IjEAPER / ' .^A/^jf iaj Promo^nt^xtfrs Americans Largest Weekly for Public Employees Vol. XXVI, No. 1 9 Tuesday, January 12, 1 9 6 5 H t-'zttmv Price T e n Cents WOrxm-TOXidvo s e i CSEA Wins DE Interv.. W, Wholly-Paid Pensions; Levitt To Continue Support (Special To The Leader) ALBANY, Jan. 11 — S t a t e Comptroller Arthur Levitt last week told The Leader t h a t he is pleased t h a t Governor Rockefeller has recom- ATTENDANCE RULES —— For the first time in its history, the Town of Babylon has established a set of attendance rules for its employees. Seen congratulating Town Supervisor William T. Lauder on the "progressive step" is Mrs. Eve Armstrong, Suffolk County chapter delegate to the board of directors of the Civil Service Employees Assn. Dr. Ross Allen Metro Conference Meet to Host Kings In High Post County Legislators Dr. K e n n e t h Young, president of State University College, Cortland, New York has announced the appointment of Dr. Ross L. Allen to ths position of Director of Graduate Studies and Researcli, effective Feb. 1. 1965. Dr. Allen will fill the position now held by Dr. Ben A. Sueltz wlio will retire Jan. 31. The appointment was made by Dr. Young upon the recommendation of a faculty committee, chaired by Dr. Wright Thomas, to suggest to the president possible replacements for Dr. Sueltz. Dr. Allen has been Director of Education. Division of Health, Physical Education, and R3creatlon at the College since 1954. He came to the College in 1915 as Professor and Chairman of the Department of Health Education. On CSEA Board Dr. Aaen currently represents all State University chapters on the Board of Directors of the Civil Service Employees Assn. of the State of New York. He is also immediate past president of the New York State Assn. for Health, Physical Education, and Recreation and was given that As-sociation's highest award in 1962. He Is listed in Leaders in Education, Leaders in Science, American Men of Science, Who's Who in American Education, Who's Who in the East, and World Biography. Dr. Young announced, too, the appointment of Dr. Whitney T. Corey as Acting Director of Education of the Division of Health, Physical Education, and Recreation at the College and that of Professor David G. Miller as Acting Chairman of the Department Of Physical Education for Men. Kings County assemblymen and senators have been invited to attend the Jan. 23 meeting of the Metropolitan Conference of the Civil Service Employees Assn. and most of them have indicated they will be present, Salvatore Butero, Conference president, announced last week. The Winter meeting of the Conference will begin at noon In the lounge room adjacent to the Community Store at Brooklyn State Hospital, 681 Clarkson Ave., he said. Piom 3 to 4:30 p.m. the major portions of the CSEA's 1965 legislative program will be presented, after which there will be a panel discussion on various items. Prior to this, there will be the usual handling of Conference business. Butero said the dinner portion of the meeting will begin at 4:30. Delegates planning to attend this important meeting are asked to notify the Conference secretary as soon as possible. Nassau Unit, CSEA. To Meet On January 20 The Nassau County chapter of the Civil Service Employees Assn. will hold its regular meeting Jan. 20 In Assembly Hall of the Nassau County Police Building, Garden City, at 8 p.m. A meeting of the officers and members of the Board will be held at 6 p.m. at the Round Table, Mlneola. A speaker from the MetropoliTAKK A TIP FKOM MR. ZIP . . . tan Diagnostic Institute will talk INCLUDE ZIP CODES "N ALL at the general membership meetADDRESSES ing. ARTHUR LEVITT mended increased benefits for State employees in the State's Retirement System adopting many of the earlier recommendations made by the Comptroller. The increased benefits would include a non-contributory system, vesting at the end of 10 years of service, Instead of at the end of 15 years, and vested benefits payable at age 55 for members in the 55 year plan. The Comptroller, sole trustee of the Syst?m, said: "I have made recommendations substantially as made by the Governor today in order to make our Retirement System the progressive, modern plan it should be in keeping with trends in private industry. As I have done in the last three sessions, I shall introduce my own legislative program which embraces these and other points." Levitt's recommendations were reported in The Leader last September. Lindenhurst Unit Presents Pay Program The Lindenhurst Village unit of Suffolk chapter, Civil Service Employees Assn., recently presented to the Village Board a program that Included among its points tenure, additional retirement benefits and pay raises. Felix Livingston, Jr., president of the Unit, laid he felt the program was n>utually beneficial to ©uiployijr euiployee. See Page 3 X <> usMv^a 0 d ase SVJIOHX ^ -r , BULLETIN Si ALBAISY, Jan 11 — An Albany Supreme Court justice last week ruled thai the duties of a proposed new title for the State Division of Employment—that of employinent counselor —and the duties of employment interviewer^ a title now in existence, are essentially one and the same. The opinion^, handed down late last week hy Justice John H. Pennock, resulted in a major victory for the Civil Service Employees Assn,, tvho had brought suit to block an attempt by the Slate Civil Service Commission to have employment interviewers and senior employment interviewers compete by promotion examination for higher positions whose duties they already are performing. Justice Pennock sent the case back to the Civil Service Commission to act in accordance with his decision. Commission compliance with the court^s decision would require ALL employment interviewers and senior employment interviewers to be reallocated and reclassified to the higher grades of employment counselor and senior employment counselor. Harry W\ Albright, Jr., CSEA counsel, successfully argued the Employees Association case. CS£A Maps Appeal As Court Rules Against Di Budget Vote Suit (Special To The Leader) ALBANY, Jan. 11—The State Supreme Court denied last week an appeal by t h e Civil Service Employees Assn. w h i c h sought to overcome a budgetary veto of salary reclassifications of four titles within the S t a t e Division of Employment. Joseph P. Feily, president of the C S E A , immediately an- tion for all employment internounced that CSEA attorneys viewer titles. were preparing an appeal of the The titles affected by the Suruling to the Appellate Division. preme Court ruling are: employAnd, at Leader press time, ment intei-viewer and claims exCSEA attorneys were in court aminer, grade 12 to 14, and senior and fighting for a salary reclassifica- employment" interviewer senior claims examiner, grades 16 to 18. The appeal was submitted to (Continued on Page 3) Jacob Fruchthendler Is Honored By Tucson School Bd. Orin Wilcox To Be Named To State Civil Service Comm. O RIN W i l c o x , Jefferson County assemblyL will be n a m e d by Governor Rock.^feller to fill the existing vacancy on the State Civil Servic. Commission, this column was in formed by an authoritative source last week. The post has been empty for over a year-.since the retirement of H. Eliot K'«'>lan who served as (Cvuliuued Page 2) The Tucson, Arizona, School Board will name one of its future elementary schools after a former New York City employee, Jacob Fruchthendler, it was learned last week. Fruchtendler, who moved to Arizona several years ago, was one of two living persons so honored by the school board. He was a member of that board eight years. The operator of an Insurance agency in Tucson, he also is nesident of the Tucson Youth Ard and is active in numerous uther civic and philanthropic affairs. His sister, Edith Fiuchthendler Is an employee In the PubUe Service Coitunissiou hei'«. CIVIL Page Two SERVICE Tuesday, January 12, 1965 LEADER J«ttpli l y n i t t Stids Thaikt To MtRds Civil Semnts Invited Your Public Relations IQ By L ^ O J . Horrors of Harioti€5 Addittion To Be Shown During Albany Meeting MARGOLIN Mr. Margolin is Head of tlie Division of Business Administration and Professor of Business Administration at the Borough of Manhattan Community College and Adjunct Pro(Special To The Leader) fessor of Public Relations in New York University's GraduALBANY, Jan. 11—High school and college administrators ate School of Public Administration. will be introduced to the horrors of narcotics addiction on Monday and Tuesday, Jan. 18 and 19 at a special institute WE FEEL it is our duty to warn everyone in Goveniment: co-sponsored by the State Health Department and the InterD o n t get bobby-trapped into a television panel program national Narcotics Enforcement where the prime objective is to promote only negative conAssociation. of Narcotics Control, 84 Holland troversy. Featured speakers at the sesTO PUT IT more bluntly: Don't put yourself in a position where you will spend 99 per cent of the time allotted to t h e program denying t h a t you beat yom- wife. W E CALL this to your a t t e n tion a f t e r seelcing a shocking example on a program misnamed "Open Mind," televised recently over NBC's Channel 4 in New York. The subject was "The Image Industry." T h a t title alone should have warned the participants fi-om the public relations field t h a t they were there as "patsies" and targets r a t h e r t h a n as discussants. THE MODERATOR, Dr. Eric F. Goldman, Professor of History at Princeton, insisted to the TV audience t h a t he ventured no opinion. Yet, he made his opinion known again a n d again with questions featuring the so-called "illegitim a t e " areas of public relations, while carefully avoiding questions which would produce affirmative replies. p r a c t i c a l l y every question h e posed had sti-ong overtones of "When did you stop beating your wife?" Ave., Albany, N.Y. 12208. Goldman used the old fashioned political technique of keeping panel members off-balance with off-balance questions. EXAMPLE: "Do you think a $50,000 fee for public relations services is pustified?" These are not exact words, but the tenor of the que.stion is exact. NONE OF the panelists gave a straight answer to this question. For the information of our r e a d ers, this is the answer: Public relations is worth $50,000 or $1 million, If it achieves the legitimate objective the client seeks. ANOTHER DEAD give-away on the "Open Mind" progi'am was the presence of Irwin Ross, free lance magazine wrtter, who h a s been less t h a n friendly to the public relations field. Ro&s held the floor for much longer t h a n he deserved and he, too, asked some wifebeating questions. However, to Ross' credit it m u s t be said t h a t he did approve of a P R m a n being a n advocate for the agency, corporation or cause he represented. I T WAS QUITE obvious t h a t Dr. Goldman had little interest in letting listeners know what public relations really Is. Never once wa-s the key word " p e r f o r m a n c e " mentioned. There were a few minutes devoted to the brilliant public relations achievement by William L. Safire, public relations panel member, who arranged to have the famous Nixon-Khrushchev kitchen debate take place in a typical American home built by a Safire client. READERS OF this column are keenly aware of this simple f a c t : T h e r e must first be good p e r f o r m ance before there can be good public relations. Yet, the moderator of "Open Mind" closed his mind to all questions to save those callirig for defensive answers. Dr. THE FACT Is t h a t a good p a r t of the program's time was spent in defense of public relations by public relations people. Thomas P. Robertson, president of the Public Relations Society of America, was on camera long minutes insisting t h a t his s t a n d a r d s were as high as those of other professionals such as lawyers. One of the curves thrown a-t him was about the disciplinary actions taken by the Society against a tiny number of its members. sion will be Dr. Hollls S. I n gi-aham, S t a t e Health Commissioner; Henry L. Giordano, U. S. Narcotics Comraissioner; J o h n J. Bellizzi, director of the State Health Department's Bureau of Narcotics Control a n d executive secretary of the INEOA; Dr. Robe r t Baird of the Haven Clinic in New York City and Dr. G r a h a m Blaine, Jr. of Harvard University. College and secondary school administrators, faculty and school secui-lty officers have been Invited as well as law enforcement officers, social workers and people in allied professions. "The best approach to this growing problem," Bellizzi said In speaking of t h e Increased use of narcotics, "is to teach school officials to detect on-campus users. This will enable enforcement o f ficers to round u p sellers before the problem becomes widespread." A docinnentary movie will also be shown to those attending the sessions a t t h e Health Departm e n t auditorium. For f u r t h e r i n f o n n a t i o n and reservations contact the Bureau YET NEITHER the moderator nor Ross asked about some of the brilliant award winners in public relations, of which there have been hundreds over the years. "OPEN MIND" is a good lesson in what a television panel program should not be. I t is a prime lesson no one In Government should ever forget. Commission president — and the Governor's failure to fill the job since then has been a cause for growing concern among civil service employee organizations. While the 1964 election campaign figured somewhat in Rockefeller's Inaction to bring the Commission up to full membership (two Republicans and one Democrat) it was learned t h a t he was also hampered by pressures from some minority gi'oups a n d labor organizations to n a m e a m a n from their ranks to the job. Most of the persons proposed were, mainly from lack of experience in the field, unqualified to serve on tlie Commission, it was said. Oreaiiixution Support Seen Wilcox's assignment to the civil service post is certain to get en- civil. W K V I C B LEADKK America's Leading Weekly for Public Emplo.veeii L E A D E B PUBLICATIONS, INC. • 7 Dnan» f i . . Maw T a r k , N . V . - I 0 M 7 Telephonci 313-BBefcman .^-note Publlahed E s c b TuNHlay Gnlered m w c o n d - o l t e i m a l t r r and aecond-elaia postage paid. Oclnbnr S, 1939 a t the poat oBiea a t New r o r h , N . T . and a t Bridireport. Conn., under t h e Act ( f March 3. 1879 Member of Audit Bureau of Circulatfona. S u b s r r l p t t o n Priea 9S.00 Per Year Individnal copica. l O t R Accident Appraisers Needed By State; Experience A Must Experienced automobile accident appraisers and adjusters are needed by the State of New York. There axe openings for damages evaluators in Depai'tment oi Motor Vehicles district offices thi'oughout the State. An examination for the position will be held February 20, Starting salary is $6,180 a year with five a n n u a l inci-eases to $7,535. Applications will be accepted t h r o u g h Januai-y. For more information write to Recruitment Unit 72, New York S t a t e Department of Civil Service, T h e State Campus, Albany, Nev/ York 12226. Here's real economy—twice the numb«r of pictures you get from an ordinary 35mm camaral And the new DEMI is so small it fits in a thirt poektt. Easy'to-use, match-tha-needk txposurt control lets you capture every picture in "high fidelity" color, or crisp, aparkling black and whitel Try the Bell & Howtll/Canon DEMI, it's at oelorful as tha pictures It takes! WITH AIL THESE lie CAMERA FEATURES « DONT Joseph J . Byrnes, venerable member of the New York City c h a p t e r of the Civil Service ESmployeei Assn. who was hospitalized briefly. ha« asked T h e Lead* e r to convey his thankat to t h e hundreds of friends who sent h i m notes a n d cards during his illness. MtM-NMdl* i^SrieEye RSPEAT thusiastlc backing from the giant Civil Service Employees Assn. and most other employee organizations. As chairman of the Assembly Civil Seivice Committee for many years, he was a strong advocate of many progressive measures affecting public employees, not only in areas concerning State workers but also on m a t t e r s affecting political subdivisions. This column was told t h a t news of the Governor's recommendation was held up only because the Legislature has iv>t been formally organized (as of this writing) due to the Democratic majority's inability to agree on its leadership. An inteiesting aspect of the Wilcox appohitment Is tlmt it will result in the n e t d for a .si>ecial election in Jeffei-son County to fill his Assembly seat. Wilcox ran THIS unopposed for the post. Addenda A number of other important comralsbioneishlps are also up for reappointment. The term of Col. S. £. Senior as chairman of the Workmen's Compensation Board expired last month. A career .man, Colonel Senior is expected to be reappointed. On the other hand, it was learned t h a t Governor Rockefeller does not plan to reappoint William NDorgan, Cortland Democrat, to t h e State Liquor Authority. Morgan was a member of the S t a t e Civil Service Commi.ssion under Governor Harriman. M a j o r assignments to the Stute Parole Board a n d Public Service Commission are also open but no word was available on Administration choices for these jobs. « H m t p Xtmm f/2.1 Lent f i M t roc«itln« System • (itiilMl IxpoMr* Central • N i t Crank itowintf SEE IT HERE LOW DOWN PAYIHtNT TODAY UNITED CAMERA EXCHANGE 95 Chombtrs Str«*t 1122 Avenue of The Amerieos 1662 Brood way 1140 Avepi!