J u n e 8, 1903 ehould n o t b e denied protributees of Fred Mar, deceased, whose b a t e .
I n s t r u c t i o n s & R o a d Tests
n a m e s and post office addressee are unIN TESTIMONY W H E R E O F , We h a v e
F o r C l a s s 1-2>3 Licenses
k n o w n and c a n n o t a f t e r diligent inquiry caused the seal of the Surrogate's Court
be ascertained by the petitioner h e r e i n ; of the said County of New York to be
Model
Auto Driving School
being t ) ^ pereons interested ae creditors, h e r e u n t o affixed.
C H 2 - 7 5 4 7 1 4 5 W 14 St. ( « * 7 A v e . )
distributees or otherwise in the estate of
WITNESS, HON, J O S E P H
A.
Fred Mar, deceased, who at t h e time of
COX. a S u r o g a t e of our said
Open Daily 8 AM. to 10 P.M.
his d e a t h was a resident of 3 0 1 E a s t (Seal)
County, at t h e County of New
Incl. Sat, & Sun.
02ud Strpet. Kew T o r k , N. Y.
York, the 4th day of November
Send G R E E T I N G :
in the year of o u r L o r d one
Upon the petition of The P u b l i c Adminthousand
nine
hundrerd
and
istrator of the County of New York,
bixty-lliree.
PATHONIZt
h a v i n r h i s office at Hall of Records,
,
Phiilp A. Donahue,
OUR
ADVERTISERS
R o o m 3 0 8 , Borough of M a n h a t t a n . City
Clerk of t h e Surrogate's Court
and County of New York, u atlministrator
of t h e goods, c h a t t e l s and credite of taid
deceased:
T o n and each of you are hereby cited
t o show cause b e f o r e t h e S u r r o g a t e ' s Court
of New York County, held a t t h e Hall
of RecoivJ*. in t h e County of New York,
on t h e 17iU d a y of Dectmber, 1063, at
B t H l N O M eiCUUULa
ten o'clock in t h e forenoon of t h a t day,
w h y t h e a c c o u u i of proceedings of Tlie
P u b l i c A d m i n i s t r a t o r of t h e County of MONROE S C H O O L - I B M COURSES {J^'^pTr^x^TS?,
New York, a s a d m i n i s t r a t o r of the goods, VICB IBM TESTS. (Approved for Vets.), switchboard, typing, I4CB Bookkeeplof
c h a t t e l s and credits of
said deceased, machine, FI.8 Equivalency, English for foreign born. Med. Legal and Spanish s e c
ehould not be judicially settled,
retarial. Diiy and Bve CIMMS. East Tremont Ave., Bostoo Boad, Bronx. K1 3-BOOO.
IN T E S T I M O N Y W H E R E O F , We h a v e
caused t h e seal of the Surrogate's Court
n e I D U I
IBM—Keypunch, Sorter, Tabi, Collator. Reproducer,
of t h e said County of New York t o be
D E L r n I
Operation. Wiring. SECB£TARlALr-Med., Leg.,
Ext.
h e r e u n t o affixed.
• I I C I M B C C c c u n m < Elec. Typ., Swtchbrd, Comptometry, All Stenuu, Dlctapb.
WITNESS,
HON, 8. 8 A M U E L
DUaiNB^a
STENOTYH* (Mach. Shorthnd). PREP, lor CIVIL
DiFALCO, a S u r r o g a t e of o u r SVUE Day-Eve. FREE Placmnt. 1713 KiiiM Hwry, Bklyn. (Neat to Avalon Thaat.)
(Seal)
said County, at the County of DJl 6-7200. 47 Mloeola Blvd.. Mineola, L.I. (al bua * U R B d e p o U ) . CH W 9 0 P .
New York, the SOth day of
October, in the year of o u r Lord
one t h o u e a u d nine Ituudred and
•ixty-three.
Philip A, Donahue,
Clerk « t tb« buiruiriite'it Court
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Page Sixteen
CIVIL
SERVICE
LEADER
Tuesday, November 26, 1963
H
Acting Watertown Mayor
Raps Slow Action In
Creating Eligible Lists
(From Leader Correspondent)
WATERTOWN, Nov. 25—A city council man has told the Watertown Council that If
the secretary of the Municipal Civil Service Commission is "asleep at the switch", he
should be replaced.
Councilman Charles W. Hayes,
acting mayor in the absence of
Mayor William G. Lachenauer.
told the council last week that
he has noticed "the same trouble
for 15 years" in getting eligible
lists for municipal civil service
appointments.
