Civil Service Commission Pressed For Action On Promise Of Snow Leave Time

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America'B Largest Weekly for Public
yol. XXVIII, No. 3 3
'
Tuesday, April 19, 1 9 6 6
Emptoyeet
See Page 14
Pricc Ten Cents
Civil Service Commission Levitt Bill Vetoed
CSEA Launches New Drive
Pressed For Action On
Promise Of Snow Leave Time For 1/60th Retirement &
$ 2 , 0 0 0 Insurance Benefit
The Civil Service Employees Assn. is pressing the State
Civil Service Commission for action to implement Governor
Rockefeller's recommendation that time lost by State employees in Central and Western New York as a result of last
January's snow storm be excused
without- charge to leave credits.
Following a recent meeting with
the C emission, CSBA president
Joseph F. Feily, summarized the
Association's position in a letter
to Mary Ooode Krone, president
af the Commission. The letter,
copies of which are being sent to
presidents of chapters In the a f fected upstate areas, said in part:
*'we have heard from a number
Of our representatives . . . com-
i
ALBANY—The Civil Service Employees Assn. last week launched a drive to resurrect
in
this session of the Legislature a bill which would establish a l / 6 0 t h retirement
plaining that they have heard
nothing whatsoever relative to be- plan for members of the State Employees Retirement System.
ing excused from work during the
Announcement of the drive came in the wake of a veto by Governor Rockefeller of
snow storm following the statei ments made by Governor Rocicefeller a t our annual dinner on
March 11. We are unable to f u r nish a reasonable reply to these
inquiries. The Infoi-mation requested from you in this letter
would enable us to advise members, employed by agencies which
have requested waiver of the
rules, tihat a t least the matter is
under consideration. It would also
enable us to write to the various
State agencies which have not
made requests for waiver, urging
them to take action . .
a l/60th bill sponsored by Compwas headed by the eight percent sent members of the System. Protroller Arthur Levitt and passed
salary proposal already passed and visions of the bill will again be
by the Legislature.
implemented for all State em- made permlslve for political subMeanwhile, in another action,
ployees.
1 divisions.
legislation was introduced last
j
Death Benefit
Still Possible
week which would give all State
j The death benefit measure inOn
the
plans
for
reintroduction
employees with 10 yeans of servj troduced last week would estabice a $2,000 death benefit after of the l/60bh bill, Joseph F.
lish a $2,000 payment for survlvFelly,
CSEA
president,
has
writretirement.
(Continued on Page 16)
Like the l/60th measure, the t®" ^11 chapter presidents pointdeath benefit bill is part of the i
that the measure had
Employees Associaton's compre- been vetoed by the Governor on
hensive salary resolution, which technical grounds" . . . without
reaching the merits of the bill."
For t h a t reason, Feily told his
chapter presidents, "we believe
it is still possible for us to work
Earlier Action
out a bill which will be acceptable
This followed a n earlier letter
to the AdministraUon, the LegisALBANY—Numerous quesALBANY—As a result of de- to Miss Kix)ne in which Feily fii-st
lature, the Retirement System and tions have been directed to
m a n d s by the CiVil Service questioned the apparent lack of
organizations representing parti- i the Civil Service Employees
Employees Assn., Gov. Rocke-' appropriate action on the Govcipating employees."
| Assn. concerning the effecfeller has amended the at- ernor's March 11 statement that
ALBANY—Legislation urged
Feily said that passage of a new tive date of the new 8% salary
tendance policy established for he had "sent today to ail the heads
by the Civil Service Employees l/60bh bill would again require
State employees worlting in New of the departments and agencies
Assn., which would overcome an all out effort on tihe part of increase for employees of State
York City who were affected by a memorandum encouraging them
institutions.
higher costs for some retired the CSEA membership In contactthe January transit strike.
The State Finance Law specito make a request to the Civil employees under the Integrated
ing both their legislators and the fically states that salary increThe policy announced
last Service Commission for waivers State Health—Medicare Plans,
Governor.
ments or increases shall be effecrules was Introduced In the LegislaJ a n . 28, as a result of CSBA in- on existing attendance
The retirement measure would tive "at the beginning of the
wherever
to
their
judgment
such
tervention, has been extended to
ture last week.
guarantee for ail future employees payroll period the first day of
*'all State employees in positions waivers are called for."
The measure affects retired half-pay retirement a f t e r 30 yeaF-s which is nearest to the first day
up to and Including Grade 30
In addition, t h e Association has
of service and would provide lib- of the fiscal year."
and to persons In-statutory po- made a special appeal to State employees whose present State
eral retroactive benefits for preHealth
Plan
contributions
are
beThe State's fiscal year begins
sitions up to and including Grade University president Samuel B.
ing
paid
for
by
the
cash
value
of
April
1. This year the payroll
30." the governor has told CSEA. Gould to direct heads of Univerperiod of institution employees
Following is the policy estab- sity unite in areas affected by the the sick leave credits they had Kings Park Hospital
accummulated at retirement.
nearest to April 1 is April 7th.
lished last Januai*y:
snowstorm to make the necessary
Therefore, the 8% salary inUnder the bill, these pei\son.s Presents Spring Revue
1. "Tardiness and early de- requests for waiver of the attendThe Kings Pak State Hospital crease, all increments or any adpartures
necessitated
by
the ance rules in behalf of their em- wil Ibe reimbui-sed for the $3 per
month ($6 if spouse is covered) will present its Annual Spring ditional compensation will begin
transit strike shall be excused." ployees.
contribution
they will have to Show, this year called "The for all institution employees on
(Continuett on Pare 16)
beginning
make to the Federal Government Naughty Nineties," on Wednes- the payroll period
for coverage of Part B under the day evening, April 27. An all- April 7th. These increases will be
Dr. Hilleboe Named
patient revue, "The Naughty reflected in the pay of institution
ALBANY—Governor Rockefel- Medicare Plan.
Under the State plan announced Nineties" Is presented under the employees on April 20.
ler has appointed Dr. Herman E.
In addition to the State PiHilleboe, former State Health some weeks ago. Medicare bene- direction of the Hospital's Recnance
Law, this procedure is
reation
department.
Cui'tain
is
at
fits
available
to
eligible
enrollees
Commissioner, to the State Menspelled out in the 8% salary bill
8 p.m.
(Continnea on Page 16)
tal Health Hygiene Council.
Itself and in the Civil Service
Law.
Following is an exact quotation
In Civil Service
of the Section of the Finance
Law spelling out this procedure:
"Notwithstanding
any
other
provisions of this chapter or of
any other law, when any officer
or employee of the state whose
compensation is payable in accordance with section six of this
chapter is granted an increment
or increase in salary or compenE A D E R S of New York City
sation pursuant to statute or
labor unions may feel
pursuant to budgetary appropriaMayor John V. Lindsay is crytion or as a result of reclassificaing "wolf" in seeking approval
tion, which increment or inof new and larger tax programs
crease is otherwise effective on
but if the new revenues are not
the first day of a fiscal year,
approved, City civil service may
Rockefeller. From left are William Rossiter, William such increment or increase shall
be faced with the prospect of LABOR RELATIONS — These mem. Hazel, Henry Shemin, committee chairman; Grace be added to the salary or combers of the Civil Service Employees Assn. Special T. Nulty and Irving, Flaumenbaum. The commit- pensation of such officer or emJob layoffs.
6o predicted Deputy Mayor Ro- Comjnittee on Labor Relations are seen as they met tee plans to present an analysis of the report and to ployee at the beginning of t h a t
bert Price in an Interview with in Albany last week to give further study to recom- submit recommendations of its own at a meeting payroll period the first day of
this column last week. Price said mendations on government-publio employee rela- of the CSEA Board of Directors, scheduled for wiiich ijs nearest to the first day
of the fiscal year."
(Continued on Page t)
tions made by » panel appointed by Governor this week in Albany.
CSEA Wins
More Strike
Forgiveness
RepeatThis!
Layoffs Possible
If Tax Programs
Fail, Says Price
L
CSEA Bill Would
Help On Medicare,
Health Plan Costs
Explain Date
For Pay Raise
Page Sixleea
CIVIL
Don't Repeat This!
(Continued from Page 1)
t h a t many labor leaders were giving f i r m support to the Mayor
b u t t h a t others were refusing to
t a k e any s t a n d on t h e t a x issue.
"We a r e n ' t making the promise
that if t h e employee organizations support Mayor Lindsay's tax
programs they will get all they
want when they come to City
Hall to bargain," Price declared.
"But," the
outspoken
Deputy
Mayor said, "it would seem obvious t h a t the City will be in no
position to do any serious b a r galnlnfif on wage increases without new monies—and more of
labor should be helping us find
support for those monies."
Price said the Lindsay Administration was "economizing all
over the place" and t h a t laying
off civil servants would be the
very last, drastic economy. "We
w a n t to improve services, not cui
t h e m , and we have a wonderful
corps of public employees capable of delivering the best," Price
declared. "But we must have the
money in the f u t u r e to pay
them."
Likes the J o b , ' B u t
T h e Deputy Mayor, interviewed
between some 15 telephone calls
ai)4 f r e q u e n t trips to Mayor
"I may n o t stay here the whole
four years," he says with a smile,
but I intend to stay In politics.
An elective office h a s never been
of any interest to me and never
will be," he declared.
"Our t e a m h a s taken hold
now," Piice said, " a n d I think we
have corrected a lot of t h e early
mistakes in style a n d p e r f o r m ance, It's going to be a red hot
four years of top p e r f o n n a n c e
from the Lindsay t e a m . "
T h e Deputy Mayor also explained why he had rejected a
m a j o r position in the f o r t h c o m ing G O P gubernatorial campaign.
"This job ( a t City Hall) a n d the
campaign are both gigantic tasks.
I couldn't do justice to either on
a part time basis and my first
loyalty now is to do the job the
Mayor h a s appointed me to do."
Price also noted t h a t although
the Lindsay Administration was
going to give the City a bipartisan
government " t h a t doesn't mean
t h a t I'm not still a voting Republican. 1 a m . "
ADVERTISEMENT
"Diploma Break For
High School Dropouts"
If you are a High School "Dropout" a special state Issued High
School Equivalency Diploma which receives general acceptance in
private business, civil service or for college entrance as the full four
year High School Diploma, can m e a n $25-$50 more for you each week.
The National School of Home Study, licensed by the N.Y. State
Dept. of Education and Chaitered by the Board of Regents now offers
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F o r a F R E E HOME STUDY HIGH SCHOOL BOOKLET, CaU OR 7-7390
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DEA|!,MAIIIIN.iyiAnHELM
ihESlLENCERS
A COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE in C0LUMBIA60UM
jt <»• jA-fr.'Y/., PresentJtion The.ities'
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Ma«Kk M(<I NtCN
New Bill Would
Prevent Sabbath
Penalties In CS
WMNW
iCf»t
mmmt
wwwi
Mr. Margolin is Dean of Administration and Professor of
crimination against S a b b a t h observers seeking employment in Business Administration at the Borougli of Manhattan Comcivil service. Assemblyman Noah munity College and Adjunct Professor of Public Relations in
Goldstein <D. Bklyn) la the co- New York University's Graduate School of Public Adminissponsor of t h e bill.
tration.
T h e Posner-Goldsteln bill would
a d d a new section to the Civil
Service Law to prohibit the S t a t e
or municipal civil service commissions or a school district from
di.scrlminating
against
persons
who are unable to work on S a t urday or m u s t leave early on F r i day a f t e r n o o n because of their
religious beliefs. T h e s t a t e or city
agency or d e p a r t m e n t would work
out a n a r r a n g e m e n t with the
employee to make u p t h e lost
time; charge It to a n n u a l leave;
or deduct it f r o m his salary.
Policemen, firemen a n d persons engaged in public t i a n s p o r tation, such as bu.s drivers and
subway motormen, would be excluded f r o m the provisions of the
bill.
Mexico 'Festa'
Tour Now Open
A 16-day "Mexican Fiesta"
tour is now open to Civil Service Employees Assn. members, their
families
and
friends. The tour, which will
fly to Mexico by jet f r o m New
York City on July 30, is now open
for bookings.
Highlights of this exciting vacation offering will include a stay in
t h e glamourous capital of Mexico
C?ity with its glittering shops a n d
night life a n d a seat a t t h e bull
fights. O n t h e way down to the
resort city of Acapulco, m u c h of
the beauty of old Colonial Mexico will be seen as well as spectacular landscapes t h a t range from
deserts to m o u n t a i n s to the Pacific Ocean.
XjMuhte]
.with
A n ^
•-N.Y. Daily News
t o enjoy a n d
remember with
pleasure!"
—N.Y. Herald Tribune
— N . Y . Daily
A Columbia Pictures Release ^
VICTORIA
rwayt46th St. 0 0 60)40
«NC1HI> f i l l rUHINS-Alttt I PM
N«ws
T
by the use of plastic spiral
binding.
A B I G "plus" for the report
is the index for easy reference
to the comprehensive
subject
m a t t e r . T h e New York S t a t e Dep a r t m e n t of Health is a m a j o r
S t a t e operation, covering hospitals,
communicable
diseases,
water pollution, x - r a y machines,
atomic radiation, physical xehabilitations, records a n d vital
statistics, cancer research, air
pollution
control,
and
many
other areas.
F O E ALL these services a n d
and more .the cost was nominal
—$103,311,823 for 1965.
ONE T H I N G we liked about
the D e p a r t m e n t ' s a n n u a l r e p o r t
was its theme, "Building for B e t ter Health." This gives the r e p o r t
a cohesiv€sne.ss around new r e sponsibilities assigned to it by t h e
Legislature—planning, inspection,
St^tep T h e theme for ttod!196| emnuftl^yepoii ' I W
^
ANNUAL
REPORTS
must
communicate clearly a n d p r e cisely, t h u s placing a p r e m i u m
on good writing. By and laig©
(Continued on P a g e 15)
BUSINESS
INSTITUTE
i ACCBPTKD l o r Civil Service
• JOB PROMOTION
• EXCELLENT TEACHERS
• SHORT C O U R S E — L O W RATES
Call Mr. J e r o m e f o r Con eu It at ion
Kl 2.5«00
E. T r e m o n t A v . A Boston Hd., Bx.
(RKO Chester BUIg:.)
Kl 2-6«O0
Men, Women—Easily Ltarn to
INVESTIGATE
ACCIDENTS
%
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Oft
• f t J J L j L L M i J M i L L A J i i ^ i
•UNt«U
MTCS
W« subscribe to th« Safe
Driver Plan, If your present
company does not—
00 THIS!
O i l now. A tourtcou*
St*t«'Wid« t u p t t l will
(iv* you (h« i«vina* <«cl*
on full co««r«a«» r « i l o i t 4 l
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W E GIVE V O U
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CREDITS & COLLECTIONS
up t o
$ 2 0 0
up to $ 1 0 0
I
o
(Full
o week (part time} i
Low coiit course, V iiiklitii whly f o r ]
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rM|uir«iiieiilN. Free uUvUor} vliii:ciii«ut J
nervice. t a l l now,
j
FREE BOOKLET - BE 3-5910 [
STATE-WIDE
NSURANCE
''HH6i!izond.