^ of The Americas 265 Madison Avenue 132 East 43rd Street Tiirsday, Jamiary 12, l^ftJ? CIVIL SERVICE Four Score Years Finds James Martin As Busy As Always KINGSTON, Jan. 11 — That "worry" about too mucU "time-on-my-hands after retirement" has never had a chance In the busy life of James P. Martin. Kingston, who, as president of the Ulster County chapter of the New York State Civil Service Employees Assn. Is probably chapter president dean of the state. Martin will be 80 In March. TAKES OATH Barney Aversano, right, president of tlie Long Island Parkway Police chapter, Civil Service Employees Assn., takes the oath of office, administered by John Powers, CSEA field representative. Also shown are, from left, James Hallinan, standing in for Phil Ferrato, Chapter secretary, who was in the hospital; George Koch, vice president; and Richard Borchers, treasurer. CSEA To Continue Budget Veto Fight (Continued from Page 1) the State Supreme Court after T. Norman Hurd, State budget director, overrode earlier approval of the reallocation by the State Civil Service Commission. Kelly, an employment Interviewer, is that the duties of the new position of employment counselor as described in specifications are the same essential duties that are now being performed by employment interviewers and that all The Ruling interviewers have by a previous In denying the appeal, Justice examination qualified for the new V. Roscoe Els worth said, "the posllton. contention of petitioners that the Albright Argues budget director should have given reason in writing justifying his The argument on the reclassidisapproval and should have noti- fication case was made for CSEA, fied petitioners of his determina- before Justice John H. Pennoch, tion is not well founded." by Harry W. Albright, Jr., assoHe said, "the crux of the argu- ciate counsel. Accompanying Alment of petitioners is that the bright were Edward Croft, chair- li^ - ' Ultimate source of the payment of salaries to them is Federal funds and that whatever the salries may be is no concern of the budget director. The court cannot adopt such a parochial view," Justice Elsworth said, "since the budget director does have p>owers under the statutes above referred to which are not vitiated by the fact that Federal funds are involved." An Illustration "In way of illustration." the jurist said, "it seems illogical to the court to place State employees paid with Federal funds on a sky-is-the-Ilmit basis In contradiction to State employees not paid with Federal funds." Upon learning of the decision. Peily told Division of Employment members, "when this matter first came to us, I gave my word . . . that we would appeal this case to the highest court of the State, If necessary. Our attorneys are already preparing an appeal to the Appelate Division . . .," he said. Tlie CSEA president, said, "in addition, we have other pending litigation In the Supreme Court which could favorably affect the rights of the petitioners In this case." Salary Reclassification This was in reference to a related action, whereby CSEA, last Friday, sou^jht. in arguments before the courts, a salary reclassification for all employees In employment Interviewer titles to a new position of employment counselors. In tills case, the Employees Association is aiding In an action brought by a group of employment Interviewers who contend they are performing the duties of employment counselor. The essence of the CSEA-six)n•ored case, brought by William man of the CSEA Division of Employment committee; Edward Haverly, president of the Albany D of E chapter and Robert Dalley, president of the Metropolitan D of E chapter. The full D of E Committee met separately last week to plot the Association's strategy in the case and to assist in the preparation of the necessary appeals. Members of the committee, in addition to Croft, Haverly and Daily, are Milton Handel, Edward L. Allen, Adele V. West. Samuel Grossfleld. and Dorothy D. Honeywell. LEADER P i ^ TliNi 26 Promotion Exams Set By State; Closing Dates Jan. 18, Feb. 1 New York State announced competitive promotion examinations in various fields and departments. Closing dates fol applications for these exams are Jan. 18 and Feb. 1. The exaru is open to New York State employees only. CLOSE JAN. 18 Interdepartmental CENSE EXAMINER, CXv.AJd number 9743, Salary, $6,180 SENIOR X-RAY TECHNICIAN. $7,535. Exam number 1578, Salary is In Mr. Martin SENIOR MOTOR VEHICLE I N G-11. retired on April VBSTIGATOR, exam, number SENIOR STATISTICIAN, Exam 1, 1955, from 9742, Salai-y, $7,745 to $a,375. number 1600, Salary Is In G-18 his position as MOTOR VEHICLE INVESTIOA^ level. a City of KingTOR, exam number 9741, SalASSOCIATE BIOSTATISTICIAN, ston police ary, $6,180 to $7,535. Exam number 1601, Salary Is lieutenant at in the G-23 level. Department of Labor the age of 70, SENIOR BIOSTATISTICIAN, ASSOCIATE INDUSTRIAL EN after 37 years and 4 months on Exam number 1603, Salary, GGINBER, exam number 1634 the force. Mr. Martin joined the 18. Salary, $12,500 to $14,860. OSEA In 1950 and has been A S S O C I A T E STATISTICIAN, Public Service pesident for 13 of the 14 years. Exam number 1605, Salary. GASSOCIATE HYDRAULIC EN He has been elected to life mem23. GINBER, exam number, 1637, bership. Department of Health Salaiy, $12,500 to $14,860. To keep himself "occupied," he SENIOR SANITARY ENGINEER. also works six days a week, 11 Public Works Dept. Exam number 1604, Salary. Ga.m. to 11 p.m. at his son James' ASSISTANT ARCHITBCT, exam 23. Anchorage Inn and Restaurant In number 9731, Salary, $8,175 to ASSISTANT SANITARY ENGINEddyville. In his "spare" time, $9,880. EER, Exam number 1606, SalMr. Martin works as a guard for SENIOR ARCHITECT, exam ary, G-19. an Industrial firm, Sundays from number 9732, Salary, $10,090 to Public Works Dept. 4 p.m. to Midnight. $12,110. ASSISTANT DISTRICT ENGINEER, Exam number 1608. Sal- ASSOCIATE ARCHITECT, exam number 9733, Salary, $12,500 to ary. G-32. $14,860. Thruway Authority State University RADIO DISPATCHER, Exam PURCHASING A G E N T , exam number 1610, Salary, G-10. number 1625, Salary, $7,745 to Commerce Department AMENIA, Jan. 11 — Forest D. ASSOCIATE BUSINESS CON$9,375. Philip, 90, chairman of the Tax and Finance Dept. SULTANT, Exam number 1620. Dutchess County Civil Service SENIOR C L E R K (Surrogate), Salary, G-26. Commission until his resignation SENIOR BUSINESS CONSULTexam number 1638, Salary, last year, died recently at his $4,135 to $5,135. ANT, Exam number 1619, Salhome in Amenia after a long illary, G-22. Kings County ness. State University SENIOR STENOGRAPHER, exam Philip had served on the com- SCIENTISTS, Exam number 9721. number 1632, Salary, $4,250 to mission since its inception in Biology; Exam number 9722. $5,330. 1942. He became chairman in Biophysics; Exam number 9723, New York County 1956 and served until ill health Physiology and Exam number SENIOR TYPIST, exam number caused him to resign as chairman 9724. Physics, Salary is in the 1633, Salary, $4,250 to $5,330. and a member last year. G-18 range. For further information conPhilip, who was born in Philtact the State Department of CLOSE FEB. 1 mont in 1874, worked for the New York Central Railroad for STATE DAMAGES EVALUATOR, Civil Service, the State Campus, Exam number 1602, Salary, Albany, 270 Broadway, New York 50 years, retiring 25 years ago. City, and the State Office Build$7,320 to $8,875. Active in the Amenia community, he was a director of the PRINCIPAL MOTOR VEHICLE ings, Buffalo and Syracuse. LICENSE EXAMINER, exam First National Bank of Amenia FREE BOOKLET by U.S. Govnumber 9744, Salary, $7,320 to ernment on Social Security. Mail and a member of the Amenia $8,875. Board of Education. only. Leader, 97 Duane Street, SENIOR MOTOR VEHICLE LI- New Yorl£ 7, N.Y. Forest D. Philip, Dutchess County CS Head. Is Dead Donohue Wins Court Upset Of Trooper Sergt. Examination ALBANY, Jan. 11—The Appellate Division of the State Supreme Court last week upheld a former state trooper's contention that a State Police promotional examination given more than a year ago was of "questionable validity. " In ruling In favor of former trooper John H. Donohue. of Peeksklll, the Appelate Court unanimously reversed a lower court ruling on the examination. The t«st, for promotion to sergeant, was given on Oct. 21, 1963. Some 200 men were promoted to that rank as a result of the examination. Since bringing the court action Donohue was dismissed from the force, an action he Is also contesting in the courts. Donohue had challenged the use of an oral examination In the promotional test as being unpi'ecedented. He also contested a service-record rating system applied to the test as not being the same as the day-to-day rating made by a trooper's immediate superiors. Court's Ruling Referring to the rating method used in the contested examination, tlie court said "the system now foitnulated involves an evaluation made specifically for purposes of the examination by a rating board guided only by general standards. Thus, upon combination with the servloe-record rating and the oral examination results, an aggregate weight of 40 would be assigned factors conShown at the recent Chrlstmaa pwrtr stituting judgements largely sub- ARMORY PARTY Meeting of the Suffollt Armory Employees chapter, held at the jective. This dilution of a competitive element seems of ques< Ritrerhead, L.I.. Armory, are Paul Richmond, left, fuperintendeat; and William Kempy, resident. <Coutlnued Page 1«> CIVMi P ^ f m m WAf ra fo Applf F«r Publk Jobs Ttm faOtwlBff Mreotlons 80BVICE LEADER The KTPE said that while the freeii now le aimad prlmarllr at upptr Imnel Jobe. it could readily be extended to all fradM from the lowest to the highest. Several agencies have already instituted severe controls which will cause delay in up<^gradlng actions and promotions at all grade levels in order to meet an arbitrary average previously established. In additton. many down-grading classUicatlon actions are taking place in the field in the lower grades, the NFFE declared. U.S. Service News Items M l WlMM to MWly fMT frtlllo ItN Wd IIAW to rtftch 4MttnatiMUi In New York Cttr tbe trsmH mtm* NEW rOEK CITY—The AppliCAttoitf Section of tbe lf«w York City Department of Personnel Is located at 49 Thomas 0t.. New York 7, N.Y. (Manhattan). It Is three blocks north of City Hall, one block west of Broadway. Sours are 0 A.M. to 4 P.M. Blonday through Friday, and Saturdays from 9 to 12 noon. Telephone 566-8720 Mailed requests for application blanks must \ include a stamped. telX-addreseed business-size envelope and must be received by ithe Personnel Department at least five days before the closing date lor the filing of applications. Completed application forms Which are filed by mall must be sent to the Personnel Department ftnd must be postmarked no later than twelve o'clock midnight on the day following the last day of receipt of applications. The Applications Section of the Personnel Department Is near the Chambers Street stop of the main subway lines that go through the area. These are the IRT 7th Avenue Line and the IND 8th Avenue line. The IRT Lexington Avenue Line stop to use is the Worth Street stop and the BMT Brighton local's stop is City Hall. Both lines have exits to Duane Street, a short walk from the Peraormel Department. STATE—Room 1100 at 270 Broadwa-y. New York 7, N. Y., comer of Chambers St., telephone BArclay 7-1618; Governor Alfred £. Smith State Office Building and The State Campus, Albany; State Office Building. Buffalo; State Office Building, Syracuse: and 600 Midtown Tower, Rochester (Wednesdays only). Any of these addi'esses may be used for JoIm with the state. The State's New York City Office is three blocks south on Broadway from the City Personnel Department's Broadway entrance, so the same transportation instructions apply. Mailed applications need not include return envelopes. Candidates may obtain applications for state Jobs from local offices of the New York State Smployment Service. BIGGEST DRUGGISTS The 700,000 civil service retirees and snrvivors can look forward to a modest increase in benefits this year, according to Washington observers. The Johnson Administration Is expected to go along with a three per cent hike. This would be consistent with the principle in the 1962 law which decrees that benefits m\ist stay in line with living costs. This Is the first break In the Administration's antipathy to change in the retirement system or its benefits. It is also felt that full retirement at the age 56 after 30 years may be agreed on— If the Government is given the option of requiring employees to retire under the same conditions. The 1962 law says that whwi the cost of living rises three per cent, then rettrement benefits are raised three per cent. But if the cost of living were to rise, say, 2.7 per cent in a given year then no increase. The Administration is expected to modify this clause, so that increases of one or two per cent could be given when the cost of living goes up that much. Ten Fer Crat Increase In another development, a bill has been Introduced by Rep. Arnold Olsen (D-Mont.) to give retirees an Immediate increase of 10 per cent of the first $2,400 in benefits; free survivor benefits for future retirees, and full retirement at S6 after 30 years at the sole option of the employee. The Administration plan could derail the Olsen plan, which had the approval of the House Civil Sei-vice Committee earlier this year. FVDEBAL — Second U.S. Civil Service Region Office. News Building. 220 Bast 42nc} Street (at 9nd Ave.), New York 17, N,Y., just west of the United Nations building. Take the IRT Lexington Ave. Line to Grand Central and walk two blocks east, or take the shut• • • tle from Times Square to Grand Central or the IRT Queens-Flush- P.O. will Shidy ing train from any point on the Sick L«avt Uft line to the Grand Central stop. A high-level committee will be Hours are 8:30 to S p,m, established soon to study use, Monday through Friday, Tele- and perhaps misuse, of sick leave phone number is YU 0-2626. by the Post Office Department's Applications are also obtainable at main post offices, except - CIVIL SERVICI the New York. NY^ Poet Office. EMPLOYIIS Board« of examiners at the par* ON A IUD9ITI ticular initallationa offering the tests also may be applied to for IN N I W Y O I K e i T V further Information and applicai l l l l V I Y O U l l O O M AT tion forms. No return envelopes NATIONAL HOTEL are required with mailed req\iests 7Hi A ¥ l . k 4 l N d I T . . ( I r e e d w e y ) for application forms. AT TIMES SQUARI, N.T.C. FREE BOOKLET by U.S. Government on Social Security. Mail only. Leader, 97 Duane Street. New York 7, N. Y. 2 All In R u u j u f r l v . Uutli $4.S0 fttriMii Tranitportation At Coruer PkoN* Wl 7.3100 Jmnary 1965 12, idb^Tttfory Aid«t NMd^M hy HY City: Salory U $4,000 The City of New York has 50 vacancies in various departments for laboratory aides. Salary in these positions is from $4,000 to 11.080 pe# year. Applications will be accepted until Feb. 24. For further information contact the AiH>lieations Division of the Department of Personnel, 40 Thomas Street. KELLY CLOTHES, INC. Srlg. Oen. Charles H. Ginsles. ri^ht. Commanding Officer of Brooklyn's Defense Medical Sui^iy Center, known informally as "the biggest drug store in the world," congratulates Joseph Rockman f w winning a Presidential citation for a large-scale money-saving suggestion, as feliow-citation-winners William Turner, left, and Walter Ratkowski look on. Pension Boost Seen; New Bill Pushed In House TuMdaf, TROY'S FAMOUS FACTORY STORE MEN'S & YOUNG MEN'S FINE CLOTHES SEMt-ANNUAL SALE NOW 621 RIVER STREET. TROY 590,000 employees. Postal employee leaders will be Invited to 2 Blocks No. of Hoosiek St. Tel. AS 2-2022 take part In the committee. The inquiry was prompted by the Comptroller General, who has charged misuse of the Govern- M • LETS MAKE '65 A GREAT YEAR" • ment's generous sick leave privi- • FINISH leges Iw employees in several large post offices. Suspicion Is aroused by the great variation in leave use from post office to post office. * 4t SHIGH S C H O O L : * NFFE Hits Johnson's Freeze On Upgradings I The soundness of the Administration's "freeze" on upper level • Federal positions was seriously questioned by the National Federation of Federal Employees. r AT HOME IN SPARE TIME " If y«u ar« 17 cr aver and have dropped out of school, write for FREE Ussioa oad FREE leoklot. Tells how. H ™ AMERICAN SCHOOL. Dept. 9AP.85 130 W. 42nd St.. New York 36, N.Y. Ph. BR 9.2*04. Day or Night I Send me your free 55-page High School Booklet. NTame _ JVge Aiddress — ^Ap tp . t • WHY You Should Insure with Ter Bush & Powell Ter Bush & Powell, Inc. of Sdienectady, New York, has boon a pioneer in providing insurance plans fie»r leading employee, professional and trade associations in New York State. We work closely with your association and The Travelers to keep your insurance plan up-to-date. Because 40,000 CSEA members are covered, the cost can be kept at a low level. Ter Bush ft Powell has a large staff of trained personnel to give you prompt, courteous and efficient service. Twelve Travelers claims paying offices are conveniently located to assure fast, fair settlement of cidims. Join the,thousands of members who enjoy broad Insurance protection through the CSEA Accident & Sickness Flan, administered by Ter Bush ft Powell, Ina, and underwritten by The Travelers Insurance Company of Hartford, Connecticut TKR SCHENECTADY NEW YORK BUFFALO EA8T NORTHPORT SYRACUSE — - m CIVIL TiiesJny, January 12, 196S SERVICE LEADER Page FHr® ************************************************* Miss Civil Service The Job Market 97 Diiane Street New York, N.Y. 10007 Plenfte enter the following as a candidate of the Miss Civil Service Contest: Age. Name (Contintted on r»ge 12) % A LISTING OF NON-CIVlL SERVICE JOBS AVAILABLE | THROUGH THE NEW VORK STATE EMPLOYMENT SERVICE % BE FULLY PREPARED! Address Title Dept. Business Address Submitted By NYC. County- State. PederftL (Please Check) (PLEASE CLIP TO BACK OF PHOTO) Use Pencil or Ball Point - l y Y. RAIDER WEXLER Manhattan only, applicants will be intrevlewed at the following Industrial Offices: In Manhattan, at 255 West 54th Street; In Brooklyn, 690 Fulton Street, ami in Queens at the (Thase Manhao Leader' to Choose Most Beautiful Girls From Civil Service i It's that time off year when The Leader plays mirror to several thousand girls' "Mirror, mirror on the wall, who's the fairest . . ." Our panel of judges will select the four that it considers fairest, and they will reign for a year as "Miss Civil Service of 1965." One girl