He
referred
specifically to two members of
the fire department holding jobs
under provisional appointment
for a year.
"Get on the Ball"
Hayes told City Manager Ronald G. Forbes to call the civil
service secretary "and get him
on the ball."
Forbes said there Is an eligible list with two names. One
of those eligible, he said, has
declined appointment. The other
is In the military service.
"I presume we need a new list,"
the city manager commented.
No News, Some News,
What News?: Topic
At ASPA Meeting
ALBANY, Nov. 25—The efforts of government agencies
to manage news will be the
topic of a panel discussion at
next month's meeting of the
Capital District Chapter of
the American Society for
Public Administration. Panel
members will express opinions on what the public
should not be told about government operations.
The panel will composed of
David H. Beetle, special correspondent, Gannett News Service;
Dr. James A. Rledel, professor of
Government,
State
University
Graduate School of Public Affairs; and Ernest Gross, public
relations consultant. New York
State Department of Labor.
The meeting should be of
special interest to citizen groups,
government administrators and
public Information personnel. It
will be held at the Health Department Auditorium, 84 Holland
Ave., Albany, Tuesday, December 10, at 8 p.m. and will be open
to the public.
Forbes said he will be "glad
to again ask the secrr^iry for
a list, not only for this but
others."
"I am In accord with Hayes, I
too would like eligible lists."
Futures In Jeopardy
Meanwhile, the president of
the Watertown Firefighters, Joseph Corbett, told the council he
feels men so long in provisional
appointments "are being denied
their rights and are having their
futures placed In jeopardy."
Corbett said the long-time
provisional appointees should
have their annual clothing allowances and City Manager Forbes said If the council wants to
change its policy "for provisional
appointees In the fire and police
departments," he will prepare
a resolution to establish such a
policy.
The city manager said he can
not "be assured" the provisional
appointees "will pass the civil
service test."
C.iarges Discrimniation
Corbett charged that under
the circumstances "they are
being discriminated against. The
city manager said that tests are
prepared by the state civil service commission and are held
"about once a year." In the past
It has taken months to get test
results and set up eligible lists.
The local civil service commission is headed by Starr V.
Stitt. Members are: Attornev
Donald A. Wiltse and Supervisor Hugh E. Hamilton. The
commission, by law, hires its
secretary whose main functions
are to prepare and hold civil
service examinations, enforce regulations and certify to the cor-
Buffalo Unit Fetes
25-Year Members
BUFFALO, Nov. 25—The State
Insurance Fund unit of Buffalo
chapter. Civil Service Employees
Assn., gave a 25-year anniversary
party In the Park Lane recently
for Sherry Belllsslmo, a claims
representative, and Michael Spry,
a safety service representative.
Both have worked for the State
for a quarter century and are
active in CSEA affairs.
Kathleen Marshall Named
'Employee Of The Year'
BUFFALO, Nov. 25 — Kathleen M. Marshall, a member
of Meyer Memorial Hospital
Unit, Erie county chapter,
Civil Service Employees Assn.,
has been named "Erie County
Employee of the Year" by the
G-E-X Corp., an employee
cooperative.
Miss Marshall, who received a
$100 savings bond and a plaque,
is acting director of the Meyer
Memorial Hospital School of
Nursing.
A 22.year-career employee, the
«itdtlou noted that Miss Marshall
gave "uixstintlngly of her time
beyond her hours of duty."
She was nominated for the
award by Michael Faust, president, and Angelica Phelps, first
vice president, of the chapter.
Review Steno Exam
(Continued from Page 3)
Feily also took Issue with tiie
composition of the exam saying
that according to his reports "the
participants were expected to
have a depth of knowledge in the
field of statistics not iu keeping
with their specialized occupations."
rectness of municipal payrolls
where civil service personnel Is
Involved.
During the regular weekly
city council session both Mayor
Lachenauer
and
Councilman
David A. Marshall were absent.
Councilman Hayes was chosen to
preside.
SAFETY LESSONS
— Fire prevention lessons are ffiven t«
Peggy Geer, student nurse at Rockland State Hospital, by George
Fuller, a member of the fire department at the hospital, during safety
demonstrations at the hospital. In the rear Is William Herman, instructor of the fire safety classes, patrolman Cornelius Burkert and
other student nurses from the hospital.