Better H e a l t h . "
T h e price of only $545 includes
most meals, all hotel rooms, round
trip jet plane fare, sightseeing
tours a n d such extra features as a
picnic lunch at a famous beauty
site and cocktail parties.
I m m e d i a t e application may be
h a d by writing at once to S a m
Enunett, 1060 East 28th St.,
TO ADD to the attractivesness,
Brooklyn, N.Y., 11230. After 6
p.m., telephone (212) CL 2-5241. t h e report is m o r e easily handled
I StHk Ctmptuy
COLUMBIACOIOR*
All i n Sundt«-W{t1
corporation. O t h e r s are just a
conglomeration of words, words
a n d more word.s—and lots of pictures of the mayor a n d / o r the
commissioners.
IN ALL fairness, it m u s t be
said t h a t a n n u a l reports f r o m
government entities are getting
better. If they are as excellent as the 1965 a n n u a l report
of t h e New York S t a t e D e p a r t m e n t of Health, we know t h a t
government h a s f o u n d the secret:
ANNUAL H E P O R T S are the
m o d e r n highway to good public
relations, a n d t h e toll charges are
moderate for the immense value
received.
THE BASIC objective of any
a n n u a l report Is to communicate
by word and illustration a dep a r t m e n t ' s accomplishments for
the year j u s t passed, a n d to set
f o r t h plan.s, objectives, and hopes
for t h e f u t u r e .
REPORTING
THE
problems
are also in order. A discussioii of
problems e n h a n c e s t h e
docum e n t ' s authenticity a n d minimizes the c h a n c e t h a t t h e a n n u a l report will deteriorate into
a "puff sheet" for t h e top brass.
THE 1965 annual r e p o r t of the
D e p a r t m e n t of H e a l t h Is a t tractively de.signed, and above all,
typographically readable. I t is
produced by the offset process,
and, we suspect, It was skillfully
processed r i g h t within the Dep a r t m e n t itself.
FOiR EXAMPLE, most Of the
78-page report is set in typewriter type—double-spaced. This
could have clicked r i g h t out of
the roller of one of the d e p a r t ment's own typewriters, pasted on
to a clean white pages ,illustrations added by paste-up, and
t h e n reproduced on a thin m e t a l
plate by a photographic process.
I INSURANCE >
" A FILM
OF WARMTH
AND LAUGHTER
•'HAYLEY MILLS
Is a red-haired
hellion on wheefsl'*
Road To Good PR
UNLIKE SPRING this year^ annual reports from government agencies are busting out all over.
SOME ARE as beautiful as Spring flowers, with design
and printing that would do justice to a multi-billion dollar
tmniruMi
I h e
her talent a n d
{)uts
o v e Into t h e role!'*
• y LEO J. MARGOLIN
(WW*
^
"ROSALIND
RUSSELL
Your Public
Relations IQ
Assemblyman Seymour Posner
(D. Bronx), to prevent dis-
AUTO
^^A
Tuesday, April 19, 1 9 6 6
LEADER
Lindsay's office, still like.s his Job,
still dismisses t h e tags of "Hoy
Scout Brigade" a n d o t h e r such
The State Assembly ha5
r e m a r k s a n d still claims h e h a s
passed a bill, introduced by
no aims for political office.
ADVERTISEMENT
CtNIUflVt Mi.iu«i»
SERVICE
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ADVANCE INSTITUTE
30 E. 20 St.. N. Y. 3. N.Y.
CIVIL SKKVICE LEAUBK
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f o r P u b l l o Employee*
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{
TiiPMlay, April 26, 1966
CIVIL
SERVICE
LEADER
Page Tliirt<trri
Capital Conference
Moves To Strengthen
Bonds V!Hit Community
ALBANY—In order to form a deeper in ter-relationship between the Albany community and the civil service employee, the Capital District Conference of the Civil Service Employees Assn., will sponnsor an informal exchange of ideas between the two groups on
May 3 at the Inn Towne Motor Hotel.
T h e event, being held with the i
I let will list t h e organizations par- Social Committee, and Mary M.
cooperation
of
Albany's
Publicity
newspapers, will bring together 'ticlpatlng and will give pertinent De Save, chairman.
the chapter presidents of the Cap- facts concerning the aspirations Committee.
Reservations for dinner may be
ital Conference with some 50 rep- and needs of the organizations
CHINA —— Shown above is Dr. George F. Etling, second from resentatives of community organ- and their programs for the com- made by writing to Max Benko,"
chairman. Community Night, care
left, director of Wassaic State Scliool, gratefully receiving a check izations, according to Max Benko, munity.
Benko explained t h a t the Com- of Capital Newspapers, 24 Sherifrom Richard J. Snyder, CSEA chapter president, for purchase of chairman of the session and first
china donated by the Wassaic chapter of the civii Service Employees vice president of t h e Conference. mittee is commencing the pro- dan Avenue, Albany, New York.
Assn. for employees' teas and parties. Also shown are Robert P. Foley,
Attending will be leaders of gram with grouiJs In the Albany
business officer, and Edith Boisvert, supervising dietiitian.
charitable, cultural, educational, area. If the response Is as good
voluntary,
civic and
business as anticipated, the scope will be
groups. Also to be represented will broadened to encompass the enbe the Saratoga Performing Arts tire Capital District area in the
Center, Channel 17, the local jed- future. If there is sufficient emucationai channel, and represen- ployee interest, it is hoped t h a t
the organizations themselves will
tatives of several hospitals.
hold receptions for the Civil
Booklet Prepared
Service employees in the Fall to
ALBANY—The Civil Service
"Golden Opportunity Booklet"
During the annual St. Lawrence State Hospital Em- is in preparation by Capital f u r t h e r acquaint t h e m with the Employees Assn. has won a
promise from the Division of
ployees Silver Anniversary Dance and Party to be held Newspapers as one of its contri- objectives of the organizations.
Associated with Benko on the the Budget to include the
April 23 in Curtis Hall, Dr. J. Rothery Haight, Hospital Di- butions to the project. The booksteering committee for the event title of hearing reporter among
rector, will present 13 employees of the hospital with their
will be Gene Robb, publisher. a group of titles to be reviewed
25 Year Seiivce Pins a n d CerCapital Newspapers. Other m e m - for possible upgrading as proD. Breen; E m m a Alton; Marie C.
tificates. The employees completbers of the Committee are W a r - vided In the c u r r e n t budget.
D u r a n t ; and Helen S. Jackson.
ing 25 years service and who are
ren Shaver. Education DepartDr. Haight said t h a t honoring
Replying to a direct request
to be honored at the a f f a i r a r e :
ment; J o h n Wyld, Commerce Deeach employee who completes 25
Everett
Thompson;
William
from
CSEA President Joseph F.
partment:
John
F.
Kennedy,
years of service with the State is
Kroeger;
Kenneth
MsDonald;
Felly, Dr. T. Norman Hurd, Dipresident.
Music
Association
of
an expression of recognition by
ALBANY—The Civil Service
J a m e s E. J o h n s t o n ; William K.
,and
James
Drislane, rector of the Budget, stated:
the St. Lawrence State Hospital of Employees Assn. reports one Albany
Burrows; Walter Montroy; E r ". . . . You may be assured
the service t h a t an employee h a s success and another immin- president, Albany Chamber of
wlth W. Dezell; J a m e s F. o J h n t h a t the title of Hearing ImportCommerce.
Participating
i
n
t
h
e
given to the State of New York. ent in reclassification reston; Claude H. Spooner; Doris
er will be included in t h e review.
R«tirees
quests filed in behalf of two planning a r e also A. Victor Costa.
While we were unable to approve
Conference
president;
M
a
r
g
a
r
e
t
Also at this time special recog- State employees.
the Civil Service Commission acFleming,
conference
second
vice
nition will be given to those who
The Division of the Budget h a s
tion of April 10, 1963 ,we recogretii^d during the last year f r o m approved reclassification of the president; Mary Hart, c h a i r m a n .
nize t h a t situations change rapidthe institution. T h e last year r e - title of Salvatore Gallio, Grade
ly with the passage of time and
tirees includes: Vina Richard; M. 4 maintenance helper at M a t we will again, give this m a t t e r
Howard Wainright; Bdmond J . tewan State Hospital, to motor
our most care and t h o u g h f u l
Dadey; Grace G. Wright; George vehicle operator Grade 6. Gallio
consideration.
W. Robertson; J a m e s
Hubert
was promoted to the reclassified
" T h a n k you for bringing this
Webb; Caroline Richardson and
position on April 7.
matter to our attention."
DOVER PLAINS — Elvin Ralph N. Northrup.
In the other CSEA request, the
Anthony Glannettl, Chairman
Kurd's mention of the ill-fated
Sedore was honored at a dinDr. Haight noted the number Division of Classification
and of the Canvassing Committee for Civil Service Commission action
ner attended by approxim- of employees still in service a t
ately 125 fellow employees the Hospital who have completed Compensation h a s reclassified t h e Nassau chapter. Civil Service of two years ago refers to a
Grade 7 maintenance m a n title Employees Assn., announces t h a t hearing officers' bid for reallocarecently,
at
the
DeLaVergne 26 or more years of service. He
held by Sherman McDowell, New ballots will be in the mall next tion from Grade 14 to Grade 16
F a r m s Hotel. Amenia, upon the said t h a t there were four emHampton Training School for week for the election of officers which was originally denied by
occasion of his retirement f r o m ployees with over 40 years servBoys, to locksmith. Grade 10. The in t h e chapter. If you do not re- the Division of
Classification
the Wassaic State School a f t e r ice; 30 employees with over 35
action now awaits final approval ceive a ballot by April 29, pierre and Compensation,
subsequentyears service; 21 with over 30
iV/i years of service.
inform Glannettl a t P.O. Box ly granted on appeal to t h e
by the Budget Division.
years and 56 with over 25 years
91, Hempstead, New York or call Commission, but ultimately disSedore started work at the
service.
him a t IV 1-8033. He will make approved by the Budget. RecallWingdale State Hospital in OctoEgan
New
Administrator
"Add to these the 13 presently
available, for you. an affic^vlt ing this earlier action in subber, 1924, and transferred to the
ALBANY
—
J
a
m
e
s
R.
Egan
of
honored for 25 years of service,"
to secure a ballot. All ballots stantiating his request to Hurd,
Wasasaic State School in SeptWhitehall
is
the
new
administraDr. Haight remarked, "and we
must
be in the hands of t h e
ember, 1929, where he has been
have a grand total of 124 e m - tor of t h e Bureau of Apprentice Canvassing Committee no later Felly said ". . . we believe t h a t
since t h a t time. At the time
Training
in
the
State
Labor
Desuch upgrading la completely
ployees at the St. Lawrence State
t h a n May 8.
of his retirement he was the
p
a
r
t
m
e
n
t
.
justified.
Hospital with 25 and many more
head maintenance supervisor for
years of service in care and t r e a t p t h e school.
ment of the mentally ill of our
Guests
section of New York S t a t e . "
At the dinner, Robert Foley,
The presentation ceremony will
senior business officer a t Was- be held at 8:30 p.m. following a
saic, was the master of cere- welcome to all by the Hospital's
monies. The Rev. G. Curtis Conk- CSEA chapter president. R a l p h
lln of South Amenia gave the Briggs and prayer by Hospital
Invocation. Guest speakers in- Chaplain, Rabbi David Kozak.
cluded Dr. George Elting, senior
The Swingmasters
Orchestra
director of Wassaic State School; will f u r n i s h music for dancing
Nelson WliitiU'y, a former busi- and a Buffet dinner will be served
ness officer at the school, now during the evening.
retired; Gilbert Beck, assistant
commissioner of standards and
purchases from Albany; Joseph Dr. Richard Hunt
Herbek, assistant chief engineer,
Albany, and Rlclvard Johnson, Returns To State
assistant engineer, Albany
ALBANY—Dr. Richard C .Hunt
'
Other honored guests included has returned from retirement to
accept appointment as assistant
Fi-ed Nelson, head maintenance
commissioner for the S t a t e Desupervisor from Kings Park State p a r t m e n t of Mental Hygiene. He
Hospital;
Peter
Noe,
head will handle special projects for the
maint-enance supervisor a t H a r - Department.
For the past three years, he h a s
lem Valley State Hospital. Fred
president; Mrs. Ann Siierman, vice president; Mrs.
served as a special consultant to INSTALLED
• Pictured at the- recent in^ M a t t h e w s , head maintenance suClarissa Wallace, secretary; Mrs. Wilma Simpson,
the National Institute of Mental stallation of officers of tlie W.R.C. Home chapter,
P p e r i s o r , Hudson River State Hos- Health Community Research a n d
district representative of the Social Seourity AdCivii Service Employees Assn., are from ieft: CSEA
pital; and David Hughes, a dis- Service! Branch. He retired f i o m field representative Benjamin Roberts, wiio was
ministration who was the fuest 8|>eaker: and Alan
State service, m .1362.
.
Wiuans. clMpter drlegate.
trict inspector.
(h« i n s t a i i ^
Mrs. lillian Gray, chapter
Hearing Reporters
To Get Review On
Upgrading Appeal
St Lawrence State Hospital
Honors 25 Year [mployee
CSEA Wins On A
Reclassification
Retires Aftet
41 Years Of
State Service
Nassau Chapter
Election Ballots
Being Sent Out
CIVIL
Page Sixleea
FREE BOOKLET by U. 8. GoT- only. Leader, 97 Dnane
crnment on Social Security. Mall New Yorli 7. N. Y.
SERVICE
Street,
U.S. Service News Items
How To Get A H
$fl Month)/
incluclen all
Bookn, Ezflms,
Indlvliliinl
Inst riift ion!
•I
I
I
Our itnilents
liave entered
over ROO
ColleKPRt
I
I
LEADER
•By JAMES P. O'HANLON'
HIGH SCHOOL | House Pay Bill Should
EDUCATION
I Look Good To The Senate
AT HOME IN SPARE TIME
If you are 17 or ever and have left school,
you can earn a High School diploma. Write
for free High School booklet—tells how.
H
T h e r e is a temporary lull In Post Office a n d Civil Service
_
the tableau now t h a t the House C5omp€nsation subcommittee disH
AMERICAN SCHOOL, Dept. 9AP.53
130 W. 42nd St., N.Y. 36, N.Y. Ph. BRyant 9-2604 Day or Night
Send me your free 55-page High School booklet.
Name
Addiess
City
Age
I
_JVpt..
-Zone.
-State.
OUR 69th YEAR
ARCUS
has passed its version of T h e
_ Federal pay raise a n d fringe ben• efit legislation. T h e Senate h a s
B set April 20 as t h e opening date
of its hearings and as things look
now those activities should a m o u n t
to a r e - r u n of w h a t h a s already
happened a t Rep. Udall's House
RADIO
Introduces This
SABRE
SAW "S
IMEW
COME IN
FOR LOW
PRICE
• 3 position saw table
•
•
3 position chuck
•
3300 strokes per min.no load speed
cussions.
T h e only m a t t e r which is causing any stir in the pay-raismg
procedures is the question of
whether certain provisions of the
House bill should come under the
3.2 guideline.