will be chosen from each of the major Jurisdictions- City, State, Federal and county. As with last year's contest, final selection of the beauty queens will be made on Civil Sei-vice Day, May 31. at the V/orld's Pair. The winners are chosen from among entries submitted by readres in the form of a glossy photograph of the candidate along with her nnm°, address, department, title, and age. Preliminary selections will be made from the photographs, so the best available should be sent. The st.'xndard 8 x 10 inch size is the best, though not necessary. In no case should the pictures be smaller than 2 x 3 . And all photos should be black and white. The winners will be chosen by a panel of judges to be named later. The selections will be made In three stages, preliminaries, semi-finals and finals. The prizes will be announced later. Last year's winners each won a trip for two to Puerto Rico and a week's stay at a luxury beach hotel there. There are no requirements aside from (1) employment In civil servloe, and (2) beauty. Marital status does not matter. A coupon for entering the contest appears above. Entries should be sent to Miss CSvil Servic« Contest, 97 Duane St., New York. N.Y. 10007. The closing date for accepting of entries is April 15, 1965. Court Clerk Sought In Sullivan County Sullivan County has an opening for a Family Court stenographer and clerk. Candidates must have been residents of New York State for at least 12 months prior to the written examination. Salary in this position Is $3,200 to $4,000 a year. For further Information contact the State Department of Civil Service, the State Campus, Albany, the State Office Buildings, Syracuse and Buffalo or any State Employment office. Experienced elementary and high school TEACHERS, SCHOOL COUNSELORS. LIBRARLANS and SCHOOL ADMINISTRATORS are needed for overseas positions in schools for childi'en of military and clvlUan personnel. Minimum^ requirements are a B.A. or B.S. and 18 hours in Education plus two years of teaching experience from September 1960 to June 1965. Males are preferred to be single. Females must be single. The salary range is $4,535 to $10,650 a year, depending on level of Job, plus transportation and housing. Call the Education Unit of the Professional Placement Center at MU ft-5040 for an appointment. Federal Jobs GOVERNMENT STENOGRA PHERS, male and female, are needed by various Federal, City and State agencies in downtown Manhattan. Federal and State stenographers start at $3,880 a year and City stenographers start at $3,750. All get good fringe benefits, sick leave and vacations with pay, and will be tested at 80 words per minute. Apply at the Office Personnel Placement Center, 575 Lexington Ave., Manhattan. AUTO BODY REPAIRMEN with own tools are wanted in Manhattan and the Bronx to straighten out fenders, knock out dents, replace units and do collision work. The pay is $2.25 to $3.25 an hour . . . A fully experienced OFFSET PRESSMAN -will earn $135 to 1155 a week to set up and operate Zenith 30 and Chief 29 Offset presses. Apply at the Manhattan Industrial Office, 255 West 54th Street. Printing Vacancies In Brooklyn, a PLATEN PRESS OPERATOR will earn $85 to $100 a week to set up and' operate a Heidelberg platen press and a C & P automatic for die cutting cardboard. A TV and RADIO REPAIRMAN FREE BOOKIET by U.S. Gov- with at least two years' experience ernment on Soeial Secarity. Mall is needed. Must have driver's only. Leader. 91 Duane Street. llcenrse, preferably own car. The New York 7. N.*. salary is $00 to $110 plus car allowance for a SVa to 6-day week. If you want lo know whal't knppenlng to you to your chances of promotion to your job to your next raise and similar matters! FOLLOW THE LEADER REGULARLY! Here Is the newspaper that tells you about what U happening in civil service, what Is happening to the job you have and the Job vou want. Make sure you don't miss a single Issue. Enter your subscription now. The price is $5.00. That brings you 52 Issues of the Civil Service Leader, filled with the government lob news vou want Vou can subscribe on the coupon below r CLERKS H U N D R i D S O F CAREIR P O S I T I O N S I N N . Y . CITY and SUBURBS NO EXPERIEMCE OK EDUCATIOHAL lEQUIKEMEtlTS <64-^68 wl FULL CIVIL SERVICE BENEFITS 97 Duon* Str««f N t w York 10007, New >IAME ADDRI 50 Years of SuccessfuI~S|^laliied Education Por Career Opportunities end Personal Advancement Be Our Guest at • Class Session of Any Delehanty Course or Phone or Write for CTass Schedules and FREE GUEST CARD. OfPICIAL'WRITTEN EXAMS FOR: * HIGH SCHOOL E Q U I V A L E N C Y * N . Y . S T A T E C L E R K S Men & Women, 18 to 70 Yrs DIPLOMA * PATROLMAN - N.Y. Police Dept. Exam May * CORRECTION OFFICER (MEN) 15 CI.ASSK?! NOW FORMING KOK COMINO EXAMfl F d K : RAILROAD CLERK —Men & Women (Subway Station Airent^N.Y. City Transit Authority) No Age, Educational or Experience Requirements Salary $ 9 8 . fO S I 0 3 . 9 0 Also —40-Hour, 5-Day Week MAINTENANGeIiAN—SI42 a Week At least 2 years of paid experience In maintenance, operation and repair of bolldlnvs. No ace limits. Inqtiire for details and Startinj; Dates of Classes Thorough Preparation for NEXT Maahattani 123 East 12 St. nr. 4 Ave. Jamolea: I9-2S Merrieh Blvd. at 90 Ave. Arcklfecfaral—Meckaelcef—ftrHcferaf Draftln§ flpiiiff, flectricel anW Meelilee Drawing. TO »80-'84 RADIO. TV & ELECTRONICS SCHOOL TEST 117 l a s t 11 St. nr. 4 Ave., Maahattae Medie and TV Servic* 6 Repair. Caler TV Servicing. "HAM" License Preperafiee. DELEHANTY HIGH S ( ^ O O L or Be Our (iuent tit Jmt Fill In indjiinijciijuoj^ r O E L I H A N T Y INSTITUTI I I I I last 1SlhSt.,M«nkattafi "j { Nom« Addrtii Zon» ^^ ** unAfs DRAFTING S C H ^ L S CLAfS T H U M . JAN 14 at 7 PM Ciry g PM r i d S K D M T t with SpaeMltatlon on Automatic Tronimlssloit$ PHONE GR 3-6900 I encloiie $5.00 (check or money order for a yeartt •ubscrlptlon to the Civil Service Leader Please enter the name listed below: REGISTRAR'S OFFICE OPEN* ^ w r r i w c V/TKR. S-01 46 Road at 5 St., Leaf Isiaad City Complete Sftop Training en "Live" Cars Proctic* i x a m i at Evory Clost for Contpftl* Information York The DELEHANH INSTITUTE MANHATTAN: 115 EAST 15 ST.. Near 4 Ave. (All Sobwavf) JAMAICA: 89-25 MIRRICK BLVD.. bet. Jamaica & Hllltid* Aves. AUTO MECHANICS SCHOOL Thorough F r t p o r a l i o n lor CIVIL SERVICE LIAOER 13th Licenied by N.Y. Sf«l<—Appraved far Voferant INCREASES OFFICIAL W m n i N MANHATTAN: T I K S . , M N «t 1!1.%, itt.lfi of 7:.1<» P.M. or Able-bodied men over 18 are I WKI*., J A N . 1.3 Mt 7 P.M. wanted to DELIVER TELE- JAMAICA •last n i l In and Brfng Coupon PHONE BOOKS to private homes, apartment houses, commercial es- I D e l c f c f l R f y I n t t i M * . lir> EfMt iflth Nt.. Manhattan a r tablishments and office buildings Ij SO-SS M^rrlok Blvd., JnitiaU-a In Manhattan. Must be able to I Nama carry 50 pounds and climb stairs. } Address Will average $11.80 for an 8-hour { City /.on» day. While this assignment is for I Admit FKBK t o One Patrolman ClnM PRACTICAL VOCATIONAL COURSES: SALARIES YEARLY •173 iRMll O r o N ^ — I V I . CLASSIS — I x ^ r t lastraeters APPLICATIONS OfEN-EXAM FEI. 27 STARTING PATROLMAN N.Y. CITY LICENSE EXAMS for * MASTER ELECTRICIAN - Fridays at 7 P.M. * STATIONARY ENGINEER - Class Forming * REFRIGERATION OPERATOR - Thur. 7 P.M. N.Y. Stole Written Exom for MEN I WOMEN \J TO 70 Apply at the Brooklyn Industrial start Classes NOW for N«tt WRITTEN EXAM. MAY 15 Office, 590 Pulton Street. Wanted In Queens Is an ELECTROt»LAtlNa FOREMAN to supervise ten men in electroplating and vacuum plating department. N.Y. POLICE DIFT. He will keep all records and recommend hiring and firing The pay is $100 a week and up. Also wanted is a FOREMAN in A WEEK manufacture of jewelry cases with AFTER 3 YEARS supervisory experience in some < Inoludea Pay f o r ffolidayt and A n n a a l kind of metal manufacturing. lltiirorm Allownnce) Must be able to supervise 25 male Exeolltnt l>remotienal Oppertunitlei and female workers on assembly PENSION A F ^ 2 0 YEARS of small metal parts by hand or kick press, and will keep all re- Aqest 2 0 tHroHgh 2 8 — M t w . H f t . S T ' cords and recommend hiring and ENROLL NOW! D O N T DILAYI firing. The salary Is $100 a week Practice Exams at Erery Claw and up. Apply at the Jamaica For CeniBietc Information State Employment Office, 90-01 PHONE GR 3-6m Or Be Gue.st at a Clajw Sutphin Boulevard. - Admit fr9» lo On* CM Clan A««redlted by l e a r d of Regeati 91-01 Merriek leulevard, Jamaica A Collogo freperetery Co'Hocotlonul Aeoicmio HIgk School. Secretarial Training Available tor Oirls as an Eloctivo Supplement. Special Preparetlee lo Science and Mathematics for Sftidonft Vfho (Visli to Quollty for Tochnologlcal and fnfineerinf Colleges. 7th to 12th Grades. Por lnf<!»rmotioii on All Courttt Phone GR 3*6900 ^ CIVIL Pag« Six SERVICE LEADER ICADCRl BOX Antcriea'tt tMrge»t Weehlff tor Puhiie Einployeen Member Audit Bureau of Circulations Published t'l t^ry Tuesday by LEADER PUBLICATIONS. INC. 17 Dhoii* Strccf. Ntw York. N.Y.-10007 212.IE«kmaR 3.«010 Litters To The Editor Discussion Continues On Sick Leave Rules Statesmanship A rights in the State Retirement System at age 55. It is good to be able to report that the Comptroller, in his own fashion, will continue to support these measures. Only recently, we expressed our concern that public employee programs might get bogged down In political power plays. The statesmanship exercised by the Governor and the Comptroller, both leaders in their respective political parties, Is an assurance to civil servants that neither side intends to involve public employees in political struggles. The retirement measures are only one portion of an imp>ortant and much-needed program of benefits being sought by the Civil Service Employees Assn. It is to be hoped that continuing negotiations on other major items will produce the action that is expected by rank and file public employees from the leaders of both parties. The Welfare Strike A s long as the Condon-Wadlin Law forbids strikes by public employees we cannot condone the violation of a law by these public employees no matter how serious the grievance. However, we certainly can examine the pressures that brought on such a strike as well as the attitudes among top City officials that ignored the creation of these pressures. In essence, we lay the blame for this strike (still in effect as we went to press) at the doorstep of Mayor Robert F. Wagner. A mayor who ignores the glaring fact that the Welfare Department has suffered a 40 per cent turnover in personnel for years (something which would bankrupt any ordinary business); a mayor who will allow the City's most expensive and sensitive department outside of education to be run basically by underpaid personnel; a mayor who ignores years of vocal and written warnings on deteriorating morale in a big agency is a mayor who seems not only unconcerned about these employees but also appears to be holding them in contempt. Employee organizations in this town who are well-knit in their leadership and effective in their political activities have done very well with Mayor Wagner. Employees in the Welfare Department are divided into two, warring union factions and do not have a reputation for eagerly ringing doorbells at election time. Therefore, It appears that they are of no concern either personally or politically. The mayor can disprove these charges by showing some Imaginative solution to the discontents wracking these employees. In so doing, he will not only be delivering some overdue corrections of salary and working condition Injustices but performing a service to the very people that It Is the duty of the Welfare Department to help. Civil Service Law & You 101 Jerry FiiikelBteiii, Publisher Paul Kyer, Editor Joe Deasy, Jr., CAly EdiUtr Gary Slcwart, Assodale Editor Mike Klioii, Associate Editor N. H. ]VIaf;«>r, Business Manager Advertising Representatives: Editor the Leader: ALBANY — Joseph T. Bellcw — So, Manning Blvd., IV 2-5174 I have been reading letters conKIN(;STON, N.Y. - Charles Andrews - 2;J9 Wall Street, FEderal 8 8350 cerning sick leave time. I have 10c per copy. Subscription Price S2.55 to members of the Civil Service Employees Association. $5.00 to non-members. something to add concerning this matter. It also is a m a t t e r the TUESDAY, .JANUARY 12, 1965 Civil Service Employees Assn. should do something about. A few years back, in early 1962, I was injured on the job. N a t u r a l ly it was a compensation case, FTER the November 3 elections, this page carried an where my employer or compensaeditorial entitled "Message to Rockefeller" which called to tion board paid my expenses. But the Governor's attention the fact that the election results in- during this illness, my sick leave, dicated a mandate for government that is progressive in annual leave and personal leave terms of the needs of its people. The editorial also called time were used up. After returnthe election a challenge to the high quality of leadership ing to work, my sick leave and a n n u a l leave time were restored In government that Rockefeller has shown In the past. but not the personal leave. I n As the result of the Governor's announcement last week cidently, my injury is more or less that he would propose a non-contributory retirement system a p e r m a n e n t one, it can reoccur a t and an age 55 vesting rights plan for State workers, the any time—which it has. The secevidence is already in that Rockefeller does, indeed, plan to ond time it happened all my acfulfill his earlier pledges to bring the conditions of employ- cumulated time was used up inment in the State close to par with those in business cluding the personal leave. It was a repeat of the original, going and private industry. back to work again, my sick leave In September, this newspaper reported that Comptroller time a n d annual leave time, in Arthur Levitt would introduce legislation for a wholly-paid due course were returned, but not pension system and would resubmit a bill to allow vesting the personal leave. Prom the time of the accident u p to this date I have lost over 40 days sick leave time, which I never will get back, due to the fact this injury keeps me off the job a day or two at a time when I ' m unable to work, through no fault of my own. All the time t h a t I took for doctor office calls —which were many—was also lost. T h a t time was taken off my personal leave time although I was a compensation case. Why should I lose time because the doctor appointments were during work hours. W h a t this amounts to is this. Why should a man. injured on the job, lose any time what so ever regardless of whether he has 100 days or more of accumulated sick or annual leave time? Why should he lose time going back and f o r t h to the doctor? Just why doesn't the employer just give him this time as long as he was injured on the company time. It just doesn't add up. A man does not ask to get injured. He does not want something t h a t is going to bother him for life either. It all boils down to this. Don't get injured. Don't get an injury t h a t is more or less a p e r m a n e n t injury. If .vou do get an injury, get a minor one where you are only off a day or so. INJURED ATOE l y WILLIAM GOFFEN (Mr. Goffen, • member of the New York Bar, teaches law at the CoHece of the City of New York, is the author of many boolis and articles and co-authored "New York Criminal Law.") Disability Retirement A CONTRIBUTION to the financial solidity of the New York state Employees Retirement System is the reticence with which service incurred disability pensions at threefourths of the employee's salary are sometimes paid. The reluctance to award three-quarters' pay to the employee totally disabled from the performance of his regular work Is notorious, and the pensioner awarded a total disability pension considers himself lucky. As the pension is income-tax exempt, the employee's "net pay" is greater than he enjoyed while working at full salary. THE SYSTEM'S CAUTION may not always be fair to the injured employee. Contemplate a certain petitioner's case against the New York State Employees Retirement System. IN MAY, 1954, petitioner was appointed on the basis of competitive examination to the permanent civil service position of toll collector and assigned to the Jones Beach State Parkway Authority. As such, he was a member of the New York State Employees Retirement System. ON OCTOBER 12, 1955, while petitioner was collecting tolls at the Jones Beach State Parkway toll station, a motorist entered his lane and placed the toll In his hand. Simultaneously, the motorist seized petitioner's hand tightly and accelerated the automobile in an effort to drag him over the Dutch door of the toll booth. Petitioner struck the side of the booth fracturing his left elbow with ulnar nerve involvement and sustaining additional, serious personal injuries. WHEN HE RETURNED to work several months later, petitioner was unable to perform normal toll collecting duties without risking total loss of use of his arm, and he was assigned to clerical work at Authority headquarters. As the examination for toll collector was regarded as adequate for senior clerk, petitioner was reclassified to the latter position. MEANWHILE, PETITIONER experienced pain of ever increasing severity in the lower chest. Injections, nerve blocks, and finally an operation for the surgical severance of two spinal nerves designed to relieve the pain failed to prevent its recurrence. Petitioner, three years after the incident, applied for accidental disability retirement under the Retirement and Social Security Law, Section 63. The State Comptroller denied the application on March 24, 1959, on the ambiguous ground that the "claimant is not physically or mentally incapacitated for the performance of duty as a senior clerk . . . as the natural and proximate result of an accident . . The reason for the disapproval is ambiguous because it is not clear whether the petitioner was not found to be incapacitated