CSEA Takes Stand On
Attendant
Reallocation
(Continued from Page 1)
a new clas8 title of senior attendant, grade 9.
The following is Felly's statement:
"It is with great pleasure that
I welcome this opportunity to
make representation to you on
behalf of the State's nearly 23,000
Mental Hospital attendants," he
said.
Continuing his remarks Feily
said, "We of New York State can
pride ourselves in the advancements made in the care treatment of Mental patients within
our State Mental Institutions.
Many forms of therapy which were
not even dreamed of a few short
years ago are in use today. Procedures such as the "open door"
policy of our State Mental Hospi-
tals would have been considered
quite radical and virtually impossible a little more than a decade
ago. These advancements including many new concepts in the
treatment of many positions In
our State Mental Institutions including the position of attendant."
In addition he said, "The position of attendant at all levels has
evolved from positions of a custodial nature to positions which play
an active role in the administration of therapeutic procedures in
the treatment and rehabilitation
of the mentally 111. The evolution
of these positions from their former concept has been given little
recognition especially in the area
of annual compensation. The
State of New York can well be
proud of the new role played by
Jefferson
Supervisor
Calls For Perlodiial
Comparative Pay Study
WATERTOWN, Nov. 25—The chairman of the salary
committee of the Jefferson county board of supervisors has
come up with a suggestion which, if adopted, might avoid
periodic employee drives for higher pay.
Supervisor William A. Denlson,
Adams, has reported to his colleagues t h a t : "a comparative salary
survey should be made annually
or more often when substantial
changes in the economic situation w a r r a n t . '
Private Business
He explained that county government pay should be compared
with comparable work in private
business.
"If the differences between
county and the salary survey
lines warrant, an appropriate
adjustment in the salary structure should be considered." he
said.
The salary committee's recent
recommendations to the board of
supervisors was rebuffed by the
whole board in what Mrs. F a n nie W. Smith, president of the
Jefferson County chapter. Civil
Service Employees Association,
called "political expediency."
Supervisor Denlson s new plan
would be used for future salary
adjustments If the board accepts
it.
Work Ratings Hit
As To Propriety
its Mental Hospital attendants In
the care and treatment of its
mentally ill citizens.'*
"There can be little doubt t h a t
the duties and responsibilities accepted and undertaken by the
attendant today bear little resemblance to his former role. Thus
it becomes vitally important for
the State of New York to provide
a salary for each of these positions
which gives recognition to the increased duties and responsibilities
performed by attendants" he said
"We feel that an upward adjustment in the salaries for all '
classes of attendant positions is
long overdue and absolutely neces-^
sary. A continued lack of recognition of the new role played by
the attendants would only magnify an existing inequity," Felly
stressed.
"A denial of the request for the
upward reallocation and reclassification of positions in the Attendant Series pm-ely on the basis
t h a t the vast number of positions
involved or affected would have
Insurmountable fiscal implications
for the State of New York would
be most inappropriate," he said.
"It is important to remember
that om- Mental Institutions, including all personnel necessary
for the operation of these Institutions, provide a necessary service
to the citizens of this State under
a social mandate. Under such a
mandate it behooves the State of
New York to provide the best possible care for Its citizens who are
admitted to its State Mental Institutlons. We believe that the
continuance of all programs aimed
at providing the best possible care
for the mentally 111 necessitates a
more active role on the part of
the attendants and the further
imposition of additional duties
and responsibilities on these positions.''
(Continued from Page 1)
aminatlons; proposed changes In
rules governing work performance ratings, and the not uncommon practice of an appointing authority persuading employees on promotion eligible
lists to waive their positions to
enable the agency to reach someConcluding
h is
presentation
'one of its choice further down
Feily said, "With this new conthe list.
cept of the attendant's' positions
Propriety Questioned
in mind, I urge that a favorable
Felly also questioned the pro- determination be made by the
priety of alleged statements by Division of Classification and
various personnel officers that Compensation on these request."
oral examinations would not be
necessary if probationary periods
on promotion were allowed. He
said these alleged statements in- Nelson To Represent
dicate "that oral examinations
ALBANY, Nov. 25—Dr. Eino
are being used as a threat . . ." Nelson of tlie State University at
Felly asked that the Associa- Buffalo will represent the Amerition be heard by the Civil Service can Association of Colleges of
Commission "If there Is any In- Pharmacy on the Council of tha
clination to approve probation- American Association for the Adai'jr periods upon promotion ..
vancement of Science.
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