I t h a s been reported t h a t t h e
House-passed
bill,
supposedly
d r a w n u p to President Johnson's
specifications is over t h e dollar
limit by somewhere between 40
a n d 100 million dollar-s.
Congressional spokesman contended however t h a t the excess is
monies needed for such provisions as liberalizing retirement
benefits for already retired Federal workers; those who retired
between 1948 and 1966 in this
case. T h e y m a i n t a i n t h a t such
costs cannot logically be charged
to t h e 3.2 limit since the individuals effected a r e not now
employees of the Federal government.
I t would appear t h a t the final
decision on the m a t t e r will lean
heavily on this logic.
I t would also appear t h a t the
S e n a t e will not make too m a n y
changes in t h e passed House bill,
largely complying as it does to
t h e President's wi-shes a n d approved, as it is, if reluctantly,
by most employee spokesmen.
Besides allowing for the pay
Increase of a n across-the-boai'd
2.85 percent, t h e main provisions
of the House bill include; a July
1 effective date for the pay
raise; a n option of retirement at
age 55 a f t e r 30 year.s service or
a t age 60 a f t e r 20 years. I t makes
u n i f o r m allowances
mandatory
where authorized by law; increases government h e a l t h benef i t contribiutions to $1.62 biweekly; grants classified employees t i m e - a n d - a - h a l f for work
done in excess of forty hours in
one week; broadens the definition
of 'child" school to age 22; grants
certain los-s-of-salary protections
to General Services Administration workers and offers classified
a n d wa^e board employees 25 percent premium compensation for
work done on Sundays not subject to overtime pay.
w i t h the addition of Genaril Electric Interchenteable
Tool Heads, this one power tool can be your own
portable power tool workshop.
Public Health
Nurse Exam Is
Open Continually
We Carry A Complete
Line Of G. £. Products
A R G I J S
241 EAST 59TH STREET
R A D I O
(Corner 2nd Avenue)
(1 BIk. East of Bloomingdok)
EL 5-1572
NEW YORK CITY
T h e New York City D e p a r t m e n t
of Personnel is accepting applications on a continual basis for
an examination for public health
nurse.
S t a r t i n g salary in this position is $5,750.
Applications are accepted only
on T h u r s d a y of each week and
candidates will have to pass a
medical test before being allowed
to file their applications,
Ti-e written test is also given
on Thursday of each week.
F o r f u r t h e r i n f o r m a t i o n and
applications contact the Applications Section of the D e p a r t m e n t
of Personnel, 49 T h o m a s Street.
Tuesday, April 19, 1966
Where to Apply 4
For Publit Jobs
The
following
directions
tell
where to apply for public Jobs
ftnd how to reach destinations In
New York
City on
the
transit
system.
CITY
NEW -fORK CITY—The Applications Section of the New York
City D e p a r t m e n t of Personnel is
located a t 49 T h o m a s St., New
York 7, N.Y. ( M a n h a t t a n ) . I t ia
three blocks n o r t h of City Hall,
Mie block west of Broadway,
Hours are 9 A.M. to 4 P.M.
Monday t h r o u g h
Friday,
and
S a t u r d a y s f r o m 9 to 12 noon.
Telephone 566-8720
Mailed requests for application
blanks must include a s t a m p e d ,
self-addi'essed business-size e n velope a n d m u s t be received by
the Personnel D e p a r t m e n t a t least
tive days before the closing d a t e
tor t h e filing of applications.
*
Completed application
forms
which a r e filed by mail must be
sent to t h e Personnel Departmei.it
and must be postmarked no later
then the last day of filing or if
stated otherwise in t h e e x a m ination announcement.
T h e Applications Section of
the Personnel D e p a r t m e n t is n e a r
the Chambers Street stx)p of t h e
main subway lines t h a t go t h r o u g h
the area. These are the I R T 7 t h
Avenue Line a n d the IND 8 t h
Avenue Line. T h e I R T Lexington
Avenue Line stop to use is t h e
Worth Street stop and the B M T
Brighton local's stop is City Hall.
Both lines have exits to Dillane
Street, a short walk from t h e P(ii'sormel Depstrtment:
,
1
STATE
STATE—Room
1100 a t 270
Broadway, New York 7, N. Y.,
corner of Chambers St., telephone
BArclay 7-1616; Governor Alfred
E Smith S t a t e Office Building a n d
The S t a t e Campus, Albany; S t a t e
Office Building, B u f f a l o ; S t a t e
Office Building, Syracuse; a n d
500 Midtown Tower, Rochester
(Wednesdays only).
,
Candidates may obtain applications for S t a t e jobs f r o m local
offices of t h e New York S t a t e
Employment Service.
FEDERAL
FEDERAL — Second U.S. Civil
Service Region Office, News B u i l d - ^
Ing, 220 East 42nd Street (at 2nd
Ave.), New York 17. N.Y., Just
west of the United Nations builds
Ing. Take the I R T Lexington Ave.
Line to G r a n d Central a n d walk
two blocks east, or take the s h u t tle f r o m Times Square to G r a n d
Central or t h e I R T Queens-Flushing train f r o m any point on t h e
line to t h e G r a n d Central stop.
Hours are 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m«
Monday t h r o u g h Friday, Telephone number is YU 6-2626.
Applications are also o b t a i n able a t main post offices, except
the New York, N.Y., Post Office.
Boards of examiners at the p a r ticular installations offering t h e
tests also may be applied to for
fui-ther information and application forms. No r e t m n envelopes
are required with mailed requests
for application forms.
,
i
|
(
i
i
FREE BOOKLET by V S., GOY«
uuvM
A1|||
ernment
on
Social
Security.
REMEMBER, A SO-year old
firefighter was killed recently ONLY. Leader. 97 Duane St.,
while reKtfondlnf on a false alarm! City, N.Y. 10007.
CIVIL
TiiPMlay, April 26, 1966
SERVICE
LEADER
Page Tliirt<trri
Tentative Key Answers For
Parking Enforcement Agent,
Motor Veliicle Operator Test
State Jobs As -
Stockroom Workers;
Filing Closes May 16
These are the tentative key answers for the writt-en examinations given Saturday April 16 for parking enforcement agent and motor vehicle operator in New York City,
Candidates who wish to file protests on any of these answers
have until May 4 to do so in writing, with such evidenc®
that the protest is based upon.
The State of New York is accepting applications until May 16 for an examination for
stockroom workers. Salary in this job is $65 per week.
1, D; 2. B; 3. A: 4. C; 5, C;
There are no education or experience requirements.
6, B; 7. A; 8, B; 9. D; 10, A;
Stockroom workers are eligible for posi tions as clothing clerk, stores clerk, mail and 11. A: 12, C; 13, D; 14. C; 15, C;
supply clerk
and
mechanical
sbores clerk.
These are not white collar positions a n d require standing and
lifting .
T h e r e are vacancies In these
jobs throughout the State.
Tests
T h e written test will have questions concerning recognizing and
counting names, numbers, clothing, tools and on following directions.
T h e written examination is
sciieduled for Saturday, June 18
at various locations throughout
New York State.
For f u r t h e r information and applications contact t h e S t a t e Dep a r t m e n t of Civil Service, the
Sbate Campus, Albany or the S t a t e
Off-ice Building, Syracuse B u f f a l o or New York City, or any
local office of t h e S t a t e E m ployment Service.
Foremon Plumber Promotion Exam
T h e New York City D e p a r t m e n t
of Personnel will accept applications until April 27 for a promotion examination for f o r e m a n
plumber. T h i s examination is
open only to qualified employees
of the D e p a r t m e n t s of Hospitals,
Public Works. Education
and
Welfare.
Starting
salary
Is
$42.35
day.
Harness Maker
Is Needed In
Police Dept.
T h e New Yprk City Police
D e p a r t m e n t Is accepting applications for a projijslonal appointm e n t as harness maker, the only
position of its kind in City
service.
Salary in the job Is $6,600 to
start.
Harness makers m a i n t a i n and
repair bridles and sadles for the
Mounted Police Division of the
Department, the only one t h a t
still uses horses In the City.
For f u r t h e r information call
t h e New York City Mounted Police District. CH 2-6647.
Apply For Radio
Announcer Jobs
The United States I n f o r m a t i o n
Agency h a s openings for radio
^ announcers in the Washington,
D.C. area. Openings are available in grade GS-9 through grade
GS-12 at s t a r t i n g salaries of $7,479 through $10,619 a year. Applicants must be willing to accept
a schedule of shifting work hours.
Duties include voicing and producing of news features, documentaries, dramas and special f e a t u r e s for broadcast by the Voice
of America, the radio a r m of the
U.S. Information Agency.
Experience evaluations will be
m a d e on the quality, scope and
responsibility of experience r a t h e r
tiian on Its length.
Professional acting,
lecturing
a n d communications media writing experience will be regarded as
m u c h a.s announcing experience.
Education substitutes for experience will be made In some cases.
Applicants will be required to subm i t a demonstration tape.
For applicatiom and f u r t h e r
^formation c o n t a c t
the
New
York Region Office, United S t a t e s
Civil Service Commuslon, 220
E a s t 42ud Street, New York City.
New York.
A separate promotion list will
be established for each d e p a r t ment.
iPor f u r t h e r Information contact the Applications Section of
the D e p a r t m e n t of Personnel 49
T h o m a s Street, New York City
REIVTEMBER, False alarms strip
per areas of firefighting
for critical minutes!
apparatus
A COURSE OF PREPARATION
FOR PROMOTION TO
ADMINISTRATIVE
ASSISTANT
APPLICATIONS OPEN JUNE ( - EXAM NOV. 19
EJSROLLMEJST
— mW
16, A; 17, D; 18. B; 19. D; 20, C;
21. B; 22. D^ 23. A; 24. C; 25. B.
26.B; 27. B: 28. D; 29. C; 30 A;
31, B; 3, D; 33, B; 34, A; 35, C;
36 D; 37, B; 38. D; 39, B; 40, D;
41, O; 42, D; 43, C; 44, A; 45, B;
46, A; 47, A: 48. C; 49. C; 50. B.
51. A; 52. D; 53. B; 54. B; 55, D;
56, A; 57, C; 58, A; 59, C; 60, A;
61, A; 62, C; 63, B; 64, D; 65, D;
66, A; 67, D; 68, B; 69, B; 70, C;
71, C; 72, B; 73, B; 74, A; 75, D.
76, A; 77. A; 78, D; 79, C; 80. C;
81, B; 82, C ; 83, D; 84, C; 85, A;
86, B; 87, D; 88, C; 89 ,B; 90, D;
91, C; 92, A; 93, D; 94, B; 95,A:
96, B; 97, O; 98, C; 99,D; 100, D.
Rec. Supervisor
In Suffolk Co.
T h e Oivil Service Commission of
Suffolk County will accept applications until April 29 for a n examination for recreation supervisor. S a l a r y varies according to
location.
For f u r t h e r information contact
the County Oivil Service Commission, Riverhead.
z
Applications are being received by the New York City
Department of Personnel on a
continual basis for an examination for case worker I.
This a trainee class of positions
with a one year term. At the end
of the year of service, employees
in the position who meet all r e quirements will receive a regular
appointment to tdie title of case
worker II with a salai-y range of
$6,400 to $8,200.
Appointments of case worker I
eligibles are made at a salary of
$5,750 to s t a r t with a n increase
a f t e r six m o n t h s to $6,050 per year.
A written test will be given o n
the day of filing applications.
For f u r t h e r information conta-cb
the Applications Section of t h e
Department
of Pereonnel,
49
T h o m a s Street, New York City.
OPEIS
This is the DELEHANTY team of experts who will cover,
BiS specialists, the following subject areas set forth in
the official requirements for the examination.
ADMimSTRAlWE
A^D
PRACTICES
Contiinual Filing
For Case Woricer 1
In New York City
Tlie DELEHANTY INSTITUTE
MANHATTAN: 115 EAST I S ST.. Near 4 Ave. (All Subway*)
JAMAICA: 89-25 MERRICK BLVD.. bet. Jamaica ft Hillside Ave*.
PRimiPLES
OFFICE HOURS: MON. TO F R I . 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. Closed Sat.
EDWARD P. McANIFF,
Chief
(Ret.)
of
Depar+ment,
N.Y.F.D.
SUPERVISORY
PRINCIPLES ATSD
PRACTICES — IISTERPRETATIOIS
OF
DATA INCLVDim
GRAPH,
CHARTS,
etc,
50 Years of Successful Specialized Education
For Career Opportunities and Personal Advancement
Be Our Guest at a Class Session of Any Delehanty Coarse or Phone
or Write for Class Schedules and F R E E GUEST CARD.
PATROLMAN
BRIDGE & TUNNEL OFFICER
HENRY J . MULHEARN,
Chairman of Delehanty A d v a n c e d
Police Programs
PUBLIC
ADMimSTRATlON
MAXWELL LEHMAN.
Isf Deputy City Administrator
(Ret.)
OFFICE
CLASSES IN JAMAICA, WED, 7 P.M.
IN MANHATTAN. MON. 1:15, 5:30 & 7:30 P.M.
Physical Training Classes, Thursday 6-7-8 P.M. at uur
Jamaica Gym, 89-25 Merrick Blvd. $3 per session.
CLASSES NOW MEETING IN M.'INHATTAN & JAMAICA
•
HIGH SCHOOL EQUIVALENCY DIPLOMA
MAISAGEMENT
CLASSES for SENIOR CLERK
ALYIN BOOKE,
of the faculty of the Baruch
School of Business and Public
Administration
In BROOKLYN - JAMAICA - MANHATTAN
Xo|»-l'lisht Iiistruitioii — Maxiiiiuiii L'uiiveniriice — BIcderule !'«•
• PRACTICAL VOCATIONAITCOURSES:
Liceeied by N.Y. State—Approved for Veterans
GENERAL
TOPICS
a specialist in clerical promotion
examinations
While all of the above Instructors will concentrate on
the multiple-choice type of question, there will be ample
coverage, as well, of essay writing.
DELEHANTY CLASSES WILL START
IN MANHATTAN . TUESDAY. MAY 3 at 6 P.M.
at 120 E a s t 13th St. - Near 4th Ave.
S a m e lecture will be repeated.
IN JAMAICA . THURSDAY, MAY 5 at 6 P.M.
at 8»-25 Meirick Blvd. opp. J a m a i c a Bus Terminal
CANDIDATES MAY ATTEND AT EITHER LOCATION
BE OUR GUEST AT THE OPENING CLASS
COMPLETELY AIR CONDITIONED CLASS ROOMS
THE DELEHANTY INSTITUTE
lis
Uit
AUTO MECHANICS SCHOOL
RALPH LEONE.
ISth
>
5-01 46 Road at S St.. Long Island City
Complete Shop Training on " L I v " Cars
with SpeelaliiatloH on Automatic
Trantmhtlonn
DRAFTING SCHOOLS
Manhattan: 123 East 12 St. nr. 4 Ave.
Jamaieo: 89-25 Herrick llvd. at 90 Ave.
^Architectural—Mechanical—Structural
Drafting
Piping, Electrical and Machine Drawing.