or whether he was found to be incapacitated but not as the result of the incident of October, 1955. FOLLOWING THE disapproval, petitioner came under psychiatric care. Henry Alsop Riley, M.D., in the capacity of an Impartial psychiatrist, reported to the Workmen's Compensation Board that the petitioner's physical and psychiatric symptoms constituting his disability were casually related to the accident. Petitioner was accordingly awarded Workmen's Compensation benefits, but under section 64 (b) of the Retirement and Social Security Law, the favorable determination of the Workmen's Compensation Board is not binding upon the New York State Employees Retirement System. IN SEPTEMBER, 1962, Erwln Jaffe, M.D., a dlplomate In psychiatry and In neurology, who had earlier Informed the- petitioner his disability was emotional rather than physical, concluded that he had become totally disabled. Like Dr. Riley, Dr. Jaffe found casual relationship. The petitioner then filed a second application for a disability retirement pension. This time the State Comptroller denied the application on the technical ground of res judicata in that the earlier application predicated on the same accident had been disapproved. The Comptroller pointed out that the petitioner had not requested an administrative hearing within the four months of the notification of disapproval. THROUGH AN ATTORNEY at long last retained by the petitioner, he sought judicial review. In an Article 78 proceeding, the attorney directed attention to an assurance by the Comptroller that the petitioner could file for accidental •disability retirement "at any time." In the Comptroller's words, "If at any time during your period of employment you" feel that you cannot perform the duties of a senior clerk because of a condition which resn'^^^d from the accident, you Editor, The Leader: This is an open letter to Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller. New York S t a t e Senate, New York State Assembly, and the Civil Service Employees Assn., Inc. New York S t a t e has an arbitrary maximum (150 days) of sick leave accrual. At this point, the employee ceases to accrue benefits. Moreover, the employee receives no payment of any kind for such credits at time of retirement, death or separation. In both respects, our "Empire S t a t e " lags and is not in the forefront of leadership. RVIN Fendal of Queens Is a practicing attorney. He used to In the area of sick leave acbe a practicing police sergeant. The Police Department crual : * At least four cities allow u a has ruled that the occupations of Mr. Fendel (formerly Ser(Cuuliuued on P « f e 7) I (Cvutiuued on P a f e 13) I Crime and Punishment I Tuesday, January 12, 1963 tCoutinued on Vnitt 7) CIVIL Tiiesflay, January 12, 1965 s e r v i c e : l e a d e r EDITORIAL Tioga County Lunch Manogor Civil Service Law & You (Contlnaed from P n f c 6) (Centinned Tioga County ha« an opening for a school lunch m a n a g e r . Salary is $5,500. Closing d a t e for applications is J a n . For f u r t h e r Infonnatlon contact the County Civil Service Commission, Owego. from Paftt f) geant Pendel) are not only incompatible but atoo a violation may make application for accidental disability retirement." of Department rules. INSTEAD OF Interposing an answer to the petition, the The discovery of Mr. Fendel's legal activities lias reComptroller withdrew his contention of res judicata and sulted in his dismissal from the force. This, it seems to granted the petitioner a hearing on his application. Justice us, should be sufficient chastisement. However, the departIsadore Booksteln thereupon marked the proceeding off the ment has also announced that he loses his pension, estimated calendar. In a subsequent column, I shall discuss the hearing. at about $4,500 a year. It is incredible to think that a man, should he lead a long life now, be fined tens of thousands of dollars for violation of a Department rule. By any standards, the Blind stands, providing a livelipunishment here does not fit the crime—It overwhelms it. State Architect Charles S. Kawecki officiated at the opening of a new State Commission for the Blind vending stand hood for more t h a n 200 blind We hope the courts will nullify such excessive chastisement. operators and their assistants, are in building No. 4 at the State Campus In Albany recently. located in public a n d commercial FREE BOOKLET by U. S. GovSuperintendents Installed through the coordinated efforts of the State Architect Opens Commission For Blind Stand buildings throughout the State. T h e New York City Department efl-nment on Social Security. Mall Office of General Services and the interested in operating stands, to Total gross volume of these 118 of Sanitation's Superintendent only. Leader, 97 Duane Street, S t a t e Commission for the Blind, become self-sustaining business- stands amounts to almost 4 mil- Assn. will meet on J a n . 20 a t the ultramodern snack bar is beNew York 7, N. Y. men. 118 Commission foi- the lion dollars annually. 8:00 P.M. at 428 Broadway. ing run by stand operator Herm a n Stollberg. For the past five year Stollberg h a s operated a Commission for the Blind snack bar In the Sears Roebuck Store at Levlttown, L.I. Pi'ior to becoming blind in 1959 Stollberg, a trained dietitian, h a d been employed in the r e s t a u r a n t business for more t h a n 15 years. T h r o u g h its vending program, the New York S t a t e Commission for the Blind provides a n opportunity for capable blind persons, Promotion Exams Set In Erie Co.; Cleric & Technician New York State is offering two examinations for promotions i n BSrte County. One Is for senior xr a y technician in t h e E.J. Meyer Memorial Hospital. Salary is from $4,990 to $6,410. Candidates must be employed In a competitive class In the hospital in a related field. T h e second exam Is for special deputy court clerk. Salary is f r o m $6,440 to $8,280. Candidates must be employed in t h e Office of the County Clerk, Auto Bureau o r Clerk of Courts. Applications will be accepted until J a n . 18 by the S t a t e Civil Service Commission. For f u r t h e r I n f o m a t i o n contact the State D e p a r t m e n t of Oivll Service, the fltate Campus, Albany, S t a t e Of floe Buildings, Buffalo, Syracuse ftnd New York City or all State EJmployment offices. Health En9iiic*r Thiee vacancies will be filled This Is New York State's No. 1 electrical center . . . Tt^c General Electric Company in Schenectady has the world's largest plant for the production of electrical equipment. Here, too, arc located extensive research laboratones and facilities where scientists are constantl)' at work developing new and better products for all Americans. M the result of a n open-competl- tive examination for senior public health engineer i n Nassau County. Salary in this position Is from $10,443 to $13,075. F o r further Information con tact the rjunty Civil Sei-vice Commission, Mineola. S p e e l a l CIvU Ser^ i e « C ' o u r t e s y RaU>»M NEW HOTEL CHESTERFIELD 130 WEST 47TH ST. >ILSO WiiKLY * No. 1 RATSS ON REQUEST 15 Floors . . . and these are New York 400 Rooms P h o n e CO 5 - 7 7 0 0 Il^offorti Read) W ^ H t S l O l S f C CIUR ^ -Well Cards I More than 485,000 State employees and employees of many local subdivisions of New York State and their dependents are glad they have them. These New Yorkers depend on the three-^\'ay STATEWIDE PLAN — Blue Cross, Blue Shield and Major Medical — to protect them against the costs of hospital, surgical-medical and major medical care. If you're not a subscriber and would like to learn how the STATEWIDE P I A N offers the most liberal benefits at the lowest possible c o s t . . . see your payroll o** personnel officer. HOUl I f T I R I M E N T CAN | | Hr AM A9$$ Y—r»y t w l s BLUE CROSS* M U N t r W U M A L nonw lUM^nnucwt i Itmmliui i M i i n f e ' P N i * ! WrHoioxnit nmNt S S I - M I (VI 1 A M I B F A C H . i f : . 1 i 1 I H1 ( AUANY • BufF.VLo • jANtesTowN • « N E W YORK • ROCHESTER BLUE SHIELD* • SvRAcusg • UIICA • WATERTOWN CIVIL Eiffltl SERVICE LEADER Tuesday, January 12, 1965 Guide To City Office Teleptione Numbe The City of New York has a direct Inward dialing system (centrex) for most City listing names and extension n u m - offices are open f r o m 9 a.m. to 5 departments. Through this system, persons can call directly to an extension resulting bers of personnel of these City p.m. daily, except Saturday, S u n departments may write to Centrex day and holidays. County offtcefl In speedier service. Room 1327, Municipal Building, are the same with the exception However, since many people do is printing a directory of depart- the departments. t h a t they generally close at 4 p.m. Those desiring specific persons M a n h a t t a n , New York 10007. not have a centrex telephone ment extensions. This is to be Unless otherwise noted, City directory available, The Leader used for general information for must still call 566-2121. Directories A m POLLUTION C O N T R O L IS Park Row (10038) 566-2722 ART COM'N—City Hall (10007) 566-2121 ASSESSORS—Municipal Bldg. (10007 BOROUGH PRESIDENTS— Bronx—851 Gr. Concourse 566-2121 <10451) CY 3-9000 Brooklyn—Borough Hall <11201) TR 5-7100 Manhattan—Municipal Bldg. a0007) 566-2121 Queens—120-55 Queens Blvd.. Kew Gardens a 1424) BO 8-5000 Richmond—Borough Hall, S. I. 10301 GI 7-1000 BUDGET—Municipal Bldg. (10007) 566-2349 BUILDINGS— Main Office—Municipal Bldg. (10007) 566-2121 Bronx—1932 Arthur Ave. (10457) LU 3-5520 Brooklyn—Municipal Bldg. a i 2 0 1 ) TR 5-7100 Queens—120-55 Queens Blvd., Kew Gardens (11424) BO 8-5000 Richmond—Borough Hall, S. I. (10301) GI 7-1000 CAREER AND SALARY BOARD OP APPEALS—93 Worth >10013) 566-4880 CHIEF MEDICAL EXAMINER— 520 1st Ave. (10016) MU 4-1600 CITY CLERK— Main Office—Municipal Bldg. (10007) 566-3296 Bronx—851 Gr. Concourse <10451) T R 8-2204 Brooklyn—Municipal Bldg. (11201) TR 5-7100 Queens—88-11 Sutphin Blvd., Jamaica (11435) RE 9-8694 Richmond—^Borough Hall, S. I. (10301) G I 7-1000 CITY PLANNING— 2 Lafayette (10007) 566-8500 CITY EMPLOYEES' RETIREMENT— 2 Lafayette (10007) WO 4-5656 CITY RECORD— Mun. Bldg. (10007) 566-2616 CITY REGISTER— Hall of Records, 31 Chambers (10007) 566-3734 Bronx—851 Gr. Concourse (10451) CY 3-7070 Queens—161-04 Jamaica Ave., Jamaica, (11432) JA 6-8684 Kings—Supreme Court Bldg. (11201) UL 5-7700 CITY SHERIFF—Hall of Records (10007) 566-3738 Bronx—851 Gr. Concourse (10451) CY 3-3900 Kings—Municipal Bldg. (11201) TR 5-7100 Qns.—Old County Court House, Court Sq., L.I.C. (11101) EX 2-4950 Richmond—County Court House, S.I. (10301) GI 7-0041 CIVIL COURT— New York—111 Centre (10013) 566-2878 Bronx—851 Gr. Concourse (10451) CY 3-6500 Kings—120 Schermerhorn (11201) UL 5-4899 Small Claims UL 8-9805 Queens—126-06 Queens Blvd., Kew Gardens (11415) LI 4-9300 Richmond — 927 Castleton, West New Brighton (10310) GI 2-8000 CIVIL DEFENSE— 135 E. 55 (10022) PL 8-2300 CIVIL SERVICE— 220 Church (10013) 566-8720 COMMERCE AND INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT— 415 Madison Ave. (10017) . . P L 9-7770 COMPTROLLER— Mun. Bldg. (10007) 566-2121 CORRECTION— 100 Centre (10013) 566-8347 COUNCIL— City Hall (10007)' 566-2121 President—City Hall (i0007) 566-5018 COUNTY CLERKS— Bronx -851 Gr. Concourse (10451) CY 3-8000 Kings—Supreme Court Bldg. (11201) UL 5-7770 N. Y. Cbunty Court House (10007) 566-8657 Queens—88-11 Sutphin Blvd., Jamaica 11435) LI 4-9300 Richmond—County Court House, S. I. (10301) SA 7-1806 Administration Office—100 Centre (10013) CRIMINAL COURT OP THE CITY O P NEW YORK— New York— 100 Centre <10013)— Dial 566 plus Extension Parts—lA 6348 IB 7383 IC 7354 2A 7381 2B 7382 3 8382 5A 6449 5D 7345 8 7361 9 7357 11 RE 2-6267 Sat., Sun. and holidays— Parts—4 and 8 RE 2-6267 Part—9 RE 2-6265 Complaint Room 566-7358 52 Chambers St. (10007)— Parts—5B and 5C 566-7444 6A and B 566-7338 7A and B 566-7403 2d Ave. a n d 2d St. (10003) — Part^lO OR 7-6780 Bronx— 162d St. and Washington Ave, (10451); Parts—1 A, IB, 2A, 2B, 2C, 3, 6 and 7; Part—4, Sat., Sun. & holidays—MO 5-7500. 1400 Williamsbrldge Rd. (10461); Parts—5A, 5B and 5C—TA 8-0300. Kings— 120 Schermerhorn (11201) — P a r t s LA, IB and IC, 2A, 2B and 2C; P a r t 3, P a r t 4, Sat., Sun. & holidays; P a r t s 6A and 6B; Part 7; Parts 8A a n d 8 B — M A 4-5301. 127 Pennsylvania (11207), P a r t s 5A, 5B and 5C—DI 5-9898. Queens— 125-01 Queens Blvd., Kew Gardens (11415)—Parts lA, 2A, 2B, 2C & 3— LI 4-9300. P a r t 4, Sat., Sun. & holidays—BO 8-0047. 120-55 Queens Blvd., Kew Gardens (11415) BO 8-5000 25-10 Court Sq., L.I. City (11101) EM 1-9303 Part—5A S T 6-8402 Parts—5B and 5C EM 1-930S Part—6 EM 1-9304 Part—7 RA 9-9009 Richmond— 67 Targee St.. S.L (10301), Parts 1, 2 and 3. Part 4. Sat.. Sun. & holidays SA 7-1150 DISTRICT ATTORNEYS— Bronx—851 Gr. Concourse (10451) LU 8-9500 Kings—Municipal Bldg. (11201) T R 5-8900 New York—155 Leonard (10013) RE -2-7300 Queens—126-05 Hoover Ave., Kew Gardens (11415) BO 1-6200 Richmond—County Court House, S. I. (10301) GI 7-0049 EDUCATION—110 Livingston. Bklyn. (11201) UL 8<1000 ELECTIONS—80 Varick (10013) CA 6-2600 Bronx—1780 Gr. Concourse (10457) CY 9-9017 Brooklyn—345 Adams (11201) JA 2-2441 Queens—150-14 Jmca. Ave. (11432) JA 6-2600 Rich.—30 Bay, St. George (10301) SA 7-1955 ESTIMATE— Fianchises—Municipal Bldg. (10007) 566-2656 ReUrement—2 Lafayette (10007) 566-5720 S e c r e t a r y - Municipal Bldg. (10007) 566-2641 ETHICS—52 Chambers (10007 ) 566-3050 FAMILY COURT OP THE STATE OP NEW YORK, WITHIN THE CITY OP NEW YORK—135 E. 22d (10010) AL 4-1900 Citywide Family Offenses Term— 80 Lafayette St. (10013) ....566-7409 Citywide Filiation Term— 52 Chambers St. (10007) _..566-7409 Ext 2841-42-43 Citywide Support Central Trial Term— 135 E. 22d (10010) AL 4-1900 Juvenile T e r m New York—235 W. 23d (10011) AL 5-9000 Kings—283 Adams (11201) UL 5-1700 Bronx—1109 Carroll PI. (10456) LU 8-5000 Queen.s—105-34 Union Hall St., Jamaica (11433) JA 6-2545 Richmond—100 Richmond Ter., St. George, S.I. (10301)... .GI 2-4412 Support and Conciliation Term— New York—135 E. 22d (10010) AL 4-1900 Kings—283 Adams (11201) UL 5-1700 Bronx—1118 Gr. Concourse (10456) LU 8-5000 Queens—105-34 Union Hall St., Jamaica (11433) JA 6-2545 Richmond—100 Richmond Ter., St. George, S. I. (10301) . . G I 2-4412 FINANCE—Municipal Bldg. (10007) 566-2121 City Collections— Bronx—Tremont and Arthur Aves. (10457) CY 4-0800 Main Off.—Municipal Bldg. (10007) 566-2121 Bklyn.—^Municipal Bldg. (11201) T R 5-7100 Queens—120-55 Queens Blvd., Kew Gardens (11424) . .BO 8-5000 Richmond—350 St. Marks PI., S.I. (10301) G I 7-1000 Excise Taxes—139 Centre St. (10013) 566-2121 Special Taxes—50 Pine (10005) WH 4-8300 FIRE—Municipal Bldg. (10007) 566-2121 Brooklyn—Municipal Bldg. (11201) TR 5-7100 HEALTH—125 Worth (10013) 566-7711 Bronx—1826 Arthur Ave. (10457) LU 3-5500 Brooklyn—295 Platbush Ave. ext (11201) T R 5-9400 Queens—90-37 Parsons Blvd., Jamaica (11432) OL 8-6600 Richmond—51 Stuyvesant PI., St. George. S.I. (10301) SA 7-6000 HEALTH INSURANCE BOARD— Secretary—Municipal Bldg, (10007) 566-4686 HIGHER EDUCATION—535 E. 80th St. 10021) T R 9-3600 HIGHWAYS—40 Worth (10013) 566-3681 HOSPITALS—125 Worth (10013) 566-8237 HOUSING AND REDEVELOPMENT— 2 Lafayette (10007) 566-6590 HUMAN RIGHTS—80 Lafayette (10013) 566-5325 INVESTIGATION—50 Pine (10005) WH 3-3232 JOIN—280 Bway. (10007) 566-4444 LABOR—93 Worth (10013) 566-4883 LANDMARKS PRESERVATION COMMISSION—2 Lafayette St. (10007) 566-7577 LAW—Municipal Bldg. (10007) 566-2121 Brooklyn—Municipal Bldg. (11201) TR 5-7100 LICENSES—80 Lafayette (10013) 566-2121 MARINE AND AVIATION— Battery Maritime Bldg., Whitehall and East River (10004) 566-6646, 6647 MARKETS—137 Centre (10013) CA 6-5653 MAYOR'S O F F I C E - C i t y Hall (10007) 566-5700 Admin.—250 Bway (10007) 566-6767 MUNICIPAL BROADCASTING— Municipal Bldg. (10007) ....566-3008 MUNICIPAL REFERENCE LIBRARY— Municipal Bldg. (10007) .,..566-4284 N. Y. CITY COMMISSION FOR T H E POSTER CARE O P CHILDREN— 250 Church (10013) DI 4-8700 N. Y. CITY COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH BOARD— 93 Worth (10013) 566-4766 N. Y. CITY HOUSING AUTHORITY— 250 Broadway (10007) 433-2525 N. Y. CITY TRANSIT AUTHORITY— 370 Jay. Bklyn (11201) . . . . U L 2-5000 N. Y. C?ITY YOUTH BOARD— 79 Madison Ave., (10016) . .MU 5-8600 PARKS—64th St. and 5th Ave. (10021), RE 4-1000 Bronx—Bronx Park East at Birchall Ave. (10460) TA 8-3200 Brooklyn—Litchfield Mansion Prospect Park (11215) SO 8-2300 Queens—The Overlook Forest Park, Kew Gardens (11415) . . . . L I 4-4400 Richmond—Field House, Clove Lakes Park, Victory Blvd. and Clove Rd., Sunnyside, S. I. (10301) . .GI 2-7640 PAROLE—100 Centre (10013) 566-6444 PERSONNEL—220 Church (10013) 566-8720 POLICE—240 Centre (10013) CA 6-2000 Emergency 440-1234 PROBATION—2 Lafayette (10007) 566-3192 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATORS— Bronx—851 Gr. Concourse <10451) CY 3-7660 Kings—Municipal Bldg. (11201) TR 5-7100 New York—Hall of Records <10007) WO 2-6743 Queens—88-11 Sutphin Blvd., J a m a i c a (11435) JA 6-5037 Richmond—County Court House, 20 Richmond Ter., S.I. (10301) GI 2-1028 PUBLIC EVENTS—250 Bway. (10007) 566-2923 PUBLIC WORKS—Mun. Bldg. (10007) 566-4446 PURCHASE—Municipal Bldg. (10007) 566-4122 REAL ESTATE—2 Lafayette (10007) 566-7637 REAL PROPERTY ASSESSMENT— Municipal Bldg. (10007) ....566-3402 Bronv—Trem. and Arthur Aves. (10457) CY 4-2900 Brooklyn—Municipal Bldg. (11201) T R 5-7100 New York—Municipal Bldg. <10007) 566-3402 Queen.s—120-55 Queens Blvd., Kew Gardens (11424) BO 8-5000 Richmond—350 St. Marks PL, S. I. (10301) GI 7-1000 RECORDS, COMMISSIONERS OF— Surrogates' Court— Bronx—851 Gr. Concourse .(10451) CY 3-0300 N. Y.—Hall of Records (10007) WO 2-6744 RELOCATION—2 Lafayette (10007) 566-6500 RENT AND REHABILITATION ADMINISTRATION—280 Bway (10007) 566-5054 REVISION OF ASSESSMENTS— Municipal Bldg. (10007) ....566-3402 Bronx—530 E. Trem. Ave. (10457) CY 9-4000 Brooklyn—Municipal Bldg. (11201) T R 5-7545 Queens—95-38 130th St., Richmond Hill (11419) VI 9-6465 Richmond—Borough Hall, S.I. (10301) GI 7-8500 SANITATION—125 Worth (10013) 566-2121 SITE SELECTION BOARD—Municipal Bldg. (10007) 566-2121 STANDARDS AND APPEALS— 80 Lafayette (10013) 566-5174 STATEN ISLAND COMMUNITY COLLEGE— 50 Bay St., S.I. (10301) G I 8-9000 STATUTORY CONSOUDATION — 52 Chambers (10007) RE 2-4040 SUPREME COURT. APP. DIVISION— 1st Dept.—Mad. Ave., 25th St. <10010) LE 2-1000 Court sits from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. t h e first and third Tuesdays of each term, motion days, the Court opens at 10 a.m. Motions called at 9 a.m. Appeals from orders called a t 10 a.m. 2d Dept.—45Monro€ PI., Bklyn. (11201) TR 5-1300 (Cuutiuued «o Page 9) CIVIL TiieiHay, January 12, 1965 SERVICE Page Nine LEADER General CuiJe To City Telephone System (Continuer from Paee 8) Court sits from 2 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. SUPREME COURT, 1ST JUD. DIST.— N. Y. C o u n t y County Court House f 10007, CiimInal Court Bldg., 100 Centre (10013) 566-6700. Bronx—851 Gr. Concourse (10451) CY 3-8000 SUPREME COURT, 2D JUD. DIST.— Court opens at 10 a.m. Kings—Civic Center, Montague St. (11201) UL 5-7700 Appellate Term UL 5-7700 Rich.—Cty Ct. House, S.I. (10301) GI 7-8700 SUPREME COURT, I I T H JUD. DIST.— Court opens at 10 a.m. Queens—88-11 Sutphin Blvd., Jamaica (11435) LI 4-9300 Rich.—City Ct. House, S.I. (10301) SURROGATES' COURT— Bronx—851 Gr. Concourse (10451) CY 3-0300 Court opens at 10 a.m. Career Jobs For Women With State; Strict Requirements Career Jobs in the field of personnel are being offered to women by the State Department of Labor. Jobs are as employment interviewer, salary $5,748; employment security placement trainee, salary $5,359; unemployment insurance claims examiner, salary $5,748, and unemployment insurance claims trainee, salary $5,359. Requirements for these positions include being a college graduate, With ro fithout experience or being an undergraduate college student with experience in personnel or labor and industrial relations. For further information and applications, contact the Professional Placement Center, New York State Employment Service. 444 Madison Avenue, New York City, or at other State Employment Service offices. Kings—Supreme Court Bldg. (11201) UL 5-7700 Court opens at 9:30 a.m. N.Y. Hall of Records (10007) WO 2-6744 Court opens at 10 a.m. Queens—88-11 Sutphin Blvd., Jamaica (11435) LI 4-9300 Court opens at 9:30 a.m, Richmond—County Court House, S.I. (10301) .GI 7-7300 Court opens at 10:30 a.m. TAX COMMN.—Mun. Bldg. (10007) 566-2121 TEACHERS' RETIREMENT— 154 Nassau (10038) THE CITY UNIVERSITY OP NEW YORK— 535 E. 80th St., N.Y. (10021) TR 9-3600 Colleges: Brooklyn. Bedford Ave. and Ave. H, Bklyn, N.Y. (11210) . . . .UL 9-2400 City, Convent Ave., N.Y. (10031) AD 4-2000 Applications for sanitary engineer will be accepted until Jan. 25 by the State Department of Civil Service. State resident is not required. Salary in these position-s range fram $8,175 to $12,110. For further Information contact the State Department of Civil Service, the State Campus. Albany; 270 Broadway, New York City or the State Office Buildings. Buffalo and Syracuse. Prepare For Ask A Few Probing Questions —Like These: Q. Which health plan gives the broadest coverage—with no ifs, ands and buts? DIPLOMA Let the Columbia School of Public Health answer that one. It studied New York health plans and found that "the most complete contract offered for sale in New York State is provided by the Health Insurance Plan of Greater New York." Q. Does the plan really cover specialist care? Only H.I.P. does a real job of covering specialist care. When it comes to today's vitally needed specialist services, other plans have expensive loopholes. Compare specialist coverage carefully. Note, for instance, that out-of-hospital specialist care—so important and so costly today — is never a "paid-in-full" benefit in cash allowance or major medical plans. Q. Is the plan concerned with the quality of care? A. $35- h i g h -$35 * Ace«pt«d for Civil Service * Job Promotion * Other Purpose* UNIFORMED FORCES SALARY APPEALS BOARD— 93 Worth (10013) WA 5-1900 H.I.P. is. But it is the only plan in the New York area that checks on the quality of care provided by its affiliated physicians. Every doctor in every H.I.P. Medical Group must be approved by a medical board of distinguished physicians before he can serve members of the Plan. H.I.P. doctors give only the kind of service for which they are professionally qualified. Q. Can you continue with comprehensive benefits (home and office calls) if you retire or leave your job? A. Only H.I.P. permits this—with no strings attached. You need only be in H.I.P. for three months to be able to convert to a direct payment p o l i c y without loss of home and office coverage, regardless of your age. Five Week Course iirciuiret yuu to t a k e t h e N(ut« K d u i u U o i i ne>;iur(iii<>ut Kxuiuiiittlioii for a Ilisb KihuoJ Ktliiivuleiii'y Dittluma. ROBERTS SCHOOL 517 W. 57tli St.. New York 19 PLaza 7-0300 Pl6ase send me FREE information. UbLi Name , Address City Ph HEALTH INSURANCE PLAN OF GREATER NEW YORK 625 M A D I S O N A V E N U I , N E W Y O R K , N . Y . 10022 JU 2-2330 WATER SUPPLY, BOARD OF— 120 Wall (10005) 566-4763 WATER SUPPLY, GAS AND ELEC.— Main Office—Municipal Bldg. (10007) 566-4573 Bronx—Tremont & Arthur Aves. (10457) CY 9-2000 Brooklyn—Municipal Bldg. (11201) TR 5-7100 Queens—120-55 Queens Blvd., Kew Gardens (11424) BO 8-5000 Rich!-350 St. Marks PI. (10301) GI 7-1000 WELFARE— 250 Church (10013) DI 4-8700 Queensborough. Springfield Blvd., Bayside, N.Y. (11364) . . . H A 8-0200 Staten Island. 50 Bay St. N.Y. (10301) GI 8-9000 Manhattan, 134 W. 51st St., N.Y. (10019) 582-9300 New York City, 300 Pearl St., Bklyn, N.Y. (11201) UL 5-8100 In Comparing Health Plans Your SCHOOL EQUIVALENCY TRIBOROUGH BRIDGE AND TUNNEL AUTHORITY— Randall's Island, N.Y. (10035) TR 6-9700 VETERANS' AFFAIRS— 300 W. 43d (10036) BE YOUR SHERLOCK! A. State Residence Not Required For Sanitary Engineer 566-7680 Baruch School of Busines.s, Lex. Ave. and 23d St., N.Y. (10010) OR 3-7700 Hunter, 605 Park Ave., N.Y, (10021) TR 9-2100 Bronx Campus, Bedford Pk. Blvd. W. N.Y. (10468) WE 3-6000, Queens, 65-30 Kissena Blvd., Flushing, N. Y. (11367) . . H I 5-7500 Community Colleges: Bronx, 120 E. 184th St., N.Y. (10468) WE 3-7000 Kingsbordugh, 2611 Ave. Z, N.Y. (11235) 769-9200 TRAFFIC-28-11 Bridge Plaza North, L.I. City (11101) EM 1-8000 P L m 41144 P a g e CIVIL T e n SERVICE Tuetdaj, January 12, LEADER mms. What's Doing In City Departments When you can choose your health plan mmmmrnrn CTommLssioner of Correction Anna M. Kross represented Mayor Wagner at the Inauguration of Dona Pelisa Rincon de Oautier as Mayoress of San Juan, Puerto Rico, recently. Dona Pelisa ha.s already served for 16 years a« Mayoress of San Juan, and this present Inauguration marks her reelection to a fifth foui-- year term as chief executive of Puerto Rico's capital city. » « • On the City Planning Commission's agenda for Jan. 20 are items for a proposed City map change establishing a new street system for a large area in the Paordegat Basin section of Brooklyn and a propc.sed zoning change making provision for a local shopping section as part of the same section. • • • The Department of Purchase, In the tradition of its unusual sales, is now trying to get rid of three ferry boats, formerly of the Brooklyn-Staten Island run and now casualties of the new Narrows bridge. The Hudson, the Narrows, and the Tides will be sold by sealed bid on Jan. 15. * * • A bingo inspectors training school was opened last week by the Department of Licenses, Bingo establishments, which ai'e licensed by the City, have been proliferating during the past few year.s, so the Department has selected special inspectors to imdergo thorough courses In enforcement of bingo laws. • • THE FAMILY DOCTOR PLAN Coverage from the first visit: under the GHI Family Doctor Plan, your insurance starts with the first dollar. Paid-in-full benefits: without regard to your income or that of your family, over 10,000 participating doctors have agreed to limit their charges for covered services to GHI's allowances when the simple GHI paid-in-full rules are followed. • URBANDOC, an experimental computer documentation and information retrieval system and the brainchild of Mrs. Vivian Sessions, director of the City Housing and Flanninf Library, has been designed to handle the vast storehouse of information about the complex problems of urban life. Much of the information is compiled, then filed and forgotten, according to Mrs. Sessions. URBANDOC is intended to make the information easily available. * please choose carefully. «i • The Department of Aii- Pollution Control has issued an explanation of the formula from which the department's dally Air Pollution Index is derived. Three major sourcs of pollution, sulfui* dioxide, smoke and carbon monoxide are measured hourly, according to Commissioner Arthur J . Benline. and the index is found by a mathematically weighted form ula. Free choice of doctor: Under the GHI Plan, the same GHI payments are made no matter what doctor you choose. When paid-in-full benefits apply, GHI pays the participating doctor directly. If a non-participating doctor Is chosen, you receive the checK. YOUR FAMILY DOCTOR PLAN BENEFITS Out-of-Hospital Home Calls Office Visits Diagnostic X-ray Examinations Diagnostic Latjoratory Examinations Annual Physical Examinations Immunizations infant Cart Wall-Baby Cart Mattrnity Cart In-HotpiM Spaciaiist Consultations Surgaiy Radiation Thtrapy Pi)yalo*Tharapy ClaolrO'SltockThtrapy Allargias. Ambuianct Strvlct Visiting Nurst Strvict Surgtry Madical Cara Mattrnity Cart Antsthtsia Spaciaiist Consultations Infant Cart Radiation Tharapy Psychiatric Cara Elactro-Shock Tharapy N o s p l t a l f z a t i o n C o v * n i g « - t n most CIMS GHI subscribers are covered by Blue CroM. Demolition Inspector The above describes GHI's Family Doctor Plan, which protects most of GHI's sub- A Now York City eligible Ust for senior demolition inspector has been recommended for estab lishment with 4 names. scribers. In soma groups benafits ara also provided for the cost of Prescribed Drugs and Private Duty Nursing. This is merely Intended as a general description of the benefits provided. Further details, as to benefits, exclusions and limitations, are available upon request. ONE STOP SHOP For All Official Police - Correction Transit - Housing Equipment INCLUDING: G u m , Leathor Goods, Shirti, Panit, Hats, Handcuffs, Niaht.Stlcks, otc. WK BUV, HELL, OB TU.^DE OUNS Eugene DeMayo & Sons For more details call or write: GROUP HEALTH INSURANCE, INC. 221 Park Avenue South, New York 3, N. Y, Phone: SP 7-6000, Extension 3100 INC. 376 East 147th Street (Between W i l l i t & Third Ave.) Bronx, N.Y. M O S-7075 W« Heier. Util-CAROS 1 e CIVIL 'Tuesday, January 12, 1965 Tax Assistance By Telephone Available From Federal IRS Federal tax assistance by telephone Is available for BrooklynQueens-Long Island area taxpayers, the Intefrnal Revenue Sci-vlce announced recently. EMstrict Director Thomas E. Scanlon urged people with tax questions to call early in the filing period and avoid the "last minute rush," Scanlon said, "phoning provides uninterrupted attention to tax problems and eliminates standing In line. Experience has shown that many difficult questions can be handled over the telephone." "If taxpayers In our area prefer personal assistance, they may visit any of our offices," Director Scanlon said. He re nded taxpayers that the headquarters office is now located at 35 Tillary P'reet, Brooklyn, New York, and all tax returns should be filed with the headquarters office. The office hours and telephone numbers are: Bayshore, 1265 Sunrise Highway, MO 5-0361, Mondays and SECURITY OFFICER $19,000 START lj«rit»i roriioratlon neekH rellriNl roll(<« Oirtfcr (with Ht IcMRt C'HitCfi raiik) for iiivcHtiiriitive and NM>iirl(y w o r k . Must lie nober, IndiiittrltMiN, iliMrlpliiitHl and In Kood liealtll, with ut IPMht yearn rxiirripnce. IMetixe ituhniit r o m lilrtn rcNUnie hirhidliiK aeP. hrlKht, welftlit and i'Ff«>nt i>h»lo of yoiirKPlf. BOX riVIL SKKVICE LEADER. — JOB OPENING — New IBM installation for N. Y. State Division of Housing & Community Renewal (N.Y.C.) requires SENIOR TABULATION MACHINE OPERATOR, GR-8 on a transfer basis — OPPORTUNITIES FOR ADVANCEMENT — contact Mr. D. Sussmon at 971-1641. NO Mrs. Postoii Will Head New OfFice CLAY REAL ESTATE Springfield Gdn. Est. $15,990 Assistant Assessor Exam Closes Jan. 26 Applications for the assistant assessor examination will be accepted until Jan. 26 by the City of New York. Salary ranges from $5,750 to $7,190 a year. For further information contact the Department of Personnel, Applications Division, 49 Thomas Street. Building & Grounds Superintendent, $8,000 Rockland County has openings for buildings and grounds superintendent. Salary in this position is from $8,000 per year. Closing date Is Jan. 12. For further information contact the County Personnel Office, County Office Building, New City. A FILM ADVENTURE WITHOUT EQUAL! FEE Friendly Service SECYS (EXP) TYPISTS (50 W P M ) CLERKS C O M P T O M E T E R OPERS. BOOKKEEPING M A C H I N E OPERS. PROOF & K E Y P U N C H OPERS. Immediate work at a good salary You may tet your own schedule. Positions available in a wide choice of companies at all levels of experience and responsibilities. Come in for a friendly chat. We'll be glad to be of service. ECHELONS OFFICE TEMPORARIES, I N C . 39 Cortlandt St. 55 W . 42 St. 45 W . 34 St. LEADER ALBANY, Jan. 11 — Mrs. E r s a Poston has been named head of the new State Office of Economic Opportunity. Her salary will be $18,000 a year. Until the appointment, Mrs. Poston was ,tate coordinator for youth and work programs in the Fridays; Brooklyn, 35 Tillary State Youth Division. She has Street, 596 - 3200, Mondays been a state employee since 1937. through Fridays; Flushing, 13659 37th Avenue, 596-3200, Mondays through Fiidays. Beautiful Greene County Jamaica, 150-14 Jamaica AveSDMMRR HOMRfl — A L L YE.^R nue, 596-3200, Mondays through HOMKM — RUSIXKMS & OTHKR PROI'ERTIKS Fi-idays; MSneola, 114 Old Country Road, CH 8-7100, Mondays through Fiidays and Riverhead, TEL CATSKILL 943-2420 240 West Main Street, PA 7-3426, COXSACKIE 731.8734 Fridays only. Assistance is avallabe 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at all offices. Help Wanted Male & Female TEMPORARY SERVICE CINEMA II •rh.,0 A,t-.n,c j i 60(ii St'Mt Shoppers Service Guide DISCOUNT PRICES H. MOSKOWITZ Real Estate Best Buys Lonq Island i CALL BE 3 - 6 0 1 0 ONE FAMILY Specials T W O FAMILY BRICK LAURELTON ODNS. tl.t.HOO 8«erlflc« Siile Detached Eniflish Colonial with 4 Irifc bedroome situated on a tree liiiwl utreet 600<) fguare feet of Iandsc.iape groundo. paraKe, m o d e r n k i t c h . and b a t h . Evei-yt h i n r roee. Move ripht In. 8 P R I N O F I K L D ODNfl. $iH,tt1»0 To Settle Kstate Detached new shingle le>ral 2 family consists of 2—4 ",4 room aDartniente with a bedroom.s in each apt. Ultra Modern kitchens A Baths. 2 ear r a r aire, all this on over 4000 «<inare feet of landscape grounds. Immedia t e occupancy. H0I.IJ8 <t(i.U»0 Owner* Saerlfle* T h i s 10 y e a r old Detached Cape Cod type ranch with Ultra Motlern roomn all on 1 floor pine large kitch. and b a t h . It couKistd of 4 Mi finished attif eitnated on over 4000 square feet of parden grounds. Everythine roes. CA^ftRIA HKIGHT8 I'ri.WW Due to Illness 9 y r old Legal 2 Family brick l o a i t t d in one of the finest areas with 2 large modern apts. 6 r o o m s f o r owner plus S ' / j room a p t . for income .earage, l a n d s c a p e d garden, conv. to everything. EXACTLY AS ADVERTISED G.I. $490 D O W N FHA $690 D O W N Many other 1 & 2 Family homes available QUEENS HOME SALES 170-18 HllliMo Ave. — 8-7510 CaU f o r A p p t . Jamaica R-A-N-C-H fl r«i«nn, btHlroom rHiicli. K.x<'P|i_ tiniial llvinif room — mo4lrrii u | i ' tOMlHtfi kitclien — rxrellpiit haHp•iiPiU, — neatly laiidNrniiMl KroiiiiilH — and all p«Ken(ial rxtrait iiirliidni. 0(ir br«f Imy in aRe»! ONLY $ « 0 0 DOWN BUTTERIY & GREEN lfi8-','.l Illllxidp Ave. JAiiialca «-(!aoo LECAL NOTICE CITATION. — T H E P E O P I . E OF THE S T A T E OF NEW YORK. BY THE GRACE OF GOD, F R E E AND I N D E P E N D E N T TO: MORGAN GUARANTY TRUST COMPANY OF NEW YORK, aa T m s t p p under tho lasi will ami testament of Zary Arniand Toula. deieased, MADELEI N E TOULA, LOI^IS CHERON. MARG U E R I T E CHERON, DR. HOWARD A RUSK. A T T O R N E Y GENERAL OF THE S T A T E OF NEW YORK, beiiiir t h e p e r . Boiifl internsted iiH ciwlitors, lepalees, devisees, beiienciaries, distributee!), or Otherwise, in the Estate of Zary Armand Toiila, {leeeasnd. wlio at tim time of his death wafi a re-iilent of the City, County anil State of New York. SEND GREETING WHEREAS. Moriraa Guaranty Trust Company of New York, having: its< principal place (if l)iisiness of -jlJ Wall Street in llip Uorouirh of M.inhjitlan, City, County and Slate of New York, h a s presented and filed an account of it» proreedintrx a.'j E.xccutor of the lafll will and testament of Zary Armand Toula, deceased, late of the Iloroush of Maidialtan. City, County and S t a t e of New York, and has also presented and filed a petition praylnsr that said account he judicially settled and allowed, and t h a t the wiil of said deccdent he coni^lrucd and it he iiwtructed a.s to the validity of the trust create<l by S c i i o n (I!) of Clause EIGHTH theerof a f t e r the doath of Madeleine Toula. NOW, T H E R E F O R E , .vou and each of you are hereby cited to show cause hefore one of the Siirrosatcs of the County of Ne\y York, at the Surroifate's CouH to he held at the Hall of Records, in the Borousrh of M a n h a t t a n , City, County and Stale of New York, on the Itih day of February, lf)n.". at 1 0 . n o o'clock in the forenoon of that day. why said account should not be so judiciall.v settled and allowed and xaid will should not I)e so construed and the petitioner so instructed. IN T E S T I M O N Y WHEREOF, we Iiave caused ilie fical of the Siirroirate's Court of said f^ounty of New York to lie hereunto affixed. (Seal) WITNESS. HON. .lOSEPH A. COX. one of the Surrogates of said Cruinly of New York, nt Mid County, the 3 0 t h day of Dc'cnil)er. in the y e a r of oiir Lord one thousand nine hundred ami sixly-four. P H I L I P A. DONAHCE. Clerk of the Surroirate's Court Ti;UK, MARSH. KKI.LY & HOARE .