RADIO. TV & i ^ T R O N I C S SCHOOL
117 East 11 St. nr. 4 Ave., Manhattan
Radio and TV Service & Repair, Color
TV Servicing. "HAM"
License freparatlea.
• DELEHANTY H I G H SCHOOL
Accredited by l o a r d of Regents
f1-01 Merrick ioulevard, Jamaica
A College Preparatory
Co-Bducatlonal !4eod«fflfe
NIgk School. Secretarial Traleleg
AvallabU
for Girls as an S l e e t l v Supplement. Specioi
Preparation In Science and Mathematics lor
Stedents Who Wish
Quality far Technefegrcef
e n d iegheerhg
Ceifcfes. Driver
ld«c«flM C««rMi.
N«w York. N. Y. 1004S
•tMMrey l-4f0t
F o r l a f o r n r a t i o B M All C o u n t s F k m
n
S-4fM
!
CIVIL
Page Sixleea
SERVICE
LEADER
LETTERS
TO THE EDITOR
Americans
tMrgpHt
Wrekiif
tor
Pubiie
Emplofippn
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations
Published
eiery
Ttifisday
by
LEADER PUBLICATIONS. INC.
»7 DHQII* Street. New York. N.Y.-10007
212-BEeliman 3-6010
J»Mry I'ink<'Isteiii, Publisher
Paul Kyer, Editor
J«e Oi-asy, Jr., riify Editor
James V. O'Uanloii, Associate Editor
Mike klioii, Associate Editor
N. H. Maptr, Business Manager
Advertising Representatives:
ALBANY — Joseph T. Rdlow — :103 So. Manning Blvd., IV 2-5474
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10c per copy. Subscription Price $3.00 to members of tlie Civil
Service Employees Association. $5.00 to non-members.
TUESDAY, APRIL 19, 1 9 6 6
Job Still Not Done
ITH the resumption of the 1966 ses&ion of the Legislature, State employees still have their work cut out
for them in order to assure passage of two important pieces
of retirement legislation.
The first of these is a bill that would provide a l/60th
retirement for all future members of the State Retirement
System to give a guaranteed half-pay retirement. At the
same time, such a measure would provide liberal retroactive benefits for present Retirement System members. A bill
to accomplish this goal, introduced by Comptroller Arthur
Levitt and passed by the Legislature, was vetoed by Governor Rockefeller on technical grounds. He did not pass
on the merits of the bill, however, and the Civil Service
Employees Assn. has prepared new legislation to overcome
any, technical objections.
The second bill would provide a $2,000 death benefit
after retirement to all State employees with 10 years full
time service.
Both measures must pass the Legislature and win the
approval of the Governor. For that reason, public employees
must again launch a new drive in contacting legislators and
the Governor in order to assure passage and approval of
these vital measures.
W
The Inflation of 3.2
T appears now that the President has been spectacularly
I
NE of the most important posts in City government
pertaining to the civil service employee was filled
yesterday (Monday) when the appointment of Allan J.
Graham as Secretary to the City Civil Service Commission
was announced.
Graham, for 25 years an employee at the Brooklyn
Navy Yard, brings to this most vital position a wealth of
knowledge and experience.
We join with Mayor Lindsay in praising this appointment and we also extend our congratulations and best wishes
to the new Secretary.
O
Civil Service
Law & You
Letters to the editor must ke
siffued. and names will be withheld
from publieation npon request.
They shonld be no longer than
300 words and we reserve the riffht
By WILLIAM GOFFEN
to edit published letters as seems
Appropriate. Address all letters to:
The Editor. Civil Service Leader. (Mr. Goffen, a member of the New York Bar, teaches law at the
97 Duane St., New York, N.Y. 10007. College of the City of New York, is the author of many books and
articles and co-authored "New York Criminal Law.")
Arthur Levitt Reaches
Own Conclusions On
Retirement Questions
Editor, The Leader:
A well intentioned letter to the
editor appearing in your April
5, 1966 edition has caused unjustified apprehension and concern on the part of some members of the New York State Employees' Retirement System.
Unfortunately, the letter contained some erroneous conclusions concerning Federal taxation
of benefits accruing to a beneficiary upon the death of a member of the State Employees' Retirement System.
Under present provisions of the
State Retirement Law, a beneficiary may elect payment of a
death benefit in annuity form
rather t h a n in lump sum where
the member has selected no payment option. The Internal Revenue Code recognizes the right of
a beneficiary to make an annuity
election in such circumstances.
The same provisions are allowed
in the Retirement and Social Security Law.
An annuity election may be
made by a member during his
lifetime. However, few members
of the Retirement System have
selected this provision.
In common with most generalities, such as those advanced In
the letter in question, it is not
necessarily prudent for a member to make an election of death
benefit payment option during his
lifetime. By so doing, he preventvS
his designated beneficiary from
making a personal selection of the
mode of payment of the death
benefit in the light of immediate
ch-cumstances,
financial
and
otherwise, best known to the beneficary.
Any advance selection by a
member may not anticipate future variations and changes in
the Federal Tax Code. Such a
decision could be to the detriment
of a beneficiary left with no
choice but a mandated annuity.
The taxability of death benefits or other retirement benefits
is a complex subject. Important
decisions concerning the most advantageous payment option of
these benefits should only be
made after discussion with qualified tax consultants and the Internal Revenue Service.
ARTHUR LEVITT
Comptroller, «State
* *of New York
successful in convincing all parties invloved that any
Federal pay raise and fringe benefit liberalization this year
should come within his 3.2 wage-hike guideline. Considering the promises made at last year's hearings and the firm
commitment to the concept of pay comparability with private enterprise (a lawful pursuit as of President Kennedy's
Administration) voiced by so many in Congress then, the
President's victory here is almost awesome. And it will benefit him greatly in his fight to impose the 3.2 restrictions
elsewhere.
It is reported however, that the Administration Is voicing consternation because the House bill is some fitfy million dollars over the total which would amount to an overall 3.2 pay budget increase.
In at least one case this is only fair. A portion of the
legislation allows for an increase in benefits for Federal
workers who retired between 1948 and 1956. Their present
benefit rate has long been outdated by time's attrition of
the dollar value.
Cost Of Living
They should be compensated now.
At the same time, however, their compensation should Pension Increases
not be charged against the working Federal employee for Editor, The Leader:
In the March 22nd issue of
whom a 3.2 restriction on possible added wages and benefits
the
Leader, I have read with
should mean, at least, nothing less.
Congratulations
Tuesday, April 19, 1966
interest, of the eight percent increase New York State employees
will receive April 1. And this
was accomplished, the article
states, through the efforts of the
Civil Service Employees Assn.
"Half-pay retiremept bill Js
winning in Legislature" is information
contained
in
the
March 29th issue of the Civil
Service Leader.
I have read every issue of this
publication since last July, except those papers I did not receive when my
subscription,
(Continued on Fafe 15)
Judicial Review
A RECENT opinion considers the scope of judicial review
of an administrative determination denying an application
for a service-connected pension.
THE PETITIONER, a New York City Patrolman, was retired for ordinary disability upon the application of the Police
Commissioner. The Commissioner's authority appears in the
Administrative Code of the City of New York, Section B1842.0, providing:
"Medical examination of a member in city-service for
ordinary disability shall be made upon the application of
the Commission . . . stating that such member is physically or mentally incapacitated for the performance of
duty and ought to be retired."
THE CODE provision further provides that if the medical
examination establishes that the officer is incapacitated for
the performance of duty, he must be retired.
THE PETITIONER was about to be retired in May 1965,
but he submitted a letter by his psychiatrist in which it was
stated that the petitioner's disability was service-connected.
Upon review of the psychiatrist's letter, however, the Board
of Medical Examiners adhered to its original opinion, and
the employee was retired on an ordinary disability pension
in November 1965. Because of the employee's length of service (12 years), the decision meant a pension of approximately one-fourth of his salary instead of the three-fourths
he would have received if his disability were found to be service-connected. In view of the serious consequences of the
adverse determination, the facts and the court's application
of the law warrant more detailed consideration.
IN 1957, THE petitioner slipped and fell while dispersing
two disorderly men. He cut his left hand on brokieni glass oi^
the sideivalk. The. wounds required hospitalization for flvft
weelw and a tendon transplant to the middle finger of th^
left hand. Five months after th^ accident, the petitioner waA
returned to full duty. A month later h e was assigned to
limited duty for a period of two years. He then returned to
full duty for another three years after which he was reassigned to limited duty in which capacity he served for a three
year period terminating in his forced retirement.
IN DETERMINING that the petitioner ought to be retired, the Medical Board found he was suffering from an
anxiety neurosis. This diagnosis was reached by an honorary
police psychiatrist who decided on a brief interview that the
employee's "psychosomatic symptoms stem from having to
do a job that has become boring and tedious, if not distasteful."
IN SUPPORT of his contention at Special Term that his
disability was casually related to the service-incurred injury
to his left hand years earlier, the petitioner submitted a n
opinion by a hand surgeon who recommended "surgical exploration of the digital nerve and tendon" at the tip of the
left middle finger. The petitioner also submitted psychiatric
support for the contention that his disabling anxiety neurosis was service-connected. The conclusion of his psychiatrist
was that the injury impaired the power of his left hand
with the result that he felt insecure in the performance of
his duties becoming increasingly irritated and developing
headaches and dizziness. The psychiatrist concluded that
continuing frustrations revolving about the injury led to t h e
anxiety state.
IN RESOLVING the issues, the Court cited the famous
Shoeck case invoving a fireman who claimed a service-connected disability pension. In the cited case, the Court of
Appeals ruled that the Medical Board's determination of disability is binding upon the Board of Trustees of the Pension
Fund. On the other hand, the question of service-connection
must be determined independently by the trustees who may
disregard the finding of the Medical Board denying serviceconnection unless that finding is "incontestably correct."
Special Term, giving an interesting twist to the Shoeck case,
held there was no incontestable finding that the "chronic
anxiety" was service-connected. Yet, the rationale of the
Sichoeck case is that the very absence of an incontestable
finding by the Medical Board regarding service-connection
places the burden upon the Board of Trustees of independently determining the question of causal relationship. There
is no evidence that the Board of Trustees made such a determination. Instead, it blindly accepted the Medical Board's
conclussion. Nevertheless, the Court dismissed the petition
on the unrelated ground that a choice between conflicting
medical opinions was not within the scop« of Judicial ceview.
Tuesday, April 19, 1966
CIVIL
SERVICE
LEADER
Pag« SevieU
YORK l E A C H , M A I N E
SU Idvely n«w heated housakteping
coHagst. Two & t h r a t bedroom, living room, dining area electric kitchen, hot ft cold water, shower, screened-in porch. STASIA & W I L L I A M
COTE, River St. Graniteville, Mass.
Tel. MY 2-8897.
C a m p Taconia Inc. —
Litchfield, Maine
QUESTIONS
ORfiTRAM.Y I(i.:i1n<|. fivo laltOB. (TOOrt
flfihina. rcMifiil. t o fully ponipppil hotmekofipitiij (•()ll:(ifi>:4. nrnohnrp on rpfiiipst.
Ml-. & Mr-T. RIW-PI Black. Tel. SOT-IJOS4402 or 4'!Bl.
ANSWERS
• . . about health
insurance
by
W i l l i a m G.'
O'Brien
FAMILY VACATIONS
PAIIKNTS — Knio.v New Enirlancra
I»fRi»Hl. atul ho^t rriiiipimd Coltnfre
Ouloiiy for yoiii- cliid'ii'n. Write voiir
timlH (» HAi'l'Y A(."UKS. RFD 17.
Mi(l<»lftfic1.1, foMii.
Blue CrossBlue Shield
Manager,
MILDRED H A M M
New York City
A VACATION
0IKf;('TI.V
r.AKK
GKOKOK
Americitti f'lHii Rreorf. — RpcomiiirtiKlfM) My A\A — De'.icious Kond,
Watftf .Sporls. H O H I Rides, ' Re<Tention.
Wriln fiir Kroclmre \ — BETTV *
DHKIH H\NS|.;\, DIAMOND I'OINT.
N.Y. I'Jti'.M — Tel. .-ilH-nnH-IBT-.
Ofl!' SJKASO.V RATKS—WKMORIAL
WKKK-END
SPECIAL
DISCOUNTS
To All
City. State & Federal
Employes on
1966 RAMBLERS
INVESTIGATE!
TRIAD RAMBLER
13&6 39th STREET
! • • * . 13«h & 14th A v « * . )
BROOKLYN
UL 4-3100
P A T R I C I A SEYFFAST
Local
Designed By D P W —
SPf.CIAL
DKALS
FOR
Civil Si'rvii-e
Employees!
SAAB
ALL
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IftlAIKIUATK DKLIVKRY
LOWEST PRICES. MOST
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Si»f«ly eiiKlniH^red! 'i year or
^l.miO mile wurmnty.
FliiroiMMii Delivery Arraiiffetl
MARTIN'S
DA 3-7500
Aiilliiirl/.eil iSanb Dealer
16« Soiitliorii Blvd. (150 St.) Bx.
1966 PONTIACS
&
IMMEDIATB3
TEMPESTS
DKI.IVERT
MODELS
ON
MOST
I M M E D I A T E CREDIT OK!
Selection
Of
Used
Can
ACE PONTIAC
I»31 Jarome Ave. Bronx. OT 4-4424
rreiiaru
For
Your
EQUIVALENCY
DIPLOMA
Accepted for Civil
Job Promotion
Other Purposes
Designed by architects and engineers of the D e p a r t m e n t of
Public
Works,
the
two-story
structure with an exterior facade
of brick with limestone trim was
built a t a cost of $340,000.
ROBE RTS SCHOOL
S17 W. 57tli St., New York 19
PLaza 7-0300
Please send me F R E E inforraatloa
Name
Chief Custodian
In Suffolk County
Suffolk County will accept applications until May 4 for a n examination for chief custodian.
Salary varies according to jurisdiction.
For f u r t h e r i n f o r m a t i o n ooutact
the County Civil Service Commission, Riverhead.
_
Ph.
Features
Mechanical hose-drying equipment is among the modern f e a tures of the new building which
is located in the Classon Point
section of the Bronx, an area
proposed for extensive additional
housing in the n a t u r e of high
rise a p a r t m e n t s .
Service
Five Week Course prepuret you to
lake tlie NIale Kiliii.Alloii Detiiirliiient
KtitniiiiHlioii
fur
u liitU
bcliuul
KIIUIVMIHIK y
Ul|iluiiia.
Addxess
City
D e p u t y M a y o r T i m o t h y J.
Costello, F i r e
Commissioner
R o b e r t O. L o w e r y a n d P u b lice W o r k s C o m m i s s i o n e r W i l liam C. Mattison joined in dedication ceremonies of new q u a r t ers for Engine Co. 98 and Ladder Co. 54, 1649 Story Avenue,
T h e Bronx, last week.
Deputy Public Works Commissioner Meyer F. Wiles presided
at the ceremonies and arrangements were coordinated by Deputy Fire Commissioner Raymond
P. Nolan. Music was provided by
the D e p a r t m e n t of S a n i t a t i o n
band, of which J o h n Celebre is
bandmaster.