\ttorneyB f o r Petitioner nOd F i f t h Avenue New York. New York 10nif> SECOND S U P P L R M R N T A L . CITATION. — File No. ri«ni, 1064. — T H E PEOP L E OF T H E STATE OF NEW Y'ORK. By t h e Grace of Ood Free and Imlcpendent. To ELRNOR SHIRLEY, if livby the Civil Service Eniploye-a Assn, is t h a t which is sold throuBh CSEA Headquarters. ing and if dead to her heirs at law, next 8 Elk St.. Albany. The plate which sella lor ifil. can aUo be ordered t h r o u g h of Uin and distributees whose names ami places of residence are unknown and if local chapter officeiv. she died subseducnt to the deccdent herein, to her executors, adniinistratorH, legCemetery Lots atees, devisees, assignees and successors in Applianc* Servleei BEAUTIFUL non-sectarian memorial park whose names aiul phK'es of recond. R e f r l r s . Stoves. Interest in Queens. One to I'J double loti. .l«les & Service i-esidence are unknown .ind (o all other P r i v a t e owner, For f u r t h e r inforQiatlon, Wash Machines, combo t i n k s . Guaranteed heir* a t law, next of Uin and distributees TKACY KEFRIGEBATION—CY. 2-6800 w r i t e : Box 541. Leader, y Duau* St., 240 B 148 St. « I 2 U i CastU Hilla Av. Bx of Henry Eiintein, the decedciit herein, N . y . 10007, N.V. whose names and places of residence are unknown and <-annot, a f t e r diligent inuuiry, lie a.s<'ertained. YOU ARE HERECSEA LICENSE PLATE - $1.00 BY CITED TO SHOW CAl'.^E before the STANDARD N.Y.S. SIZE • 6x12 inchts Surrogate's Court, New York County, at Kasy to attach to f r o n t bracket, reRoom 504 in the Hall of Rcconls in the quire* no epeciul holes as will nmuUer County of New York, New York, oti plate. Oval h o l e s — t o p & b o t t o m — J a n u a r y -^7. littl.'., at 10 A..M., why a C.S.E.A. Emblem, Assoc. name printed i-erlain writing dated Scplcnibcr 4lh, l!l.'.7, in Blue on White. ALL ENAMEL. which h.iN been offered fitr prol>ute<l by 91.OU ( P o s t p a i d ) , send to: SIGNS, Eva .l:ico)>s, Morrix Ep.<>lein and Albeit Humllton, Auburn, N Y. 1^10:^1. H. T i e i m a n . i-csiiling ut 1.541 E. DUt Street, Hrooklyn. N Y , in."> East 17itth NYC EMPLOYEE PLATE Street. Bronx. N Y. and ;it)l So. Oyster Buy Rd.. Hicksville, N Y , respectively UYC E.Ml'LOYEES FRONT LICENSE Adding Machintt should not be probated as the lust Will P L A T E . Uxl-J in. Standard NYS t U e , Typ»writ*r( • Mimeographs and Testunient. rcUting to real and pei •lutteil holes f o r easy a t t a c h m e n t , Ked sonul properly, of Henry Etxitein. Dc ft White Enamel. Plate carries, NYC AddrcMing M o c I i I m i ceased, who wa>i at llit< time of bis death Seal with letteriug. "City of New York, tiuuruiitfrd. AUo Rentals. Repalra. a resident of 5''0 W IKSth Street, in Municipal Employee." Cider from: the County of New York. New York biKus: 54 Hamilton, Auburn, M.Y. Date<J. Attested nnd Sealed, DccemI) r 130*41. $1.00 Postpaid. 16, 1004. »7 K A S r aiiMi HTHEKT HON. JOSEPH A COX. Surrogate. New T Y P E W R I T E R BARGAINS NKW YORK, N.V. lOOIS UKHiiiere; 7-SS8S York County. I ' H I L I P DONAUUK, •uiiili $1 7 50: Underwood 50: others Cklk. (L S ) Pearl itrus.. 470 SiuilU, B k b u T R * 3044 Get The Authorized GSEA License Plate Elrren SPRINGFIELD GDS. $22,000 Legal 2-Family — Colonial Cape No Cash Vets-$1,500 FHA A L L VACANT ON TITLE, 13 Y E A R S OLD, CUSTOMIZED HOMI!. 5 RM.<3 1ST FLOOR, ROOM.S 2ND FLOOR. P L U S 2 ' / j ROOM STUDIO APT. IN BASEMENT. EXTRAS INCLUDE ALUMINUM STORMS, SCREENS VENETIAN BLINDS, RANGES. R E F R I G E R A T O R S . PROFESSIONALLY S E T O N FULLY LANDSCAPED 4 0 x 1 0 0 PLOT, IN P A R K L I K E SURROUNDINGS. BAISLEY PARK $16,000 Detached Brick Ranch — 8 Rooms No Cash Vets—$1,600 FHA O W N E R ANXIOUS T<1 SELL THIS MAGNIFICENT R E S A L E , IN ADDITION TO USUAL E X T R A S . HE HAS JU.ST INSTALLED A NEW GAS M \ K E S THIS INCOME I^OSSIBILIT Y. OTHER F E A T U R E S INCLUDE M \ K E S THIS INCOME POSSIBILITY. OTHER E A T U R E S INCLUDE GARAGE M A I N T E N A N C E - F R E E E X T E R I O R & A LOCATION WITHIN 3 BLOCKS O P ALL CONVENIENCES. ESSEX Realtors AX7-7900 143-01 Hillside Avenue, Jamaica Take Bth Ave. "E" Train To Sutphin Blvd. Open 7 Days Weekly HOLLfS. detached colonial, !fM, l!)0 11 r o o m s , i*nter hall, huge living room, banriuet type dining room, modern eiit-in kitchen, 1 Vi tile baths, 5 large bedrooms, 2 <ar garage, cyclonc fenced enclosed huge garden plot. Reasonable term 8 arrjingeil. HOLLIS $16,990 BRICK ALL AROUND JAXMAN REALTY JAMAICA $24,990 LIVE RENT FREE! 169-12 Mllside Ave.. Jam. AX 1-7400 Farms & Acreoge, N.Y. State 6 ROOM home, b a t h ; with about uO rolling acre*. E x t r a 4 rm summer home; springs, stream. $ 1 5 , 0 0 0 . EZ terms. Earl Bein'iett, Chlchemter, Ne»v York, »14-6«8~77!J« or «««-9«31. ST. ALBANS $11,990 B e a u t i f u l Ranch, D« ta. hc.l Curiicr, Bright RniH, Bat-cmcnt. Oil H i a t , Bank Monthly Paioient ^rtH.'tU, Downpiiynient $400. Vi'terane No Down P a y m e n t . CALL AX 7-2111 E. J . DAVID KE.\LTY l O K f . 6 large, modern rms, ;i bcdrmw, 2 baths. Reauliful finished ba»^cniput ( r e n t a b l e ) , (iarage: g a r d e n groundH. Fine residi'ntial neighborhood. I.KG.IL a FA.MILY \V.\I.K T O S I B W A Y Brick & .xhingle de(ache»l. T w o ' large B rms. apts, Fini8he<l baeeinent plus e x t r a b a t h , ^-car garage. 4 , 0 0 0 •u. f t . garden grounite. NO ( ASH GI LOW CASH t l V . KENSHORE 17«)--!4 HilUide Ave., Jumuiea OL 7-3800 Farms & Acreage, Greene County COUNTRY proper!ie» & busiiuKset!. J o h n Mauri Rlty, :!0H Main, Catskill, >JY. r.l«-!H:j-;io;i7 or 51H-«78-;1.115. MOVE RIGHT IN I BEST BUYS I HOLI.1S $17.1)00 Enulibh T u d o i ' — 7 b e a u t i f u l roonii modern age kitchen. 2 tone colored tile baths, coniplclcly fini s h e d ba«enient. dela<hed garage. I-arg«j gaitlen plot.(G.I. no rash tlllWII.) CAMBRIA HTS. 6 ROOMS. Hollywood kitchen & bath, modern thrHout. $17,900 $900 Cash LONG ISLAND HOMES H18-12 HilUlcle Ave., Juinuleu RE 9-7300 For Sale • Greene County .1 BEDROOM—ALL IM I'UOV EM ENTS 1 ACRE fStl.'.OO S T E P H E N L O l x a i M A N , BOX .M «:ARIO. N.Y. PHONE—MA •.'..T^ 10- ALL DAY BAISLEY ST. ALBANS hVi ROOMS, garage, handy man special. $17,900 $900 Cosh HOLLIS BRICK. 5 down. 3 up. patio. A steal at $21,900; $2000 cash. Many ofhtr from S4S0 down #0 all, PARK ONLY $9,500 NEAR SCENIC LAKE. f O Z Y l.M.MAfUI.ATE ROO.MS, BATH yASE.MENNT ONI.Y V-'UO DOWN G INO CASH HOMES & HOMES AX M 8 1 8 Diol 341-1950 HOMEFINDERS. LTD. BELFORD D. HARTY Jr. •rektr 1192-OS UadeR Blvd.. St. Alb«M^ ^ CIVIL Page Twelv« ONEONTA PARTY — A few of the ns guests who attended the annual Christmas party •r Oneonta chapter, Civil Serrlce Employees Assn., are shown above. They are, from left: Mrs. Joe Sauer; Joe Sairer, first vice president; Vernon Tap- SERVICE LEADER TueaJay, January 12, 1 9 6 5 ^ TAKE THE PRIZE — • per, CSEA second vice president; Mrs. Edward Griffin: Edward Griffin, chapter president; Rev. Leo Marliert. who gave the benediction; Janice, Radley, secretary, and her ffuest; and Bob Harder, treasurer, and Mrs. Harder. Three-Day Filing Period Set For Caretaker Exam "Best of Show" award tai the art coiisponsored by the Capital District Conference of the CivU Service' Employees Assn. last week was won by Mrs. Elteabeth Holmqtdsi. mother-in-law of Alexander Aldrich. Aldrich, second from left. Is seen accepting the prize from Governor RockefeUer, whom h& serves as an assistant. Looklnf on are. right, Mrs. Rockefeller, and Mrs. ChrfstlD*., Tarbox, chairman of the Conference Creative and Performing Aril Committee. The t>alntlngs are on display outside the Assembly chafttb«rs in the State Capitol Building. Dr. Dean, Health Official In Buffalo Retires This Month Dr. Dean observed his 70t4i birthday recently, and when he rfrtired. He put in 40 years with tin) Health Dept.. the last 16 of them Dr. Arohibftld Dean, retiring re- In his present title. State TT-» y^i^^p fr) pnrTv n e * t honasso- year wtffi his wife Eleanore on a him. 16-month tour around the world. Only three days, Jan. 21 through 23, have been set aside by the New York City Degional director of the partment of Personnel for the filing of applications for the housing caretaker exam- Health Dept. in Buffalo, was ination. ored recently by some 120 There are no minimum education or experience requirements for this position, dates at a dinner given for Some of the duties and responsibilities of this position are to maintain the grounds and public spaces of City housing projects and other related work. NOW there is a revolutionary pair of glasses that automatically changes from pale amber to dark smoky gray as the sun brightens - then goes back to amber as the sunlight dims. Salary Tlie salary range for housing caretaker is from $.3,750 to $5,250. There are annual Increments and longevity increments of $180 About 50 vacancies will be filled as the result of this examination. Housing cai-etakers who are eligible can apply for promotion to foreman of housing caretakers at a salary of $4,550 to $6,710 after the appropriate experience. For f u r t h e r information and applications, contact the City Dep a r t m e n t of Pc^-sonnel, Applications Division, 49 Thomas Street between the hours of 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday and from 9 a.m. to 12 Noon on Saturday. Glasses that change in the sun! ASTRO-MATIC SUNGLASSES REVOLUTIONARY! The praduct of 7 years of research. Developed originally out of experiments by the use of the armed forces for nuclear testing and now adapted by Monaco for effective year round wear anywhere. The color changes gradually but is quickly efficient, provides relaxed vision in sunlight or glare. Changes I O B MARKET (Continued from Page 5) tan Bank Building, Long Island City. Wiuited in Brooklyn is a BAG MACHINE OPERATOR to set up a n d operate a Schjehdahl m a chine. The pay Is $65 to $80 a week. Also wanted is a FAI^TGGRAPH MACHINE OPERATOR. Ho will earn $2.40 to $3 an hour to set up and operate a Gorton 6c New Hermes Pantograph m a chine to do precision engraving work on elevtaors. Experieiiced bronze and white MCrrAL CASTERS will get $2.50 to $3 an horn- in Greenpoint. Apply at tlie Brooklyn Industrial Office, 590 Pulton Street SKCRETARIES with good skUls, arc wanted in the import-export fiolci iu downtown and midtown Manhntt^n. Jobs pay $80 to $100 a to tight amber indoors or in shade. Leader Bookstore 97 Ditane Street. N e w York. N.Y. 1007 Gentleman: Please send me pair{s) of Asfro-Matic Sunglasses in the styles indicated below. (Please check three boxes.) /A) Light Frame...$2.98 () (C) Men's () (E) Black {) (B) Heavy () |F) White |) Frame..$4.98 {) (D) Women's Name (please print) _ Address City _ State Zip Code Enclosed is check or money order for $ wi'ok. A!)|)ly at the Office Personal ?liici'meut Center. 575 Lexingtof ,-1 HUi'. Manhattan. (ALL ORDERS SUBJECT T O RETURN PRIVILEGE FOR 30 DAYS) TUTMDGF. JMUMJ 12, 1965 U C I V I L S & f t V I C E P a g e L E A D B R Bauch to bring these things out in the open, so in the future som*. thing might be done otwut U. h u s b ^ d Is one of those. He gets w n j j A M I . mmmAv Brooklyn more t h w my father. Kow alKNit a storjr and some publicity. I would like to allow publication of my name, but for various reasons X cannot. A KCTIltED COrS DAUOHTEB Staten Island Westchester County is accepting apfriieations until Jan. 18 for Advises Hoysing positions in tliree titles. They are; school lunch manager Aide ON Grievonee with salaries varying according to Editor, The Leader: In the Decemfa«r 22, 1964 is- location: deputy County cleric and sue of The Leader, an anonymous court room clerk, salai-y $7J)30 to employee of th« New York State $10,170; index and recording clerk, Division of Housing and Com- salary $4,470 to $5,710. For further information and apmunity Renewal, inquires as to County what action can be taken to recti- plications, contact tl fy an injustice due to his fail- Personnel orfice, County Office ure to receive recent salary in- Building. White Plains. creases. Some of the members of the Division of Housing and CommuH O U S S nity Renewal are members of the A n r / ^ New York City chapter of the Civil Service Employees Assn., Nortlicni teiiicvard at Shaiccr Rd. others ai'e members of the Division Alliaiiy. N.Y. • Tel.: HO 2-5Si2 of Housing chapter. I suggest that SINGLE $"T ^^y if the complainant is a member of ' • TIME the New York City chapter he for- STATE RATE ward his grievance to our office, ALBANY'S FINEST ADDRESS Room 905, 80 Ctentre Street, New F R E E U.MOL'^IMi: I'UUM .AlKrOHT CONIUTIONRU • AIMACKN'T TO York, where it will receive the SAIR HOPPINfl, Bi;8INE8S, THEATRE DISTRICT - MEETING fUMIHS • TV requisite attention. RESTAL'RANT . COCKTAII. LOtJNOE SOLOMON BENDET Chairman, Grievance Committee New York City Chapter, CSEA LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Tontlnued from Pare f t limited aooumnlfttion of sick leave. • At least ro«r cHles a H ^ unlimited aacumulation of siek leave. • Canada allows vnlimUed aecUmulation of sick iMve. In the area of payment for sick leave credits: • Michigan pays cash for onehalf of aecrned sick leave on retirement or death. • At least five cities pay cash for sick leavte en retirement. • At least three cHies pay cash fbr sick leave en separation. • Of 277 private industry sick leave plans studied, 34 provide for payment of unused sick leave aeemals on separation. • At least four cities allow sick leave accruals to be used as vaeatlon accruals with some limitations. a t It is Interesting to note that Canada provides a "retu-lng leave" amounting to one week for each year of continuous service (maximum of 26 weeks) on retirement, and one-half week for each year of continuous service (maximum 13 weeks) on separation. New York State should move forward. Allow unlimited accumulation of sick leave accruals; or pay annually for such accruals in excess of 150 days! Pay for sick leave accruals on retirement, death or separation! Stop shortchanging conscientious employees with large sick leave accruals earned over many years of faithful and loyal service! Let's have some positive action! PHILIP HERSHEY N.Y.8. Department of Labor Brooklyn, N. Y. Editor, The Leader In the issue of December 1st ou published a letter in "Leader" lox 101 written by Philip Hershey of the New York State Department of Labor proposing several . ways of adjusting the inequity In the New York State's sick leave ri^es relating to payment of un. used accumulated sick leave upon ' retiiement from state service. I ' wish to fully concur and compliI ment Mr. Hershey on tlie several practical solutions proposed, both from an economic and political point of view as well as from good personnel practice. ' My purpose in writing this let' ter Is to ask you to urge upon our ' Cfivil Service Employees Assn. leg^ islative representatives and our next Legislature to give these pro« \ posals careful consideration. Too long has this Uiequity been in effect and many dedicated state * «jorkers deprived of a fair deal for their dedicated service. Likewise, too long has the State been so short-sighted in not realiaitig many advantages that would [ re'oound to its benefit in increased 1 service rendered at so little cost. H 1- An Employee State Labor Dept. Buffalo Editor. The Leader 1 am wholly in support of the attempts to reform the current sick leave provisions, 'The basic point here is that surely a man who does a day's work should be paid as much as a man who does not. If unused sick leave does not have a cash or credit equivalent, then the man wlio works Instead of being sick Is being penalized. What nonsense is this? It would seem to me perfectly fair to be able to deposit excess credit with the retirement system. This would allow for a clear choice between present and future gain. I n d in equalizing the worker and the non-worker would gveatly improve both moral* and health c(m ditions In the state service at virtually no cost. The State Is already bearing these cost*; they're in another column. BROWW J A N E T B. Potrolmen's Plight Editor, The Leader: Your article in a recent issue of The Leader of which I have been a steady reader for years, as I am a civil service employee, prompts me to write you this letter. The article refers to transit patrolman who needs welfare assistance while awaiting his pension. (December 15 issue), I come from a family of policemen. My father was a New York City patrolman for many years and had to retire over 20 years ago as a result of being injured in the performance of his duty. He still suffers from his Injuries. My uncle also retired about the same time as my father while another uncle was killed in an accident while on duty. All this was over 20 years ago. Now here is the irony of the whole thing. My father, when he retired, received $2,250 a year and received this up until about a year ago when he received an increase of $200 a year making his peiosion now $2,450. My uncle retired and received $1,500 a year. Several years ago he received an inwease of $500 as a result of Amendment No. 7, and then last year received an extra $200 the same as my father received, and his pension is now $2,200. When my uncle received the first Increase my father couldn't share in it as only those retired men receiving less than $2,000 a year could receive up to $500 providing that it didn't result in a pensioner receiving over that amount. My aunt whose husband was killed had been receiving $1,500 a year and several years ago thru the efforts of their .organization is now receiving almost as much as my father does. This I feel certainly isn't fair, as my father still has my mother to support while my aunt has Just herself. I am sure that you won't have any trouble checking my figures. Unfortunately to-day the plight of retired men seems to be forgotten—especially those wlio were injured in the performance of their duty. The United State Government has given several raises to former service men who re ceived injuries. I know because my Editor, The Leader: Thank you on your article of the sick leave. As an employee of the City for 27 years I have lost some time over the 180 days. Right now I am on sick leave and believe me I could use the time I lost. Right now I think they are using it three ways, terminal leave, annual leave and sick leave, which does not seem faii' as a lot of my fellow workers lost a lot of time when they retired. The way I look at it. they earned that time. I am not much on composing a letter that is why we small employees need a man lilwe Herb Mi I wanted Merviee with TVo Service €harge»" I * i l eontai*!; • . . Tlie Keeseville National Bask Kee.sevUle, N.Y. 834-7331 Member FJ).1.C. FREE FULL BREAKFAST AT STATE RATES! FOB OUR ROOM GUESTS ' ROOMS WITH BATH, TV AND RADIO FROM $1 SINGLE SIO DOUBLE $M TWIN FREE OVERNIGHT AND WEEK-END PARKING OOMPUBTB BANQUET aad €X>NVI;NTI0N FACIUTIiQ0 4 FINE RESTAURANTS • 8TEAK and RIB ROOM • ENGU8H DINING BOOM • CAifWIGBU . . N e w . York Fomily Downtown Ownad end Syrocuto — Oporottd 0pp. City . . Holl . I Blocks Soutb of ead of Boate 8 1 . . . Ph. UA S-0403 LEPORE MOTEL EAST GREENIUSH. N.Y. RTS. 9 f t 2 0 OPPOSin lOYAL RISTAUtANT & •EORM COCKTAIL L0UN6E ia FrMi ••w«««n MIfl. AIImmv STATE RATES TEL. GR 7-4250 P.O. RTS. f ft 20. Rtnsselaer, N.Y. YOUR H O S T ^ MICHAEL FLANAGAN PETIT PARIS /RESTAURANT BUSINESS MEN'S L U N C H 11:30 T O 2:30 — $1.50 S r E C l A I J X I N a . AS ALWAVa, IN PARTIES, BANQUETS A AIEIOTINOH COMFORTARLR ACC!0MM<»0ATI(>N8 FROM 10 TO OPEN DAILY EXCEPT MONDAY. SUNDAY AT 4 P.M. — F H E E PARKING IN BEAR — 1060 MADISON AVE. ALBANY Phono IV 2.78«4 or IV 2-9fi<1 SPECIAL RATES ^ 'f o r , C f V i(. ice,Fni p l o V ^ s SPECIAL RATES FOR STATE EMPLOYEES -- HOTEL Wellington ORtVE'iN OARAQC M R COHOITWNINQ . TV No pwkina l»rebl««« at AUMny'« l«r9Mt li«t«i . . . with Albany'! only i»fi«»-l«i Borog*. You'll liki th« comfort and convanitnco. tool tamily f«t«». Coektoil levn«o. 1 8 0 STATE S T R S f T orronTf STATI CAPIfOl t o o y v H MondV * t w \ a g M f . SPECIAL Wli'siKLy RATES FOR EXTENDED STAYS TEN EYCK The IN THE H E A R T Q Q OF D O W N T O W N SY«ACUSI SVRACUSB, N.Y. • Frot indoor Parking • Air CondltioMd • Restaurant and CofFe* Shop • Free TV • SwimMiag P*«l Hotd UNDER T H E NEW MANAGEMENT UP MCHINK H 0 T B I 3 W I I X CONTINUE TO flONUB StaH Lodglit^ Ke<|«esfs Acetpf^d SPECIAL RATES FOR N.Y.S. PLUS 4LL EMPLOYEES THESE MClUTIES O f r o t Parking • Froo Llmouslnt Ser/1c« from Albany Airport e frpp toundarinn Uiunq* 0 Fro* Coffao Makors iit fho Rooms • Frae SeK-$ervic« tc« C u b * Machinat • Ffat U i a of Boctrlc Sli«v«r« Make Your Reservattoa Early By CaiUng HE 4-1111 DEWin CLINTON STATI ft IA«Lf ITS., ALBANY A KNOTT HOTIi A VAVOKITE r o w OVK^tt 3 9 riSAUti M'lTH 8TATIS T K A V E t E R I t SPECIAL NATES FOR N.Y.S. EMPLOYEES In N.Y.C. Call MU 8-0110 TV er RADIO AVAILAiU SOHINE TEN EYGK HOTEL eMktaU LoMin# » Poad<f NHlkNy f t « t « li Chopci Atba«y, N.Y. lANOUiT PACILITlift TAILORED TO ANY 81X6 PARTY F K R S T K L E T Y P B BKSKJiVATUINt TO ANT KNOTT HOTEL. I N t L t U I N t i Now WetfMi, NYC. Call Afbaiy HI In Time of Need, Call M. W. Tebbutfs Sons 633 Centrol Ave. Albany 4 8 9 ^ S 1 • TAP BOOM Syrocuit. • I L T O N MDMO oxmrni . . r o n i a r G I N o a Onltara. YAMAHA P I A N O i . Now a n d w m i tiiHtni' OHHrta aaM aiKi lawMd. LfMoaa tm tM l a a l n t M e n U . « • I W M J M R U ST. ALB., n o S - a M 5 . Open Exaim In Westchester C a Closes Jon. 18 Thonks Bauch For Letter H r f r l M n 420 Kenwood Delmar HE 9*2212 u V w 114 Vwtn of OTATHIIUTVHFD FUNRRAT MCRVICA THOMAS Q. GORMAN. 0 a a . Mgr. MAYFLOWEE • ROIAL COUBV APARTMENTS — Famished. UD^ furnished, and Roonu. Phone HB. i-1994. (Aibany>. ALBANY BRANCH OFFICE r O H IM»'0UMA1IUH rKcarain* advoiUiiliif. f l e a a a w r t u or aUt JOBiSi'a t BELLKW sua 8U MANNING BLVD i L J A N V It. N.V. l>Uuutta IV ii M 7 « CIVIt. Fourteen Hudson River Chapter To Set Up-Scholarships POUGHKEEPSIE, Jan. 11—Members of the Hudson River State Hospital chapter of the Civil Service Employees Assn. have announced that they will present to the hospital's School of Nursing a $100-a-year scholarship to a "well quali- CSEA PW Unit Art Show Awards To Be Presented Jan. 15 BABYLON, Jan. 11—New York State Superintendent of Public Works J. Burch McMorran will present awards Jan. 15 to the winners of the District 10, Public Works chapter, Civil Service Employees Assn. art show. All of the art work and photography will be on display through Jan. 22 at the Department headquarters building. Babylon. Long Island. The works are being submitted by Public Works employees and their families. Awards The awards will be in the form of silk ribbons for 1st, 2nd, 3rd and honorable mention In the categories of art and photography. The photography category will be judged by Frank Peckham. Virginia Pramer and Grace Giacobone of the Valley Stream School District will be the art judges. Congratulations -Superintendent M cM or r a n stated in a k«-ter to the Chapter that, "it is amazing to find the latent talent which exists in the Department of Public Works once it is given a chance to show itBelf. Please express my congratulations and best wishes to all people concerned." fied young man or woman, each year, who needs financial assistance," according to Mrs. Nellie Davis, president. "Ultimately." Mrs. Davis conr tinued, "the Association will be sponsoring three students, a fre^shman, junior and a senior." The scholarship committee of the Association. In revealing the school plan, indicated that a member of the entering class will be selected for the first scholarship. The committee is made up of three reprsentatives of the Association and two members of the School of Nursing faculty who are members of the Association. The CSEA is also making plans to present to the School of Nursing an overhead projector — a modern and useful visual aid to be used in the teaching of student nurses. SERVICE LEADER Mrs. Mary Cormley Is H Proud of CSEA, Career, And Jusf 'Being Irish' BUFFALO, Jan. 11 — Talk civil service in the Western New York area and the conversation ultimately must turn to Mrs. Mary D. Gormley of BufTalo, one of the most active members of the Civil Service Employees Assn. Mrs. Gormley has been a CSEA member for 12 years and is currently president of the Buffalo chapter, CSEA. With 1,000 members, it is one of the largest groups in the state. "And when we say active," an associate said, "we mean active. Mary is always on hand for CSEA meetings, knows the CSEA like few pei'sons do and is a dedicated person." Dedicated To Job An affable, Irish lady, Mrs. Gormley also is a dedicated career woman. She has been a State employee for 20 years and Is now a vocation counselor to the handicapped in the Division of Vocational Rehabilitation. with offices in the new Gen. William J. Donovan building in downtown Buffalo. New Campus Set A graduate of D'Youville College For Alfred College in Buffalo, Mrs. Gormley works ALBANY, Jan. It—Bv 1970. the for the D'Youville Almuni Assn. State University Agricultural and is first vice president of the WestTechnical College at Alfred will have a new $25 million campus. The timetable was released by Dr. David H. Huntington, president of the college. Total fulltime enrollment by 1970 will be 2,300 students. Harlem Valley Aide E. H. Coons, Dies DOVER PLAINS, Jan. 11 — Edward H. Coons Sr., 58, an attendant at Harlem Valley 'State Hospital, died recently. Coons attended the Dover Plains Methodist Church and was a member of tlie hospital's Civil Service Employees Assn. Title AmsI, civil CMiiinccr, itroni. (\V;ilei- Sii|)i)l,vl, r-.i-|iti.'<l I)f( As.ll. lort'iiian, iironi. (Smiiimioii), li, cfi tiliHl IVc. (({ inccliMMicMl fiiHrliu'cr, A cpiljlicil DIM-. lilt Astt. stulioii HUperviBoi', dioih. ( T A » , 1 (» et'l-tKit-d .l:in. 4 ' i i l [ i ' " [' ^|] AhmI. Ktiilisliclaii, <'('ilifii(l Oi'c. Iti !!!!!! i ' i i As-<1. siiDci'iiilfiKU'iil o( wi'liiirii siTviK-., I ••f'l liIicmI l i i A ' / ' i s i ' 1 * | * |^ A.isl. l)aiU'iii>l(){:isl, lu'oiii. ( H o u l t h l , ] | <t'riiticil Dec. 4 HoiisiiiK Kiiui-d apnroDnalf fnitii ulli iuicni, l.', (fM lilicd Dec! riti' Allornc.v lr;<jn(>c. It telnlitHi Dec. '.'.S Aiilo iiipc-liiitiic. r)| ccrtifiwl Dec. I "> ...!!...!!.'.'!.'! Bi iilire and liiniu-l ofliccr, S cerlilicd Ui-c. IT ^ t';(i riaKt^ lii»hol«terei', (i ciTiilit'd Doc. lit ii | Civil cuffiiii-ci iim draftsniaii. 4 oci lilifil Dec '.'it i! | . i i CMeaniT ( w o m e n ) , riS foililicd Dcr. !! 1 ' . ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! . " ! ! ! CIimU a|i|>i((|iiial(i from oliicc aiipli.iikc (.pfi-aKu', 'id (MMliiitxl lit-.-' ''•! t'leris, 1-: i-crtllifd Di-c, 'M .. <Uillft!( oiricf iisil. - A" , 4 .•(•rlillcil Dec. ;(i CollcKc secivlarial a-<st. '-A ', ;t .•.•rliliod l>.-"." •;( 1 r a i i v c l i o i i olfictT. ; t | (,prlili(.<i Dec. I and :t|l <•01111 atIcn.lcnl a|)|iP-oi>. nniloi-hi<-d ,.onrl oIli.-.T, T\VM'\ilir(l 'iVii'" t 1 n.arl-n.M.I l i t „ a n a n . o,.r,ili,Ml lo l l o s p i l a k i)...- .V(. l»Hlnct roifinan (walei H o n n i n s iiisiicctoi', i c r t i f l e d l)t lnv(MliKal«i'. ( u l i l i e d Dei'. •.'!• S e n i o r ai»i»ra»tpr ( r e a l e « l a t e l , 4 i-.'rlilici| De(. Henior cieili, (fen p r o m , HhI, ,1.-, .i.rlilled De.-. Senior e l e e t n e a l in^iuelor, pron.., e e r t i l i e d l>tv. li..»M.|. . Ut .^ . .. V ... • • • ?• / . •• • hni)Bivi«inB eleiU, p r o a i . (Cliiel ISled KxaTIiinor), :i certilled De<-. 15" Bupeivirtiua cierK, p r o m . (Uii;li«u.v»), H w r l i n e d Dec. .'{Q h i i p e r v i s i i n j i l a i k , p r o m , (Hd. of AH>fsHorsi, r5 i w t i n e d J a n . 4 8iipervi^(i»» <-!crU. p r o m . ( S a n . ) . (1 c e r t i l i w l Deo. SS .Supi-rvisitDf rlcrU. p r o m ( T A ) . 'J l e r t i t t e d Dec. S 3 .-.•suVtiB. Snpervisintf clerU, pvom. ( I l e a l l l K . It ( v r t i n e U Dee. iJ.H K i i p e r v l s i r u clev);, p r o n ' . ( W u ( c r S i i i ) p b ) . 1 oertiUetl Doc. 10 S u p e r v i d i i i ? e l e r k , p r o m . (HoHpila)*), 1 0 tH-rlifltHl Dee.. tH Hupervi-iiiiu clcrli. p r o m . ( H o r n W o r k . ^ — l l r o n x ) . 'J ( W l i d e i l Dee. 1 8 , « . „ , • • , » • SnperviHinu c l e r k , p r o m . B T / U A Div ( T A ) . 1» ( w t i f t e d D«»<-. 15 Sii.pervisiiiir Hlenc, tfen. p r o m , lint, ;!0 e e r l i f i w l IKv. ^IS g u p e r v i x i n x l y b , oper.Tlor l I D M i !»'! ccrliUe<l I K c . ;i!) Snrfui'** luiH diiipalclier, p r o m . , :tl cerliHwl IG mid 'IH T i U e fsnaniiner, 10 certilUxl Dec. lU TtietfTay, January 12, 1965 ern chapter, National Rehabilitation Assn., and for many years was on the board of directors of Mercy Hospital in Buffalo. She also Is active and a past officer In the Buffalo Catholic Business Women's Club. "A busy life," she says, "but I enjoy it." Her husband, Charles J. Gormley, a salesman, Is commander of Buffalo South Side Post, Veterans of Foreign Wars, and is a past commander of American Legion Coast Guard Post 1529. Mr. and Mrs. Gormley live at 1883 Seneca St., Buffalo. "That's the south side," she says, "the original Irish district. We've lived there all our lives and we're proud of it." Mrs. Gormley is a member of the social committee, CSEA. Ronald H. Wheat's Rewarding Hobby — Father To 105 (From Leader Correspondent) ELMIRA, Jan. 11—To his fellow employees in Chemung County, Ronald H. Wheat is a hard-working maintenance man on the night shift at the County airport who represents his department at meetings of the local Civil Service Em- ployees Assn. chapter. But to more than 100 children and young people in the Elmira area, he is Daddy. Although he and his wife, Pauline, have raised only one child of their own, they have been foster parents—for periods ranging from several months to six years—to 105 children. Currently there are six youngsters living at the large Wheat ;{8 '•'•> home at 401 Harrison St. in ''4 '4 Elmira Heights. The youngest is ;t7 3. the oldest. 12. And, like the 99 who came before them, they ISO all call Mr. and Mrs. Wheat 1(! Daddy and Mommy. Earning the 'Title' 4 7;-. The titles of respect were not (i'.tr? easily earned, for most of the children placed with the Wheats by the Elmira Child and Family Service have severe emotional problems. Some are the bewildered victims of broken homes, some are born out of wedlock, some have i:t(i birth defects and some are delinquents one step away from being institutionalized. As might '-e guessed, Mr. and Wheat have an extra measure of love for children. Every child biey teach and care for leaves them too soon, It seems. t 1' And there is an added heart7 break when they sometimes fear the departing youngster is going 30!« » to an environment where there Is 11 small chance for a happy childa la hood. 4 Happily, many of the children 58 0 never forget their foster parents. 14 .i They write to the Wheats, tele5« 0 phone and visit them. And Just St last week Ronald Wheat, who Is l:iH 57, became a foster grandfatlier. 14 The first little girl they took into their home, "ow grown up and married, had a baby. How U Started The amazing story began 18 yeai's ago when their son, Dennis, who was just a toddler, contracted asthma. A doctor told Mr. Wheat It would be well If Dennis had a playmate. So he became foster father to a little girl. Ml-. Wheat, who was a contractor before joining the County staff six years ago, found he and his wife had a new interest In life. As years went by, they agreed they would stop being foster parents after the 100th child was placed with them. "But when 100 came, there were two children at once," Mrs. Wheat recalled. "So now we say we will quit when we don't have the strength to do proper by the children." Mrs. Wheat, who has been president of the Chemung County Parent Teachers Assn. for the past two years, plans someday to write a book which she hopes to title "Unwanted Angels." Origin Unquestioned While the children are living with tlie Wheats, social workers try to make it possible for them to return to their own parents or other relatives, or they arrange adoptions. "We never ask race, color, creed or pi'oblem," Mr. Wheat explained, "we Just take them." "Ronny's biggest dream," said his wife, "is to have a home built, by the State If possible, where younger children can be rehablltated without a black mark on their recoi*ds because they have to go to corrective institutions." MRS. MARY GORMLEY Stote and County Farm Mangers Meet In Ithaca ALBANY, Jan. 11 — State ai?d county farm managers joined together recently to discuss farm management problems and practices. Tlie meeting, held in Ithaca,. brought together the managefll^ and assistant managers of 21 state institution farms and managers of some 21 county farms. Toastmaster at the group's a n nual dinner was Joseph W. KHgallen, secretary of the State Department of Agriculture and Markets. The principal speaker was Don Tuttle, farm editor of Station WGY in Schenectady. Writes on Modern Mexico ALBANY, Jan. 11 — Dr. Martin B. Travis, chairman of the Department of Political Science at the State University at Stony Brook, has written an article on Modern Mexico for the 1964 edition of the Encyclopedia Brltannica. He would like to direct such a home. Many times it Is a very small problem that is bothering a child, making him do the wronsr things. If this could be d e t e c t e d ^ and corrected, it would be, a great assist to the child and to our community." ' Don't Raise Deliquents The Wheats are especially < proud of their record with delinquent youngsters. Not one has ever gone to a reform school after leaving them, Mi-s. Wheat said. "Ronny has such a wonderful way of talking to them, making them understand the right thing. He would only spank a child as the last i-esort." "We have also enjoyed vei^y muoh dealing with the handicapped children and those with birth defects. It seems they need you as much more." "There have been lots of Joys, as well as heartaches. We hope we have helped each of the ohlU dren in some small way. Tiicy have cretainly helped us." I . t iMaday, January 12, 1965 CIVIL HIGH S C H O O L AT H O M E J KEY TO A l E n n I M , B I G I I I M Y , BRI6HTER rUTURC ! Don't waste time. The Victor Home Study : School of RCA Institutes, Inc., will prepare you to take the test for the'hich school '••qulvatency diploma without interruplinf your job or social life. And, if you don't pass the test, Victor will continue your iiome tralninc at no ixtra cost, until you <lo! TaKe>advant8ge of Victor's unique pay^ m e n t plan—No long term obligations. Oper* ; ated under the i u i p l e e * of RCA Institutes, , bacKed by more than fifty years of experl«ncc. Licensed by the State of New York. SERVICjE L E A D E R CFOvernor N a m « s CounstI To S f q # R o t h w t l l F. S m i H i . B i n g h o m t o n Seeks M o t t e q w a n A i d t , Dlts Senior Stenos ALBANY, Jan. 11 — Governor Eoclcef«ller ha« named Robert R. DouglaM of Blngihamton as first assistant counsel at a salary of $21,000 a year. Prior to the appointment, Douglass served as an aide to George L. Hinman, close political associate of Rockefeller and a Repuiblioan national committeeman. BEACON, Jan. l l . - R o t h w e l l Francis Smith, 49, of 27 Prospect Street, Beacon, died recently. He was an attendant at the Matteawan State Hoc|)ital for the Criminally Insane, Beacon. Smith wa« a member of the Matteawan Civil Service Employees Assn., St. Rocco's Society, the Polish Citizens' Club and the Dutchess Boat Club, Beacon. STOP WORRYING ABOUT YOUR CIVIL SERVICE TEST HIGH the EASY ARCO WAY $3.00 Civil Service Handbook $1.00 Clerk G.S. M $3.00 Clerk N.Y.C $3.00 ^Federal Service Intronce ExomiNotiofis $4.00 GREGG • WriU Now T«: M. SCHOFLER Bo* J613. GOP Bklyn, N.Y. 11202 EVENiNCI reO€RAMS STRINQ 196S lEMESTER CI»SH( B«(ifl February $ REGS ITRATO I N: Insurance License lis Pir S«nt«t«r Hatri ULtC. ftwMtnte) Course Open Jan. 25 Monday. Fab. P.M. CARCeil COUNSeUM MAIUtU Tmm SHCV£MN6l>IVlttMeitil«| for wnpltte tuition tnd tai ulu^lt VUnNCSS TCCHNOLOCY AccpuAtIng, CommwcMI Art, Qrtphic Ait*, Mirtetlng Managtment and SllH, ft«teilin| $humnim TccHNouMir CoMtriKtion. Eltctriul, MfChMletl lAMRATOHr nCHNOLOaVt CtMmtML UMhMl IIBOIAL ARTl and SCICNCO CmmCATC PROGRAMS Draftmf T«crmeia«y • H<t«l TmHroIoo mOIVIDUAt. eOUR8CS CnOitti, Spnch. Art, Mutic, MathMMtict. •clMta. ftyctiotMy, CcencNnlM, OsvwnrxtM, Hlstpiy, tetactad Tac«inlca( aubjact*. ate. Personnel Examiner $5.00 ' f o s f o l Clerk Carrier $3.00 Real Estate I r o k e r $3.50 School Crossing Guard $3.00 Senior File Clerk $4.00 Social Investigator $4.00 Social Invettigotor Trainee $4.00 a i O H SCHOO/ Social Worker $< 00 jk^ Mvaltncu' Senior Clerk N.Y.C $4.00 Stenotypist ( N X S . ) $3.00 attM ciry uNivcaeitv or new ittin 300 KARl fT. BROOKLYN 1, N.Y. Ul Ml 10 ItHNiaiiM'tMiHuaMWriialktMUHMt. • Troctors Trailers COMMERCIAL DRIVER far* TRAVEL AGENT CLASS BEGINNING FEB. 9 TRAIMNO. IBC. 844? S m I o N , L.1. RIlHwortb Strert R1« gQ l-40(\a An intensive evening training program for men and women interested in working in travel agencies, or in organizing tours, cruises, group and Individual travel as an income .sideline, will ' open Tuesday, Feb. 9 at Eastern School, 721 Broadway. N.Y. 3, AL 4.5029, or Information, write or call for Form 88. BDIPU)MA T ^ P F T h l . N.Y. Stat* illplema ^V V \ for C I T O service for personal satifsfaction Tnrs. and Thurs., 6;30-K:.t0 Course Approved by N.Y. State Education Dept. Write or Phone for Information l o i t o m School AL 4.502f 721 Broadway N.Y. 3 (at K St.) Pleue writ* me free tboiu the HIrh School Cqulvalencir claea. Name AddreM Boro p/ t^Mlvoltnt of groduation from « 4' yoor High School. It U voluoblo to nen-graduotoi of High School for, L3 City Exom ComiNf Seoii far ASSISTANT ASSESSOR $5.7S0.