$45- HIGH
SCHOOL
•
•
•
New Fire House
Is Dedicated
Miodern
SPECIAL OFFER:
Brine In Your Iilentiflcatlon For
Your Civil HervU'e Dltironiitl
Alao Larga
M A R I L Y N KELLY
Local
The
Statewide
Plan
This column will appear periodically. As a public service, M r ,
O'Brien will answer questions relative to the Statewide Plan. P l e a s e
submit your questions to M r .
O'Brien, Blue Cross-Blue Shield
Manager, The Statewide Plan, 135
Washington Ave., Albany, N.Y.
Please do not submit questions perE n t r i e s for t h e M i s s Civil S e r v i c e C o n t e s t h a v e b e e n taining to specific claims. Onlr
questions of general interest can
c o m i n g i n f r o m all s e c t i o n s of t h e S t a t e a n d t h e j u d g e s ,
be answered here.
it is v e r y a p p a r e n t , will h a v e a h a r d t i m e c h o o s i n g t h e
winners in e a c h category.
Q. I w i l l be 65 i n a f e w
After the preliminary judging, in our contest. This does not m e a n
m o n t h s . If I c a r r y b o t h
five semi-finalists in each of the t h a t they will be in the semiP a r t B of M e d i c a r e a n d m y
four categ'ories, New York State, finals but simply t h e fact t h a t
Statewide Plan, will I be
New York City, Federal and local, bhey are representative caiididates.
c
arrying
more
coverage
Send all entries to T h e Miss
will be brought to New York City
t
h
a
n
I
n
e
e
d
?
Civil Service Contest, c / o T h e Civil
for the final judging.
This week, T h e Leader, once Service Leader, 9 TDuane Street.
again has the pictures of four New York City, and enclose a pic- A. No. T h e S t a t e w i d e P l a n w i l l
girls, representative of the entries ture.
not duplicate any features
of t h e M e d i c a r e p r o g r a m . I n
f a c t , if y o u do n o t c a r r y P a r t
B of M e d i c a r e , y o u a c t u a l l y
will be d e n y i n g y o u r s e l f n e e d e d c o v e r a g e . So I u r g e y o u t o
s i g n u p f o r b o t h p a r t s of t h e
Medicare program as soon as
Name
you become eligible.
Finals To Be in
New York City For
Miss Civil Service
CHELKA LODGE
DAY
MAUREEN DRISCOLL
State
PARADISE
OS
AND
. . .
REMEIVIBEK.
aod l>ave kiU^I
alaruM can
r,
Miss Civil Service Contest
Address
City
A r e a of Employment
Federal
State
circle one —->
N e w York C i t y
Title
Local
Department
Business Address
Send en fries to Miss Civil Service Contest, c / o The Civil
Service
Leader,
97
Duane
HIP Laboratory
Now Operating
A non-profit laboratory t h a t
will be r u n almost entirely with
automated equipment was opened
April 18 to serve members of the
Health Insurance Plan of G r e a t er New York in the five boroughs
and Nassau County.
T h i r t e e n of H.I.P.'s 31 medical
groups are participating in the
first phase of the new opei-ation.
These groups provide prepaid care
to 420.500 of the Plan's 700,000
members.
Street.
New
York
City.
Need Teachers;
Summer Program
Is Underway
The Board of Education is in
the process of a mass recruitment
drive for 3,000 teachers for the
Fall 'term. A summer study program is being negotiated with the
City University of New Yoik by
the Board of Education, to enable
holders of college degrees to obtain credits for teaching certi^ ficates.
! Complete details on the pro! gram c a n be obtained from the
Director of Recruitment for t h e ,
Board, Gerlad Brooks, at Room |
601,
110
Livingston
Stieet,
. Brooklyn.
Q. Y o u h a v e u r g e d all thwse
65 or older to e n r o l l f o r
P a r t B of M e d i c a r e ( t h e
o n e t h a t c o s t s $3 a m o n t h . )
Will a n y a d j u s t m e n t b e
m a d e i n t h e c o s t of t h e
Statewide Plan
premium
t o m a k e u p for t h i s ?
A. Y e s . Y o u r c o n t r i b u t i o n t o
t h e c o s t of c o v e r a g e i n t h e
S t a t e w i d e P l a n will be r e d u c e d $3 a m o n t h f o r e a c h
person on your contract w h o
i i 65 y e a r s of a g e o r o l d w .
T h u s , y o u will h a v e a d d i t i o n a l
benefits at no extra cost t»
y o u by c o m b i n i n g M e d i c a r e
a n d your Statewide P l a n coverage.
Q. Last y e a r t h e L e g i s l a t u r e
passed a n e w law t h a t
State employees' accumul a t e d sick l e a v e t i m e w o u l d
be u s e d to p a y S t a t e w i d e
Plan p r e m i u m s upon retirement.
Please
explain
h o w t h i s works.
A. At t h e t i m e of r e t i r e m e n t ,
t h e dollar v a l u e of a c c u m u l a t e d sick l e a v e is d e t e r m ined. T h e n
it is
determIncorporated as Centralized Lai n e d by a c t u a r i a l c o m p u t a t i o n
bratorles Services, Inc., tlie unit
occupies 4,100 square feet at
what the individual life e x 43-25 Hunter Street. Long Island
p e c t a n c y is in m o n t h s , a n d
City and is jointly financed by
t h e n u m b e r of m o n t h s is dU
H.I.P. a n d the participating medv i v d e d i n t o t h e a m o u n t of a c ical groups.
Moravee Named.
c u m u l a t e d sick l e a v e t o arrive
•ALBANY — V i n c e n t P. Moravee a t a m o n t h l y d e d u c t i o n . Y o u r
FREE BOOKLET by U.S. Gov- of Tuxedo Park has been named
m o n t h l y premiums are t h e n
eriiuient on Social Security. MAIL to the S t a t e Busineisa Advisory
r e d u c e d by t h i s a m o u n t .
ONLY. Leader, 97 Duane Si., N.Y. Committee o a M*ania«e<ueut I m provement.
CUy, N Y. W003. .
CIVIL
Page Sixleea
Civil Service
Television
Television programs of Interest
to civil service employees are
broadcast
daily over WNYC,
Channel 31. This week's programs
are listed below.
Sunday, April 24
10:30 p.m.—Viewpoint on Men-
SERVICE
4:00 p.m.—Around the C l o c k New York City Police Department
Training Program, Repeat.
9:00 p.m. — Televised Clinical
Science Seminar.
Wednesday, April 27
2:00 p.m. Nursing Today, II—
Repeat.
2:30 p.m.—Viewpoint on Mental Health—Commissioner Marvin
Perkins of the New York City
Mental Health Board interviews
Tuesday, April 26
William D. Barley, M.D., guest,
2:00 p.m.—Nursing Today II— "Psychiatric Care and Planning
"Supervision in Nursing."
in Australia."
tal Health — "Mental
Health
Services in a Health Department.
Monday April 25
4:00 p.m.—Around the C l o c k New York City Police Training
Program, "Public Morals Law Enforcement,"
7:30, p.m.—On the Job—New
York City Fire Department Trainmg Program. "Foam."
Tuesday, April 19, 1966
LEADER
4:00 p.m.—Around the C l o c k New York City Police Dept. program. Repeat.
7:30 p.m.—On the Job—^New
York City Fire Department training
program.
"Direction
of
Streams."
10:00 p.m.—International Interview—United Nations Repretatives are interview by newsmen.
Thursday, April 28
4:00 p.m.—Around the C l o c k New York City Police Depaitment
program. Repeat.
7:30 p.m.—On the Job—New
York City Fire Department t r a i n ing program. "Search."
9:30 p.m. City Close-up—Patricia Marks Interviews Fred Herman, Commissioner of Rent and
Rehabilitation.
Friday, April 29
4:00 p.m. Around the Clock—
New York City Police Department
training program, "Public Morals
Law Enforcement."
9:00 p.m.—Courts and Lawyers
at Work—"The Role of Judge
and Jury."
You
dorit have to be
a lawyer
or an
accountant
to use
" ' H b ••
R
Don't gel 118 wrong. We like la^vyers and accountants. But they have a special kind of
talent and patience not available to the rest of us.
Few of us are keen on keeping records, filling in forms, puzzling over small print, figuring
out percentages . . . or trying to crystal-ball how much we will be out of pocket for an
operation or for specialist care.
H.I.P. is the sworn enemy of paperwork and extra charges. It believes in paid-iit'ttdvance
medical services — not cash allowances toward doctor bills.
In H.I.P.'^s basic service program there is no need to study the policy line by line to see
what is and what is not covered . . . There are no fee schedules and no claim forms*. . .
No need to worry over insufficient cash allowances . . . No need to "share" additional
charges through deductibles and co-insurance . . . No need to accumulate and total up
medical bills . . . No need to discuss family income with the doctor.
And you don't have to watch ior limits either on number of services or kinds of services.
*In the H.I.P. Medical Group Program you need claivi forms only for emergency care given by non-H.I.P. physicians. If
you have optional coverage, you need them for anesthesia and prescribed drugs because of the nature of these benefits.
Health Insurance Plan of Greater New York
625 Madison Avenue, New York, N. Y. 10022
PLaza 4-1144
]
CIVIL
Tuesday, April 19, 1966
SERVICE
LEAHER
Pag* Ninn
In School District
Hauppauge Unit
Recognized As
Non-teachingRep
' HAUPPAUGE—The Hauppauge unit of the Civil Service
Employees Assn. in its second year of organization, came
to mutual agreement with the Board of Education on the
adoption of a new salary schedule for the next school year.
In addition to the salary increases
many allied advantages were secured for all non-teaciiing personnel that will be new to the
employees with the exception of
a school health insurance plan.
The most significant was the acceptance of the unit as the representative for all non-teaching
employees in the
Hauppauge
School District,
OSEA
Hauppauge
president
Ina Nichols and a committee met
with the Board of Education on
several occasions and reported that
throughout the discussions a highly professional attitude prevailed
between the Board and the members of the CSEA salary committee.
The Board of Education formally adopted the schedule on
March 14. Included in the list of
benefits are the following:
• Recognition by the Board
of Education of the Hauppauge
unit as the non-teaching representative in the Hauppauge School
District.
• Tenure for all non-teaching
personnel after 36 montlis of service.
• $3,000 life insurance benefit for each employee whb has
completed six montiis of service;
• Partial payment of health insurance plan, up to $12 per unit.
• $.15 per hour increase in the
Allen Eulogizes
John P. Myers
ALBANY—"In the death of
J o h n P. Myers, the former
chancellor of the State Board of
Regents, the State has lost one
of its most distinguished citizens."
This was a portion of the
statement issued here by State
Education Commissioner James
E. Allen .following the death of
the Plattsburgh, New York resident.
Dr. Allen also declared:
"His concept of the duties of
good citieznship included not
only attention to the obligations
of his role as a successful businessman and banker .but also an
active concern for, and participation in, the afafirs of church,
community, and state.
"A truly educated man with
« keen intellect and an eagerness for knowledge. Mi*. Myers
understood and accepted, without reservation, the responsibility
of the educated for education.
Beginning with many years of
service on the Board of Education of the City of Plattsburgh,
he etxended his concern by becoming first a member, and then
Chancellor of the State Board of
Regents.
"The
period
of
Chancellor
Myer's service on the Board of
Regents was one of the most significant in the history of education in our State, and in his
thirteen years as a Regent he
brought to his task a sensitivity, an understanding .and a
dedication
which
contributed
greatly to the work of the Board
In those difficult and challenging times.
hourly rate for part-time custodial workers.
• Night differential of five percent for custodial workers permanently employed from three to
11 p.m., or four to midnight; 10
percent for those employed midnight to seven a.m.
• Longevity payment for all
full-time personnel who have
reached their maximum; $50 per
year for the first 10 years, $25
per year thereafter
• Prior service credit for acceptable prior service (up to the
fourth step) for clerical and
maintenance personnel starting in
the district after July 1 ,1966.
• New schedules for food serv- SAFETY AWARD
Xhe Hockland s t a t e
ice workers in addition to the Hospital's Department of Safety was recently
hourly schedule.
presented with an award from the Nation Wide
Police Association for the year 1965. Pictured above
are; at center, Dr. Ralph Harlow, asst. director and
chairman of the hospital's Safety Program, accepts
Legislation Would
Allow Outside Jobs
By Police Officers
Assemblyman
Robert
F.
Kelly will seek final action on
his bill when the Legislature
i reconvenes permitting Ngw
York City policemen to engage
In outside work when it does not
conflict with their hours of duty.
The Brooklyn legislator said
the measure explicitly sets up
iguideiwnes t h a t would prevent
an officer from engaging in work
that would harm his "ability to
perform his duties efficiently."
Kelly explained that while the
Police Department's regulations
prohibit extra work or "moonlighting" on the part of police
officers, the Pire Department
permits such outside employment
during off-duty hours.
"The Fire Department regulations consist of reasonable regulalations and safeguards that insure proper performance of duty,
and, at the same time do not
exert an extiaordinary and burdensome control over the private
lives of its employees," he said.
The Bay Ridge Assemblyman
pointed out that many public employees, especially those in lower
income brackets are forced to
supplement
their incomes by
working part time.
Dietitian Jobs
Are Now Open
Applications are being accepted
on a continual basis for an examination for dietitian by the
New York City Department of
Personnel.
Salary in this position is $5,750 to start.
Written examinations will be
administered each Thursday until
the end of the filing period, when
it is announced.
For further information contact the Applications Section of
tlie Department of Personnel, 49
Thomas Street, New York City.
PASS YOUR LEADER ON
TO A NON-MEMBER
S
the award from Dr. Alfred M. Stanley, director.
Part of the members of the Department of Safety
proudly looliinsr on are, fVom left, Ptlm. NicholM
Viggiano, Ptlm. John O'Riordan, Lt. Henry €J,
Mairer, Ptlm. Daniel Hall, Chief Fred Kennedy, Jr.,
Ptlm. Michael Dukewiski, Sgt. William Herman,
Ptlm. John Kolody and Ptlm. Wallace Kile.
E I M S A X I O I M
A l _
LOW PRICE!
mm
RADIO
Model T237-Satin white
•
•
•
•
Automatic Frequency Control
5 G-E tubes, 3 diodes, rectifier
Powerful 4" Dynapower speaker
Vernier precision tuning
Why settle for anything else
when you con get a full-quality
General Electric FM-AM radio
—with Automatic Frequency
Control—for such a low price.
Stop in to see it and hear it
. . . soon.
lOOBCiBIIRUmiBT FM-AM
CLOCK RADIO
Enjoy the true luxury of consolequality sound, and the convenience of a clock
radio. Genuine
SEE US
w o o d cabinetry.
FOR OUR
In W a l n u t o r
Antique Cherry.
LOW PRICE
90-DAY WARRANTY ON PARTS AND LABOR
ARGUS
241 EAST 59TH STREET
RADIO
NEW YORK CITY
(1 Ilk. East of Bloomingdal*) (Corner 2nd Avenue)
EL 5-1572
CIVIL
Page Sixleea
832 To Hold
Adm. Assistant
Study Classes
A class for promotion to
administrative assistant will
be formed by Terminal Employees Local 832, it was
announced by Elsie A. K n i g h t ,
vice-president In charge of Education.
"The
classes." Mi's. Knight
said, "will be given in the auditorium of Local 832 and will commence right a f t e r Labor Day."
T h e local's Executive Board, in
SERVICE
Tuesday, April 19, 1966
LEADER
t
considerin? the classes, said t h a t
instead of operating the classes
throughout t h e s u m m e r , it was
decided t h a t a c r a s h program of
sessions would be lna\igurated
right a f t e r Labor Day and continue right up to the date of the
classes.
Local 832 members are urged to
register now with a payment of
$12.50 with a n additional $12.50
to be paid a t the first session.
Checks are to be made out to the
Local 832 Educational Committee.
Classes are limited to Local 832
members.
Due to the limited capacity
and the personal instruction t h a t
will be given, it is urged t h a t
eligible supervising clerks a n d
supervising
stenographers
take
advantage and register immediately.
Reappointed
Adding
Machines
Typewriters • Mimeographs
(
ALBANY—Inez V. Reynolds of
Medina h a s been reappointed to
t h e Board of Visitors for West
Seneca S t a t e School.
Addressing Machines
OiiHrMntceH.
AUo
KKKllMl
FKK
ON
RentalN,
OF
Repairs.
RKNTAl,
niRCHASK
BEACON BUSINESS
MACHINES, INC.
IS Warren St., New Yerli. N.Y.
9A2-7444
C L E R K
Malft or fpiimle, t.imili.lr wilh court
routine and l^r(((v<(ul•e^^. «>xi>nrii>n('e<l in
Court or maiiuffinir clprk * office, needed for routine cleiical dullefl tor lega'j
periodical. Hours, noon tlir<iuffli early
ovt'oinff. No Snlurdiiya. G^vierou^ holiday. v;ic!ilion and ollit-r pniplovee
beneflU .Bojt IJIO. OSL. 97 Duane St.,
N.Y. 7, N.Y.
25 Y E A R S
OF
SERVICE
—
Anthony Schueler.
William Johnston.
Samuel Feinstein,
assistant director
count clerk.
Employees of the 3. N. Adam Hospital Division of
the West Seneca State School who have completed
25 years of service were honored recently a t a
dinner. Pictured above are, front row, from leftt
Shoppers Service Guide V.A. Hospital Needs
Get p e Authorized CSEA License Plate 'S'^^rz ZZV.^,
br the Civil Service Employee! Awn. in that which is sold throiiirh CSEA Headquarter*
8 Elk St., Albany. The plate which mIU for $1. can aiao ba ordered throufh
local chapter officei*.
Cemetery Lots
BEAUTIFUL non-sectarian memorial park
In Queens. One to 12 double lots.
Private owner. For further information.
writN.*: Box 541, Leader. 97 Ouana St.,
N.Y. 10007. N.T.
Nursing Assistants
employees work r o t a t i n g shifts.
Appllpanta are considered for einploymenj; without regard t^f' racej|
religion.natlonal origii,i or sex. j,
Application Xorms (Form 5000^,
AB) m a y be obtained at the Vet-!
e r a n s Administration Hospital on
Kingsbridge Road, a n y Post O f fice or a t t h e New York Region
Office of t h e U.S. Civil Service
Commission 220 Bast 42 Street.
New Yok Olty.
T h e Veterans Administration
Hospital at 130 Kingsbridge Road
in the Bronx h a s announced
through t h e Board of U.S. Civil
Help Wanted - Male
ALERT H5t G n \ D . Meioliaiidi.Hin? manaire- Service Examiners t h a t It is acnient trainee. $05 PIUH advcrat. Pliouo
Mr. Kelly Tlirua or Monday eve 7-8 PAl ceptingr applications for it writ*
AL. 4-51fi7.
ten examination for Nursing Assistant.
Business Cards
T r P E W R l T E R BARGAINS
3mith-917.60: Underwood-$a2.50: other*
Pearl Bros.. 478 Smith. Bklyn TR R-8024
CSEA RKFI.ECTIVR DRCAL for bumper
or aulo window. Ref^cetive Blue background, Civil Service name imprinted in
Silver. TIUPO inches in diameter. Easy
to attach. Walherproof and fuaranteed.
Mail $1.00 to .l&K Si^ng—54 Hamilton $7.00 per 1.000 — Simulated cnsraved
Ave., Auburn, N.Y. 13031.
(raised printinx). finest wliitH CVPATION
card fltofk. Blue or Btai-k ink. Two
TA('.\N<'IKS.
.H Female
Clerk-Stenocoolrs, $8.00 per 1,001). Writo for
eranlicr, (^S-.'l, $+140 pay, duly loi-ation
priees on, lellerhpads, envelopes, tickeU,
Htaleniontg. anytlunic printed. InkweM
;i4K Broadway. New York. N.Y. 100i:t.
Printers, 1310 Herlel Avenue, Buffalo,
•ut)jt-(.'( to fivil service reuuircmcnts.
N.Y..
I + IIB.
Call ;.'(H-10fil.
T h e starting grade for this position is GS-2 with salary of $3,814
a year. On promotion to Grade
OS-3 employees are eligible for a
salary range of $5,149 to $5,409 a
Mall application f o r m 5000-AB
year.
to: Executive Secretary, Board of
Both men and women m a y U.S. Civil Service EJxaminers, VetAdministration
Hospital.
apply for this job. T h e r e are no erans
Kingsbridge
Road.
experience or education require- 130 West
ments b u t applicants will be re- Bronx, N.Y»
quired to appear before a panel
Be sure t o note t h e title of
for a personal interview and dem- the examination a n d the number
m o n s t r a t e the required physical of a n n o u n c e m e n t No. NY-66-4
dexterity needed for the h a n d l - (65). O t h e r applications will then
ing of patients, in addition to be forwarded to you with notice
the written test.
of admission bo t h e written exAll applicants must have r e a c h - amination.
ed the age of eighteen years before they c a n be appointed. All
Visitor Reappointed
positions to be filled are at the
hospital on West
Kingsbridge
ALBANY — Mrs. G. Leonard
Road in tlie Bronx.
Merrill of Elmira h a s been reThis job is worked on a three appointed to the Board of Visitshift, round-the-oloclc basis. All ors of B i n g h a m t o n S t a t e Hospital
S I N C
I
1 S 7 0
SERVICE
Without Service Charget
KccMvill*. N.Y.
Per«. N.V.
7:^0 a . M . fill 2 |).m. daily
Sat. t i l l BOOR
T h e Borough of
Manhattaa
Community College Is sponsoring
a career conference Friday o n
the subject "Jobs—Where Are
They, How To Get And Hold
Them."
,[
T h e conference ,is for senior*
of t h e college who are g r a d u a t ing in J u n e . It will be held i a
the college auditorium f r o m 9
a.m. to 4 p.m.
Leading the panel of expeib»
will be Dr. T i m o t h y Costello,
Eteputy Mayor—City Administrator and Herbert Bienstock, R e gional Director of the U.S. Dep a r t m e n t of Labor, B u r e a u of
Labor Statistics.
READY MONEYt
HOW TO
INCREASE
YOUR CAPITAL
52.6?b
IN TEN YEARS
Put it in Troy Savings Bank
n o w ( u p to $ 2 5 , 0 0 0 ) .
Untouched, at our currant
a n n u a l interest rate comp o u n d e d a n d a d d e d to
the balance every three
months your initial deposit
will increase by 5 2 . 6 % in
ten years. You can a d d to
your account at a n y time,
or w i t h d r a w m o n e y If
needed without delay,
with interest earned.
4'/4%
interest r o t e b a s e d
anticipated earnings
on
...
f a.iii. till 3 p.m. daily
0|Ma
Manhattan Boro
College To Hold
Career Conf.
Send for Compound interest
Factsheet now—no obliga*
tion. Write O g d t n J. Ross,
Secretary,
The Keeseville
National Bank
• • . T W O O F F I C E S T O SERVE Y O U
Inez Vail, Bridset Shea an*
Back row, same order: Dr.
director; Dr. Isabella RaliA,
and Robert DeNoon, head ac-
O p M Sat. till aoea
TR^YITA'AII
and 4 Sial* Slt«ili/AS 2 1800
0p«n V ) Mvndgy Thgitday V 4 Fiidayt
.Mfinbtr f»4*i»\ D«|>«ut Intuianc* C»i0,
MembM or r.D.I.O.
I
J m'
CIVIL
Tuesifay, April 19, 1966
Tob Mocliiiit
Operator Needed In
Oneida County
Forms & Country Home
Orange County
W / M REALTY
—
John
T. Carroll, former New
York City Highways Commissioner from 1963 to December, 1965,
has Joined the firm of Brill EngineerinfiT Corporation in the new
post of vice president and general
manager. Carroll was the first
Commissioer of the Department
when it was reorganized from the
separate Borough Works Departments.
Birchwood Lakes
Summer Season
Over 200 homes have been built
and occupied at Birchwood Lakes.
Pifty-one homes are under construction for completion J u n e 1
and another 58 are planned for
summer occupancy. Some of t h e
homes a t Birchwood Lakes, particularly on water f r o n t and
water view locations range from
$5,000 to $25,000.
Offered to site purchasaers at
this summer season opening of
Birchwood Lakes will be a n a t tractive,
custom-built
summer
home at actual cost price, $3,495.
This home of which models are
open for inspection, has four
rooms and b a t h and is complete
with carport, plumbing and electric fixtures and
streamlined
kitchen with built-in wall cabinets.
Reilly Nominated
ALBANY—John J . Reilly of
Upper Nyack has been nominated
as Judge of the County Court in
Rockland County to fill t h e vacancy caused-,' by the death of
Judge Herbert E. Henion.
Houses For Sale
Ulster County
$6,900
a bedroom house, larire rodmp, on 1
soenic areas, a d j o i n s s t a t e land. Swinimlngr & hurinnp. Terms.
K O P P OF • K E H H 0 N K 9 0 N . N,Y.
Dial ( 9 1 4 ) 62Q-7BOO
CONCRETE and BRICK
WORK
DrIvewn.vR, Sidewalks, Curbs. Pntlos,
Walks, flariiKe Floors. Concrete an«l
Brick Stoops, Y a r d & Cellar Clean-up
R r R A T . P K O P E R T V HPKCIAII.STS
4 iic. i)in»» wpnted honiesite $.'1200
1 ai', w/Hwiniiiiingr priv.
ISSe.^
1 a<>, w/l.fiU' well - switnminfr JfilGOO
Hwy
Bo* 14. Westbrookville. NY,
Tel: ( 9 1 4 ) 8B6-a806
FREE LISTS
F. Fodera
CALL: 516 IV 9-9320
2 FAMILY
SUITABLE FOR P R O F E S S I O N A L
PERSONS
12 ROOMS
$15,000 F U L L PRICE
SOLID BRICK. SOLID
HOUSES. SOLID DEAL
FLUSHING.
r
If Yoh Act Fast
'
« Rooms & Bath Available For ^
Buyer. Soeond 4 Rooms & Bath
Apt. Brings Enough Incomo To ^
Monthly Cost.
^
Civ's Need Only $200 Down ^
ON CONTRACT
BEHER
JA 9-4400
135-19 Rockowoy Blvd.
SO. O Z O N E PARK
(Open 7
Days,
9:.S0-8:30)
TAKE OVER
MTGE.
J a m a i c a 3 F a m i l y , 4 & 3 newly
(Imoratfifl. Ca€h lequired $ a , » 9 0 .
MortKHge ¥ 1 0 . 0 0 0 .
C A M B R I A HTS.
4 bedroom, brich.
trai'aRe. motlevn.
AkkiiiK «rj4,iN)0
An.
baaement,
$'{,000
Down
HOMEFINDERS
341-1950
192-05 Linden Blvd.
St. Albans
Hillside Ave. Vie.
<W.4I.K TO SliBWAV)
D E T A C H E D
T rooms — I V i baths, living- room,
dining.'- room, modern ktichen, 4 bcdrooms, NEW t a s heating iinit, 3 retrig•^raloiniR, washer,
dryer,
beautifully
landscaped Rrounds.
Hollis
$19,990
MOTHER/DAUGHTER
AX7<2111
N.E. BRONX & VIC.
CASTLE
HILL
VIC.
Detached 1 fam on 2 5 x 1 0 0 lot. 7 rnie,
j a r a e e . finished b f m t .
FHA & GI MTGES
PRICE 920,U90
B R O N X W O O D AVE. V I C .
Detached 1 family, 3 bedrms. 3.5x110
lot. Convenient
transpth.
shopping:.
schools
REDUCED...
P K I C E «]4,9(M)
W N I T E P L A I N S RD. V I C .
Detached 4 f a m eolid b r k on 5 0 x 1 0 0
lot. Complelrly mod. Garage. Excellent
income. Low down p a y m e n t .
PRICE 923,990
FiRST-MET R E A L T Y
4 3 T 5 W H I T E P L A I N S RD., BRONX «
994-7100
N.E. BRONX & YIC.
BRUNER AVE.
Detache<l legai 2 f a m (A\'2 & 41,2):
50x100 lot. Modern k i t c h e n with Dutch
oven & range. M a n y other extra*.
? 9 9 0 DOWX - P R I C E « 1 9 , 9 9 0
MORRIS PK.(BARNES AVE)
Detached legal 2 l a m (5 & 4 ) ; f u l l
bsmt, oil h e a t . It you are h a n d y , h t i s
is t h e h o m e f o r you. L a r g e 2 5 x 1 0 0
lot. Lovely aiea. Walk to shopK &
t r a n s p t n . Needs w o r k . T E R M S ARRANGED.
PRICE 914,990
FIRST-MET REALTY
3 2 2 « BOSTON ROAD,
BRONX
O L 4-5600
OPEN 7
DAYS • O P E N
EVENINGS
AHENTION!!
No Down
Payment
For Qualified' Buyers
2 Family
All Brick
BUTTERLY ft GREEN
168-'ift HllUlde Ave
(Parking- i'aciiitieB
HILLCREST
2 FAMILY SOLID BRICK
CUSTOM BUILT 5 Y E A R S OLD
2 BRICK GARAGES.
W I T H ELECTRONIC E Y E
OVEKSIZED P O T
40x100
PRICE
!?;{2.500
CALL M Y A G E N T
riiis MODERN h o m e h a s e v e r y t h i n g !
» huKe rooms — 3 aii7 bedrooms.
Raiioh-lype livintr room, f u l l
sized
Jininir room, streamline<l kitchen f u l l y
B<iiiii)i)ed plus . . . R E N T A B L E 3V2
ROOM and BATH A P A R T M E N T . Lands<^aped Rrounds. oversizeil g-araffe and
all thi« only 8 iVIINUTES TO SUBWAY!
$700 DOWN
NEEDED
by
aualifled buyers. ( j l and F H A m o r t g a s e
available.
MASTER APT.