$7.190 Filing in January INTENSIVE COURSE COMPLETE PREPARATION meets Mondays at It:30 beginning January 18 Write or phone for information CUKS Eastern School AL 4-5029 721 Broadway. N.Y. 3 (Nr. 8 St.) Please write me free about the ASSISTANT ASSESSOR course. Name Address Boro. Sc ZIP -LI Stot* Exam Fob. 27 for CLERK Trucks if'or InstruHlona and Bead Tr«t* Chauffeqr'd License VchlrU fur CIbh* 8 T m I «1B. Vetilola far Cliut 1 T w t CIhdr J-3 Beginning Office Worker Account Clerk. File Clerk, etc. S&4 to $ t 4 wocli applications open to Jan. 22 INTENSIVE COURSE COMPLETE PREPARATION Class Tues. & Thurs. at H:.10 beffinnine: Jan. 19 Write or plione for information EMforn School AL 4.S029 72J Broadway, N.Y. (Nr. 8 St.) Please write me free about the State CLERK course. Name __ . Address Boro di ZIP LI • Imyltymtnt • PramvtUn • AdvMiMcl idutatlvnol Trolnlitf • Ptrionol Sotlifflctltn Our Spteial Inttniivo 5 - W « * k Couri* prtparet for official t x o m i conductod at regular inttrvoli by N . Y. Stat* Dtpt. of Education. SCHOOL DIRECTORY •UNIMKlM MHi>ill« AttiM Clastit In MaNhaHoR or MONROE I N 5 T I T U T E - I I M COURSES Jamolea J^^CKVICW IBM T R S W . Hw tcUhouid. Teletypewrltlnif. NCK Hookkeenlnv H.8 KqiUTaleuoji, MeO, Legal and A i r - U n e •ecr«iiiri«l n a y and Eve l i u i i u u u (natltuto. ICuiil Treuiont Ave.. Bronx. KI ENROLL NOW! Start C l i i t f i IR MoNhaHaR OR WW. JAR. U Me«t Mon. t V.eJ. or 7.30 P.M. I'Ari.lXIVKI.Y Nama I AMitti J Cilr J Admt.' lo »_^ U.S. Cquiv. C/ojj New VorU lU, N.V. » l tHl.'WO. .. INSTKIicriON > ] { I INTERESTED IN JOB SECURITY — I t i u i h t i r e "t U I I >M>rvi<'r ( u r e f i k " D i n t . U l , , C r e f i m k l i . Cuitn. j Zona Nliilh Ave.. ({iMtli Ko K<H (illM HKK(i, « U I M . I \ < i MA< IIIKKM liwludlng Ihf lutfi.! T>|»lii* h«>iuiuiM(l<i Nu. 1.100. — IC«v«^rt IntlUbluMl liulruvlloii <— llw> A Kiffilug Keeolonit — i'KivK I'I..%('K|JK\T — KtwiiunMlde Hulrtt — Muny Kici-llMtt 0|»t<nliiK» Sl.n.UO-VI'ia.OO. fKNTKU. 7.VJ Itli Ave. (Ill A r.O St*.) IM.onr <1 or N Our Outil ot • Clotil Jutt Pill In and Bring Coupon INSTITUTE MCfiAI.. i m LYONS INSTRUCTION CENTER - PHONI OR 3 - 6 9 0 0 abov*. M.;..'hiiie. .Monroe DE MARS LEGAL SECRETARIES INSTITUTE, I N C . ^ JR J«RI«ica OR Tkuri. J«R. 14 M t i t Tuei. & Thurt. at 7 P.M. For Complete Information { VI>01 A^rrUk l M . , Jamaica !• This evening course is approved by the State of New ork and New Jersey as fulfilling the i-equii-ements for admission to the state examination for insurance broker's licenses. No other experience or education is needed. Wiite EVENING DIVISION lor ! ns EaillS St., Monhalan State fe inclHd* 4% Sales T a x way, N.. 3, A L 4-5029. Catu los "CS" COILCCC NEW YORK crrr COMMUNITY I OEIEHANTY .City The next term in insurance Brokerage for men and women who want to qualify for state license opens Monday, Jan. 25, at Eastern School, 721 Broad- ASSOCIATE DEORCE PROGRAMS $400 Address High School Equivolency Diploma The next term in "Principles and Practices nf Real Estate," ofr men and women interested in buying and selling property, open-s Thursday. Jan. 28th, at Eastern School. 721 Broadway, N.Y. 3. AL 4-50M. This 3 months' evening course is approved by the State Division on Licensing Services as equal to one year's experience towards the broker's license. A Practical Course is Offered by an Experienced Senior Assessor. Personally Prepared and Taugiit. Fotrolmoii Name Barn Your Real Estate License Course Opens Jan.28^ SPECIAL PREPARATION $4.95 PU«$« t t n d m* copits of book* c l i « c M I ancloM ck«cli »t monay ordtr for TIME TRY THE " Y " PLAN ASSISTANT ASSESSOR Home Study Course for Civil Service Jobs SSc for 24>h«ir ipeciai d«iiv*ry e.O.D.'t 40c Mtro LEADER BOOK STORE 97 Ouane St., New York 7. N. Y. ANY TUTORING, Alff., Trii?., Gcomeii-^. T f . j h . Drawn.. Chem., Phy*. Call Huh. hr«. 384-OlUl. Other times 0nH.7n.'-.l. DRAKE $4.00 You Will Receive en InveluabI* New krco 'Outline ChaH New York City Government." With Every N.Y.C. Arco Book-- START PITMAN Hiqh School Diploma Te«t $3.00 $4.00 Tutoring $«rvic« • For Personal Satisfaction • For Jobs Promotion • For Additional Education SnCNO.TTPlNO, $ 5 0 BoouiPt c $ 5 0 ROOKKEEPINO, and RtTtew C OMPTOMBTBT, 15 W. 63rd St.. Now York 23 Clafiics In CLERICAL TEL: ENdlcott 2-8117 DAT: AffTEB KISINESS: BTRMNd l.M NASSAD ST. (0.>p. N.Y.C, Hall) BEekniftn 8>4II40 SCnOOMI IN ALL B0R0UGH8M $400 ORDER Dll^g^tT-^H^It COUPON \ MONDELL INSTITUTE AcIm> Be^innrr Fireman (F.D.) Stenotypist (G.S. 1-7) Surface Line Operator COACHIXU City. Stata, Fed ft P r o m o t i o n ExatiiB J r ft A i a t Civil. Mechl. Bleotl E n r r civil, Meohl. Elccttrl. Enjrrnjr D r a f t m n M a t h . Alsrebra, Goom, Trig:, S u r v e y i n r Civil Servloei Arithmetic LloetiBa Master Elecetrioiana License F i v e lyoonirw. Tiies. Tlinrs rt .'IO PM Housinir Inup R . n . Clerk Electtrical Insp U.S. Diploma E n p r Tech Aide Foder.il E n t r Maintenance Man P o i t a l ClU Carrier License P r e p , Stationar.v Riig-r. Uofriir Oper. M a s t e r E l e c t m . P o r t n h l e K n t r Cla»'»es Days, Evea, Saturrl.ny M o r n i n j 1S4 W 1 4 8 t ( 7 A v e ) I I I ;»-:i8Tfl Over M> Yr* T r a i n C i v i l Rervlce Kxnmii High School Diploma? GRADED DICTATION $2.00 Cashier (New Yerk C l f y ) FREE! Do You Need A nfieen (Eaulvalenfy) iff Civil Service Arltlimetic & Vocabulary SKRvicR crvn. Th« City of Binghamton has openings for senior stenographers in City departments. Salary Is $3,785 per year. Closing date for applications is Feb. 3. For further information contact the City Civil Service Commission. Letters To Editor Must Be Signed Readers who address letters to the editor of The Leader for publication must place their names VKTOR NOMI S TUDY SCHOOl AServc ie of RCA Institutes,Inc. and addresses on such correspon350W.4tltt.,NtwYorkU,l«.V. dence in order to receive con' p s i n i i a a a a a a M a a i H a a a M sideration for placement in The I Rush me your f r n bo«k on high s c h o o l ! Leader's letter column. I training i t homt. No obliptionsi N o * I salesman salesmanwillwillcall.call. DEPT DOT-03 Names will be withheld on re• quest of the writer. i Name It should be noted also that I Address, letters, as a rule, should not be .Zone State. I City more than 300 words long. r Page j I »ril«> N . ^ T I O N A I , Send (ii-ili4)' ftir fifi* tUAININ'O S K K V H K, SHOPPING FOR LAND OR HOMES LOOK AT PAGE 11 FOR LISTINGS Hox CIVIL Papje Sixleen SERVICE LEADER Tiipsclay, January 12, 1965 'Giving The Extras' Is How Mrs. Fannie Smith Finds Mrs. Clara Boone Works To Today's W o r k , W e / / Done, Create Better CSEA Image Makes Yesterdays Happy (From Leader Correspondent) i (From Leader Correspondent) WATERTOWN, Jan. 11—"Live wisely today to make yesterdays happy memories and UTICA, Jan. 11—You can include Mrs. Clara Boone of Utica to the long list of CSEA chapter presidents who real- tomorrows a vision of hope." This, says Mrs. Fannie W. Smith, president of the Jefferson chapter, CSEA, "is how ize that a good image for public employees stems from I try to live." * serving the public well. "Giving the 'extras' and individual attention in doing the job of ski ving the public will lead to recognition and respect," she believes. Mrs. Boona made the statement in discussing her role as a CSEA chapter leader. In her fourth year as president of Uticu chapter, she does not take her job lightly. "I take great pride In directing State employees in the Utica area in carrying out the policies and directives of our parent organization," she said. Membership Grows Her Chapter covers State employees outside of the State hospitals in the Oneida County area. The unit has about 250 members, an increase of about 80 over the membership figure at the time she became president. She is a senior stenographer with the Department of State, Division of Licensing Service. Previously, she was with the New York State Division of Veterans Affairs and the Division of Employment in the State Labor Depa' tment. A widow, Mrs. Boone has a 14year-old son, Richard, a high nore and a married daughter in Pedro, California. Besides serving as Chapter president, Mrs. Bnone is active in the Central Conference. She is a Merritt Thanks Well Wishers member of the state-wide public relations committee and second vice president of the Central Conference through which she serves as chairman of the organizations planning committee. Believes In Education One of Mas. Boone's principal aims in her leadership of the Chapter is an educational program which members receive information on the latest developments in health services, retirement benefits and the like. Keeping the members informrd is one of Mrs. Boone's major concerns. "And." slip says "the membership has a great deal on which it could be informed. "What other organization has such a ""st program of education and fringe benefits to r its membership? Whenever public employees are faced with vital problems, we are guided by our :>arent organization. Alone the employee can do little but together we can meet and solve those problems.' she says. "Ours is a democratic organization. The heritage of democracy witla quality and equality depends on the leaders. It is this kind of leadersliip we have in our local and State organization." Donahue Wins (Continued from Paffe 3) tionable validity and certainly so in the absence of any proof nnd finding of the practical necessity therefore." the court said. The status of the 200 men promoted to sergeant on the basis of the 1963 tests was not mentioned at the court decision and was not otherwise known at Leader press time. Timothy Merritt, a member of the Manhattan State Hospital chapter. Civil Service Employees Assn., and his wife have asked The Leader to extend their appreciation for the letters, cards, phone calls and prayers extended to him while he was in University Hospital. Merritt is now at home and hopes to return to duty in the near future. He has 42 years servFREE BOOKLET by U. S. Govice in tiie engineering depart- ernment on Social Security. Mail m e n t and is an electrician only. Leader, 97 Duane Street, mechanic. New York 7, N. Y. ZOH SERVATION A W A R D S — Conservation Department emplovtcs who received •ervice award pins at a dinner in Saranac Lake recently are shown above. They are, front row, from left: Shirley Dempster, Richard Emperor, Virginia Stevenii. Carl Prue, Robert Zilliox, Martin Mrs. Smith's interest in organization activity showed up early in life. Today she holds two principal facets of her busy career in public service foremost— the CSEA presidency and her work in Civil Defense. Family and CSEA While her home and family holds her greatest interest she says that her "interest and concern over civil service employees" moves her to try to "rectify some of the existing inequities through the Association." She likes to play golf when she has time and continues a vital interest in Little Theatre work and church activities. Politics and people, she says, also take up her time. Mrs. Smith plunges eagerly and enthusiastically into civic activities. It started in 1932 when she aided in organization of a Young Women's Republican Club in Watertown. Then she became president of the club. She was long active in the Y.W.C.A. and served on its board of directors, meanwhile singing in its Choral Club. She is a charter member of the Little Theatre of Watertown, Inc., and served as its vice president, recording secretary and on its various committees. She also took active part in Parent-Teacher Association activities. Civic Affairs A legal and executive secretary by profession, Mrs. Smith helped form the National Secretaries Assn. chapter here. She served as president of the Chapter. She was early chosen by the Watertown group as "secretary of the year." Her second vital public interest is her job in tlie Civil Defense effort. She is coordinator of women's activities and orgnaized the first Women's Civil Etefense Council in New York State. For her CD activity, she was person- terest in municipal affairs. She is second vice president of the American Legion auxiliary and is temporary chairman of the newly formed Business and Professional Club in this city. Bright Outlook Mrs. Smith, twice widowc^ maintains a bright outlook. S h ? enjoys her work and associations, always, as she says, looking ahead to tomorrow. She left higli school to face the world wtlh» a commercial course. Then she took a six-week interviewing course offered by the Department of Labor in Syracuse. She studied leadership and public relations in a Cornell extension course. She took a leadership trainii\? course sponsored by the National 'Secretaries Assn. and atMRS. FANNIE SMITH tended workshops on leadership ally praised by Gov. Nelson A. sponsored by the CSEA. She supRockefeller. plemented this with a business She is the proud possessor of and professional course spona municipal citation for her in- sored by the YWCA. Mental Hygiene Aides Scliedule Worl(sliop ^ & Legislative Lunch The Mental Hygiene Employees Assn. has scheduled a workshop and "Meet Your Legislator Day" for Jan. 25 and 26 at the Hotel Wellington in Albany. The workshop and a meeting of delegates will take place on Jan. 25 a t 1:30 p.m. and will deal with preparation of legislative proposals, reports of officers and a general business meeting covering the r065 program of the MIHEA. Proposed improvements in salaries and fringe benefits will be discussed. A legislative committee was appointed by president Frank Costello, headed by Emil Bollman, of Rockland State Hospital, who will outline the principal resolutions to be submitted for legislative action in behalf of institution employees, A recommended percentage pay plan to separate workers' and excutives' salaries will be taken under consideration for requested legislative attention. Previous pay plans have netted little increase for workers in the lower income brackets, and in order to attract and retain persons who are able to perform required services the State must pay salaries in the institutions which are on a level with and comparable to those of Governmental and private employers. it has been pointed out by members of MHEA. Other resolutions on the AssoPfelffer. Calvin Marshall, Olive Gardiner and ciation's program include a nonLoretta Betters. Back row: Dwinal Kerst, Greenleaf contributory retirement at 1/60 Chase. Douglas True, John Hickey, James Sullivan, the final average salary; nonMalcolmn Orcutt. Clarence Savard, Robert Jarvis, contributory State Health InsurEd Morrison. William Petty, Morris VIbert; Resin- ance; lump "im payment for unaid Wolfe. Philip Capone (hidden), Donald Bous- used sick leave; time and one<iuet aud Hemy Gannoo. half for overtime; premium pay for night shift work; State pay minimum half day's pay to State employees for emergency duty outside regular duty hours; longevity increments after 15 and 20 years' service at maximum of grade (remove "dead end" career, the recommendation stated); 371/2 hour week for instituiton office workers (a work week cortiparable with other State offices); vested retirement rights at age 55; paid life insurnace of at least $2,000 on retirement; provide 25 year retirement for Mental Hygiene State employees. A legislative luncheon will be held at the Hotel Wellington a t 1 p.m., Jan. 26, with represen(iatives from various assembly and senatorial districts, and administrative officers from the D ^ partment of Mental Hygiene, t h S Civil Service Commission, E m - 1 ployees Retirement System, a n d | the Civil Service Employees Assn. Reservations may be made witli Mrs. Marie Donaldson, first vice I president. lie "ark State School, who is in charge of arrangements. Mtembers of MHEA and CSEA are invited. Following the luncheon, th)» delegates will assemble for a final analysis of the legislative program. During this session, a committee will meet with Acting Commissioner Christopher F. Terrence, M.D., of the Department of Mental Hyptifne, "BO » R T T ! l u r ther improv<»>-airU for tlie institution worker*. * Use postal cune numbers oa your mail t s Insure prompt delivery. ^