6I/2 rms — 11/2 baths
Rental APT — 31/2 RMS
J A 0-0300
Available)
I Block Subway
SPRINGFIELD GARDENS
$14,990
QUEENS VILLAGE
$21,990
W I D O W S SACRIFICE
Owner
(.'acrificing
iliis
Delachctl
Hume Ount>i>^ting of 5 L a r g e Rooms
and Sun Portli, Strcamliueil Kitrhcu
k lialli, (iurage. Uii Lurg-e Laiulseaped P l o t .
LECAL S FAMILY
Delac-hed Colonial 5 & 3 Room Apts.
Modern Kitcliens & Baths, Plus Nile
C'liib Finislie<l Basement, Garuee, On
Large Landscaped P l o t .
ST. A L B A N S
$16,990
A I X BKICK RANCH
Tills 4 Yr. Old House Conbislin 5
Lgo Rooni«, All on One Floor, Ultra
Modern Kitvh & Bath, F i n . Bsnit,
HOLLIS
$25,990
OWNER T R A N S F E U U E D
10 Yr. Old Brick Legal 3 Family
5',i & :tVs Rw- -^Pto. Ntei Club
Finished Bsmt. Garage, All Modern,
Walk To Subway, Bus.
Many othor 1 & 2 Family homes o v o l l a b U
9UEENS HOME SALES
lio-ll
M l fw Appk
BAIHLBT P A R K
All Qti(wn« *
NaftMii
BUIsId* A ^ t —
OL 8-7510
JanuUMi
• p M Bfery
Sheltered portico entrance, enn deck,
Hollywood kitchene, etc.
Only $28,500
FREEDOM HOMES
Van
Siclen Ave. bet. Hegeman Ave.
& New L o t s Ave., Bklyn.
P H O N E — B R 2-9666 • OH 1 - 6 8 6 8
D I R E C T I O N S : BV CAR—Belt
Parkway to Pennsylvania Ave. then to
Linden Blvd. t u r n r i g h t to Van Siilen
Ave., then l e f t to model. BY SUBWAY
— I R T New Lota train to Vau Siclcn
Ave., w a l k 1 block to model.
Bal«B Kep. Delcoa Realty
ALBANY, N E W
Attention: Cold W a r Vets
New Law .Effective Now
Enables you t o purchase
YORK
A l b a n y ' ! M o i t P r o c r M s t v c R^nl
B f t a t * F i r m CoTcrlnr T h e Kntlr*
G r e a t e r Albany Area I n c l u d i n s All
Suburba.
A H O M E WITH
Photo
NO CASH DOWN
Brocharc*
Available.
Philip E. Roberts. Inc.
IN SOME CASES
NO CLOSING FEES!
1525 WMtern Ave.. Albany
Phone 489.3211
We h a v « over 1,(MM) lionipg f o r you
t o choose f r o m .
Be Amonic The First
Act immediately. Low m o n t h l y
mortg:ai!;e payments.
Call anthorisced Veteran's .Administration
Broker f o r a p p o i n t m e n t
Forms & A c r e a g e
N e w York S t a t e
L P. Leo Realty RE 9-9190
OPBN
»ATURI»AVS
&
SUNDAYS
Real Estate - Orange County
<
G.l.'s N O C A S H D O W N
LIVE RENT FREE
In announcing the summer
s e a s o n o p e n i n g of B i r c h w o o d
Lakes at Dingmans
Ferry,
Pennsylvania, Richard Norman, r e s i d e n t of the All American Realty Co., Inc., 210 River
Street, Hackensack, New Jersey
stated t h a t his company's land
sales in t h e Poconos for 1965 exceeded $1,850,000, a 25 year record for subdivisions in the New
Yot-k, Newark, Philadelphia Metropolitan area.
Fflf» Etemi
LEADER
• REAL ESTATE VALUES •
The Oneida County Civil Service C?ommisslon will accept applications until April 20 for a,n
examination for tabulating machine operator (Remington Rand
and IBM). Salary in this position
is $3,840 to stall;.
For further information contact
the County Civil Service Commission, Utica.
E L E C T I O N
SERVICE
F R I E N D L Y v e r a n d a welcomes you to t h i s
cozy f a r m h o u s e surrounrted by trees &
s h r u b s . Set on
acres. $l.'i.350.
5 ROOM year r o u n d home. 1 or a family
$10,500.
COTJNTRY retirement home. $ 1 4 , 0 0 0 .
C. D a u n , Bkr, Waldeii NY ( 0 1 4 ) 774-8ft64
a family. Live rent free, n rms, &
rms. 2 f u l l b a t h s , 2 lutchene. modern
t l i r a o u t . L a r p e garden plot. Garage.
Only $ 8 5 0 cash down
ISLAND
168-1:3 Hillside .Ave.,
R E 9-7300
LEGAr.
ACRE f a r m , 6 vm home, t r a c t o r ,
$10,,')00. — 4 rm bungalow, fiirniRhed
% acre, $3,500. — 1 0 x 5 0 trailer, ^
acres, 2 car (rarage. $ 5 , 5 0 0 . — DO acree,
3 0 0 0 f t . f r o n t . $5,500. — Cute c o u n t r y
school " 1 8 7 9 " , 1 acre, b a r n , $ 2 , 5 0 0 .
Bill Pearson, Reatlor. R t 20. Sloanevilleb
N.Y. (518)
868-45a».
Forms & Country Real Estate
For Sole - O r a n g e County
Free
List of R e t i r e m e n t Homes
In Port, Jervis Area
G O L D M A N AGENCY
85 P i k e P o r t Jervis, NY (t>14) 5 0 8 - 4 7 1 1
For Sole
East N e w York
HOLLIS
LONG
70
North
4 0 8 Cheetnut .Street
8 Rooms — 1 Family
Gas H e a t
$10,000
Ml
7-8700
HOMES
Jamaica
NOTICE
CITATION. — T H E P E O P L E OP T H E
OF N E W TORK, By t h e Grace of God.
Free and Independent.
To Attorney General of the S t t a e of
New Y o r k ; Helen Korotos: J . E. Myers,
•Ir.: Stephen P .
Bonrexis; .Joseph L .
M a t h i a s Sc .Sons; and to " M a r y Doe"
t h e n a m e "Mary D o e ' b r i n g fictitious,
t h e alleged widow of H a r r y S. Koretoe.
deecased. and also t o Dean P.nnl Koretos
and Henneth J o h n Koretos. deceased, if
living and if deail. to their executors,
a d m i n i s t r a t o r s , distributees and assigns
of " M a r y Doe" deceased, whose n a m e s
and post office adilrpsses a r e u n k n o w n
and cannot a f t e r diligent inquiry be ascertained by t h e petitioner herein: and
to t h e distributees of H a r r y ,S. Koretos.
deceased, whose names and post office
addresfiee a r e u n k n o w n and cannot a f t e r
diligent Inquiry b e ascertained
by t h e
petitioner h e r e i n ; being the persona interester as ci-editors, distrbulees or otherwise in t h e estate of Harry S. Koretoa,
deceafled, w h o a t t h e time of his d e a t h
was a resident of 3 0 0 West 1 7 t h Street.
New York, N.Y.
Send G R E E T I N G :
Upon t h e petition of Tlie P u b l i c Adm i n i s t r a t o r of the Co\inty of New York,
h a v i n g his office a t Hal'j of Reconlg,
Room 300, Boi'ough of M a n h a t t a n , City
and County of New York, as a d m i n i s t r a t o r
of t h e goods, chattele and credits of
said deceased:
Yon and each of you are hereby cited
t o show cause before the
Surrogate's
Court of New Y o r k County, held a t t h e
County of New York, on the 6th day of
M.ay. 1966. a t ten o'clock in t h e forenoon of t h a t day. w h y t h e account of
proceedings of The P u b l i c Administrator
of t h e County of New York, as admini s t r a t o r of t h e goods, chattels and credits
of said deceased, should not be judicially
settled.
I N T E S T B f O U Y W H E R E O F , We h a v e
caused t h e seal of t h e Surrogate's Court
of the said County of New Y o r k
to h e r e u n t o affixed.
(Seal)
•WITNESS. HON. J O S E P H
A.
COX, a Surrogate of o u r said
County, a t the County of New
York, the 14th day of March,
i n the year of o u r L o r d one
thoueand
nine
hundred
and
Bixty-si*.
P h i l i p A. Donahue.
Clerk of t h e Surrogate's Court.
CITATION. — T H E P E O P L E OF T H E
STATE O F N E W YORK. By the Grace
of God, Free and Indepcnilent, To Attorney General of the State of New Y o r k :
Ro#ie Podrazil; Louis Brodany: And to
the distributees of Josepii Podraxil, dece;ieed, whose n a m e s and post office addresses are u n k n o w n and cannot a f t e r
diligent inquirj' be ascertained by the
petitioner herein: being the persone interested as creditors, diKtributees or otherwise in t h e estate of Joseph Podrazil,
de(ease<I, who at t h e time of his <leatli
w a s a resident of 232 East 81st Street,
New Y o r k , N.Y.
Send G R E E T I N G :
Upon t h e petition of 'Die P u b l i c .Adm i n i s t r a t o r of the County of New York,
h a v i n g his office at Hall of Records,
Room .309, Borough of M a n h a t t a n , City
anil County of New York, as administrator of t h e goods, cliattels and credits
of said deceased:
You atid each of you are hereby citcd
to sliow cauee b e f o r e tlie S u r r o g a t e ' s
Court of New Y o r k Cunty, held at tlie
Hall of Records, in t h e County of New
York, on the 1 7 t h day of M a y . 10<)«,
a t ten o'clock in the forenoon of t h a t
d a y , w h y t h e account of in'ocet'dings of
The P u b l i c A d m i n i s t r a t o r of the County
of New York, as a d m i u i s t r a t o r of tiio
goods, chattels and credits of said deceased, should n o t be judi<ial!y eettliKl.
IN TESTIMONY WHKKKOF, Wo h a v e
caused the ecal of the Surrogate's Court
of t h e said County of New York
to be h e r e u n t o affixed.
(Seal) W I T N E S S ,
HON. J O S E P H
A.
COX, a S u r j o g a t e of our said
County, a t tlu' County of New
York, the 2 8 t h day of March,
in t h e year of uur Lord one
t h o u s a n d nine hundred and sixtynix.
Philip A. Donaliue,
Olerk of (be Sun-ogate'ii C u u r t .
CAMBRIA
HEIGHTS
Brick Colonial. $ 1 7 , 5 0 0 . 8 years old.
Modern k i t c h e n & b a t h , large garden
plot.
Immetliate
occupancy.
Agent.
216-17 Linden Blvd.
AR 6-2000
liEGAX
NOTICE
M E Y E R . W I L L I A M . — CITATION.— T H E
P E O P L E O F T H E S T A T E OF
NEW
YORK By the Grace of God Free a n d
Independent. To A l b e r t J . F r a n k e l . V e r a
Condon. Dorothy Rlcardo, Carol F r a n k l i n ,
Allen E i s e n h a u e r , Gertrude M u n i z . Frederick Lieben, Euirene Lieben, Gale Eisenh a u e r , b e i n r t h e persons interested a s
creditors, leeates. deviseee, benelictarieB,
distributees, o r otherwise in t h e estate of
William Meyer, deceased, w h o a t the t i m e
of his death was a reeident of 78 Second
Avenue, New York, N. Y., Send Greeting:
Upon the petition of Fretlerick G. Meyer
residing a t 78 Second Avenue, New York,
N. Y.
You and each of yoxi are hereby cited
to s h o w cause b e f o r e t h e Surroeate'B
Court of New Y o r k County, held a t t h e
Hall of Records in t h e County of New
York, on t h e 291h day of April, 1966, a t
h a l f - p a s t ten o'clock in t h e forenoon of
t h a t day, why the account of proceedings
of Frederick G. Meyer as A d m i n i s t r a t o r
should n o t b e judicially settled and w h y
t h e attorneys f o r t h e E s t a t e shoudl not
be allowed a f e e of $ 1 , 5 0 0 . 0 0 and t h e i r
p r o p e r disbursemente.
I N TESTIMOUY W H E R E O F . We h a v e
caused the seal of t h e S u r r o g a t e ' s Court
of t h e said County of New Y o r k
to h e r e u n t o affixed.
(Seal)
WITNESS,
HON. J O S E P H
A.
COX, a S u r r o g a t e of o u r said
County, a t t h e County of New
York, t h e 1 4 t h day of M a r c h ,
in t h e y e a r of o u r L o r d one
thousand
nine
hundred
and
sixty-six.
P h i l i p A . Donahue,
Clerk of t h e S u r r o g a t e ' s Court.
I.EGAL
NOTICE
CITATION. — T H E P E O P L E OF T H E
OF NEW YORK, By t h e Grace of God.
Free and Independent.
To Attorney General of the S t a t e of
New Y o r k : New Y o r k Telephone Comp a n y : National Organization Servic^e-Look;
and to " M a r y Doe' t h e n a m e " M a r y Doe"
being fictitious, t h e alleged wi<low of
Otto E f r a n . deceased, if living and if
dead, to t h e executors, atlministrator. distributees and assigns of
"Mary Doe"
deccaeed, wliose n a m e s and post olfice
addresses are u n k n o w n and caiuiot a f t e r
diligent i n q u i r y be ascertaincil by t h e
pettiioner herein; and to t h e distributeee
of Otto E f r a n , deceased, who«>e names
and post office addresses are i m k n o w n
and cannot a f t e r diligent inquiry be ascertained by the p e t i t i o n e r herein; being tlie
persons interested as creditors, distrihuteee
or otherwise in t h e estate of Otto E f r a n .
deceased, who a t the time of his death
w a s a resident of 2 a 3 West 0 9 t h Street,
New Y o r k . N . Y .
Send G R E E T I N G :
Upon the petition of Tlie l^ul)li'j Adm i n i s t r a t o r of tiie County of New York,
h a v i n g his offl(?e a t Hall of
Records.
Room 300. Borough of M a n h a t l a n , f i t y
and County of New York, as aiiiiiinititralor
of the goods, chattele and «.icdit8 of
said deceased:
You and cach of you are hereby cited
t o show cause before t h e
Siirrouaie's
Court of New York County, iicid at t h e
County of New York, on tlie Utli day of
May. 1966. at ten o'clock in tlio forenoon of tliat day, why tho account of
proceedings of The P u b l i c .\ilaiinislrutor
of the County of New Y o r k , as admini s t r a t o r of the goods, chattels and eredit«
of said deceased, ahould not bo judicially
settled.
IN TESTIMOUY W H E R E O F . Wo h a v e
caused the seal of the Surrogate's (^)urt
of tho said County of New York
to liereuuto aiiixcd.
(Seal)
WITNESS.
HON. J O S E P H
A.
COX. a S u r r o g a t e of o u r said
County, at t h e County of New
Y o r k , tlie 1 4 t h day of March,
in t h e year of o u r Lord one
thouiiand
nine
hundred
and
sixty-six.
Philip A. Donahue,
C l u k « l thf SuiToyatti'* Cuuri
CIVIL
Pag0 Twelve
SERVICE
LEADER
Tuesday, April
HMI
Men and Women
WHAT'S DOING IN ClfYDEMRTMENtS
Correction Officers
Needed For Federal
Prisons; $6,050
h a s announced t h e a p p o i n t m e n t
of Dr. Herbert Schueler as president of the new Richmond College
of the City of New York.
Dr. Schueler will organize Uhe
•
a
*
college for a scheduled opening of
T h e D e p a r t m e n t ' o f Air Pollu- September, 1967. H e h a s been dirtion Control has Issued more s u m - ector of teacher education at Hun<^
monses for air pollution violation? ter College since 196^
during the first three m o n t h s of
*
» a
1966 then they issued all of last
The Department of Highways
year.
has announced that the West Side
T h e D e p a r t m e n t predicted t h a t
T h e Salary and Appeals Board more then, 5,000 violations would Highway from Canal Street to
The Federal Bureau of Prisons of the United States Deh a s a new acting
c h a i r m a n be ticketed this year. For the Duane Street is now under reno- partment of Justice Is offering careers for men and women
Mayor J o h n Lindsay h a s appoint- first three months, the D e p a r t - vation. Most of the work is being as Correction Officers to safeguard, train and supervise Ined Acting Labor Commissioner m e n t as Issued 1,291 summonses. done at night and the highway mates of Federal prisons, reformatories and camps. These
will be completely open to traffic
Anthony Russo to the post.
A partial reason for the in- during the peak traffic hours.
positions, listed In Federal grade
crease in summonses is the f a c t
7, pay a n initial salary of $6,050 to take a wi'ltten test to qualify
t h a t D e p a r t m e n t vehicles a r e now
a year.
for
appointment.
Competitors
ft
's
^
s
Prtpar* for Next Writttn Exam
equipped with two-way radios,
Applicants m u s t be able to will also be interviewed by a panel
*
•
•
show t h a t they have a t least of specialists. No height or weight
The Department of Conunerce
three and a half years of experi- specifications have been made bub
Practical Nurses
and Industry has announced that
ence dealing with Individuals in applicants must be in good p h y N.Y. POLICE DEPT.
four
industrial
loans,
totaling
How
would
you
like
to
work
a
supervisor
or
instructional sical condition a n d be vigorous
SALARY
$415,1000 has been made by the and live in the Virgin Islands? capacity. Educational
advance- in relation to size.
The DeiMirtmenl of
Fublle
Events has announced that May'
or Lindsay proclaimed last week
as Pan American Day week in
the City.
The Department of Traffic has
resumed work on the installation
of one million linear feet of highway road markings throughout
the City and school safety crosswalks in Queens.
Work on this project was halted for the winter. The markings
will contain a special reflective
material which will make seeing
them at night easier.
PATROLMAN
Job Market
173
New York City Industrial Development
Cort»oration,
from
funds provided by the City Job
Development Authority.
A WEEK
APTER 3 YEARS
<Includes P a ; for
Hnlldart «nd Annual
Dnlform Allotvnnc«>
The four loans will create and
save at least Z'lQ jobs, according
lTC*lf*iit Promotional Opporfunitlti to a Department report.
PENSION AFTER 20 YEARS
•
*
*
Agot: 20 through 28—Min. Hgt. 5'S'
A variety of professional, m a n agerial, clerical and industrial
jobs await qualified men a n d women. Included are openings for
ACCOUNTANTS, LABORATORY
TECHNICIANS,
REGISTERED
and PRACTICAL NURSES, SECRETARIES,
CONSTRUCTION
W O R K E R S , WATCH R E P A I R MAN and TAILOR. For a n a p pointment, call Mr, Brady a t MU
8-0540.
Sixteen career-employees of the
OUR SPECIALIZED TRAINING Deinwtment of S a n i t a t i o n were
Prepares for Official Written Test promoted last week by CommisPractice E x a m s at Every Session sioner Joseph Perlconl. Twelve
For Complete Information employees were promoted f r o m ENGRAVING P R E S S OPERAa list to assistant f o r e m a n a n d T O R S with some experience on
Phone GR 3-6900
Modern
or
Carver
engrjiving
four were promoted to foremen.
Ba Our OiitMt at a CUm Session
• * •
presses or related die stamping
*aiM(«k'«, WMliiPMiUy, A|»rll !J0. at 7 P.M.
experience are needed. T h e y will
l a MaiiliallHii. Monday, April 'jRth
A Citizens Committee to Re- e a r n $95 to $130 a week. Experi•< 1:15, a : 3 0 or 7:30 P.M.
tain the New York City Division enced
Just Fill in and Bring Coupon
ENGRAVING
PRESS
of Veterans Affairs has been FEEDERS will get $60 to $75 a
DELEHANTY INSTITUTE,
L-45
formed. The
Division
assists week to hand feed Modern or
I I R Rast IK St., Manhattan ar
veterans, their families and Gold Carver presses and some semi8I»-!S!5 MerrJck Blvd., Jamaica
Mams
Star wives, in housing, education automatic presses. Apply a t t h e
I Addraaa
and many other areas.
M a n h a t t a n Industrial Offcie ,254
*
•
•
K City
Zone.
West 5t4h Street between B r o a d I Admit FREE to On* Patrolman Claw
The Board of Higher Education way a n d E i g h t h Avenue.
StNH'.
ments past the high school level
F u r t h e r i n f o r m a t i o n m a y bo
may be substituted for experience obtained at New York Region O f requirements in m a n y cases.
fice of t h e Civil Service Commission,
220 East 42nd Street, New
C h a r a c t e r and other personnal
York City, T h e application n u m attributes will be t a k e n into conber 5000-AB.
sideration a s trainees will be reS e n d applications to Executive
quired to perform arduous tasks,
Secretary, Board of U.S. Civil
a d a p t bo dicipline a n d ' s h o w other Service Examiners, United State®
capacities related bo such work.
Penitentiary, Leavenworth, K a n All competitors will be required sas 66048.
Operating Engineer In Federal Prisons
T h e United S t a t e s Civil Service Commission is a^jcepting a p plications for an examination for
operating engineer. Duty is in
Federal Penal a n d Qorrection I n stitutions.
S t a r t i n g salary f o r this position is $3.00 to $3.85 per hour.
Appointments will be ma'de on
t h e basia of experience.
T h e r e is no written test. Appointments will be m a d e accordto position on final eligible list
and aptness of residence to a r e a
of job vacancy.
F o r f u r t h e r i n f o r m a t i o n antl
applications, write to the Board
of U.S. Civil Service Examiners,
United S t a t e s Penitentiary, Leavenworth Kansas.
General Electric
ROTISSERIE-BROILER
MODELR2I
with Amazing
"Open-Air" Broiling!
see us
New design for best broiling ever!
Constant fresh>air flow prevents
meat from steaming in moisture*
iadea air.
FOR
LOW
MODEL F-B4
OUR
PRICES
Ma/jy
Completely automatic brewing for the finest coffee
Deluxe
Features,..
•
If't
a
Rotisserh
•
lf$
an
MiQ'Rod
Automafk
—pushbutton contfOb
—ftutomatie timer
—big enough for 2
chickens
•
It'g
i ( Three to nine cup capacity
• Speolal "Jutt R i o h f \
ic Detachable 6 foot cordset
t i H i n g t for wash a n d
w«ar fabrlea
•
Ba§y fo Cfeaii
» e u i N n l*abrt« Q u i d «
Broilwr
S E E IT T O D A Y , A T
Crtt«r« coff** m a k t r can M
p l a c t d underwater for M t i a r
cleaning.
ARGUS
241 EAST W H
STREET
RADIO
( C o r n t r 2nd A v t n u t l
( 1 Block East of BloomiNgdolol
EL S.1S72
NEW YORK CITY
TiiPMlay, April 26, 1966
CIVIL
SERVICE
LEADER
Page Tliirt<trri
DEWin GLINTON
STATI
ft l A G L I STS., A L I A N Y
A KNOTT HOTEL
A FATOKITR l O B OVKR a *
TEARS WITH 8TATF TRAVRI.KRB
SPECIAL RATES FOR
N.Y.S. EMPLOYEES
BANQUET FACILITIES A V A I L A I L E
C a l l Albany HE 4-6111
THOMAS H. GORMAN. Gen. Mgr.
ORANGE TREE
GROW YOUR OWN ORANGE
JUICE WITH FREE TREE
FROM FIRST TRUST.
You'll get a free miniature orange tree
for opening a checking or "savings
account at First Trust's new
Western Avenue Branch.
These tropical little trees grow
indoors. And, they blossom and
thrive no matter when you
plant them.
Choose an orange tree, and give
your kitchen or living room a.
touch of exotic beauty.
The tree has glossy, green foliage,
. easily trimmed and shaped.
Grows up to 3 feet tall.
When you open your account at
our new branch, you'll receive
a- certificate, which entitles you
to a free tree, it will be shipped
, direct from the Florida groves.
But hurry. Come In and open a
checking or savings account
now. This offer is for a limited
time only.
I
YOUR H O S T MICHAEL FLANAGAN
PETIT PARIS
, RESTAURANT
BUSINESS
LUNCH
$1.50
SPECIAMZINO. AS AMVAl'S, IN
PARTIES, BANQUETS « MRKTINCA.
COMFUKTARLB ACCOMMODATIONS
FROM 10 TO Z90
OPEN
DAILY EXCEPT
MONDAY,
SUNDAY AT 4 P.M.
— PREfi PARKING IN RRAR —.
1060 MADISON AVE.
ALBANY
Pkoii* VV 2-7864 or IV 2-9881
ALBANY
BRANCH OFFICE
rOR INFORMATION ragrarding advertMnt
Please write or call
JOSEPH T. BKIXEW
803 SO. MANNING BLVD.
4I3ANY 8. N.T.
PhooM IV 3-8474
ARCO
CIVIL SERVICE BOOKS
ond oil tests
PLAZA BOOK SHOP
380 Broadway
Albony, N. Y.
Mail & Phone Orders Filled
MAYFLOWER - ROYAL COURI
APARTMENTS - Fjinished, lln
furnished, and Rooms. Phone HE
4-1994, (Albany).
NEW
. ALBANY, ,
ClVa
Of choose a
miniature gardenia
tree
MEN'S
11:30 TO 2:30 -
SERVICE
YORK
BOOKS
SPECIAL RATES
for Civil Service Employees
Th$ gardenia tree grom 3 feet
tali — blossoms with fragrantt
snow white flowers. You can even
make your own corsage.
Western Avenue Branch, 1215 Weetem Avenut
Hours 8 t 4 5 A M - 2 : 0 0 P M
Wad. 4 i 0 0 P M - 6 i 0 0 P M
FrI.
4:00PM-7s00PM
HOTIL
Wellington
DRiVI-IN QARAQI
A I R OONOITIONINQ . T V
No porking
problcmt a t
AliKiny't kvOMt
l i « t « l . . . wltk
Albany'i only drive-in
•orog*. You'll lili* thfl comfori and convtnitnco, fool
family raloi. Cocktail loun««.
I S e STATB S T R E B T
t P P O S n i ITATI CAPITOL
loo f w fflitJfy hmvl ag»nl.
SPECIAL IFE'^KLY K A T E S
KJEJWK^
FOR
MMiu m m itrtsii mmnti «tiHutiM
E X T E N l > E D
Si'^yS
HII.TON MU81C CKNTKH . .
t'vnder Olbkoii UuilMr*. tAMAHA
PIANOS. New and utfd luuiraluratt itol(> and loaned. I.mhun* ou
all lovtrunifniH.
COI.IJMIIIA HT.
AI.H., UO
CIVIL
tagB FoartaMi
SERVICE
LEADER
25 State Employees
Share $710 From
Su^estion Program
Tum<I«7, AprO 19, 1966
Nassau County ^
Chapter Forms
Two New Units
Irving Fiaumenbaum. president of Nassau chapter, Civil
Service Employees Assn., announced recently the formaALBANY — Twenty-five State are considerable savings in post-
workers earned $710 last month age and envelopes.
for their efforts in raising tlie
$50 Award
efficiency of many agency proA Brooklyn labor r e l a ^ n s exgrams, according to Mary Goode aminer for the Department of
Krone, president of the New York Labor was granted $50 for providState Civil Service Oommisfiion, ing a valuable research tool for
The awards were given by tftie members of the Labor Relations
Employee Suggestion Program op- Board. William J. Peterson, preerated by the Department of Oivil pared an index and digest of
Service.
Board decisions made as far back
A Long Island man won $200, as 1937. His work resulted in a
the highest award for the month. two-volume work of 2.000 pages,
Victor P. Yuskus, East Islip, a with tables of contents and crosshead nurse at Central Islip's State references. Utlllaation has subHospital, sugested how to improve stantially reduced staff time spent
the treatment and rehabilitation on research,
i of alcoholics and at the .same time
Edmund J. Owczarak, Buffalo,
save the hospite.1 $2,000.
a senior X-ray technician for the
P a r t of the treatment given to Department of Health, earned $35
alcoholics Is hydration, adding for designing and building a maglarge quantities of fluid and vita- netic-type bulletin board to be
CUROSITY SHOPl'e
The New York City Transit mins to the patients. This hod used at Roswell Park Memorial
been done intmvenously. Yuskus Institute.
Authority held its semi-annual version of Ye Olde Curiosity devised a method in which the
Six $35 Awards
Shoppe April 19 when it auctioned off articles that have been found hospital (rather than an outside
Six $25 awards were made In
in the transit system during: the last 18 months. All of the Hems have source) prepares the fluids. He
January. They went bo Sarah L.
been collected by the Authority's supervisor of lost property, Mrs. also suggested that they be given
Bruce, Stuyvesant, a clerk with
Jeanette Weitz. Pictured above with some of the articles that were orally. This cuts costs by about
the Depaa-tment of State; Robert
auctioned is Mrs. Weitz.
95 per cent and permits the pa- N. Simonelli St. Johnsvllle, untients more freedom of movement, emiployment Insurance claims exAuthority Member
since they no longer have to be aminer, Division of Unployment;
ALBANY—Walker O. Oain of
flat in bed with tubes in their Edmund D. Lombard, Syracuse, a
Garrison is the newest member of
arms.
sergeant with the State Police;
the Bast Hudson Parkway AuthThe new system permits earlier Gerald W. Pryor, Whitesboro,
ority, succeedin'g Robert A. W.
Spain, Israel, Iran, India, physical recovery—fitting up and motor vehicle operator, Utica
Oarleton. whose term expired,
Hong Kong, Thailand, Japan walking—and releases a sizeable State Hospital; and William Lenand Hawaii are the major portion of the nurses' time for kowsky, Arverne, senior unemlands to be visited in an other duties. I t imposes no dif- ployment Insurance claims exaround-the-wor!d tour by jet now ficulty for patients, and for many, aminer^ and Heleu D. Lee, Springg T K N O f l R M ' H K R — NASSAU COI'NTY open for bookings to Civil Serv- the oral Intake of fluids is a satis- field Gardens, principal
unem1 Vic'!bii{ D Baldwin
liS.tUO ice Employees Assn. members and fying substitute for their previous
ployment insurance claims clerk,
5 KanUw Y Mineola
!)S.085
3 Unlitmlo M L r v i t t o w n
!)7.U13 members of their immediate fami- dependence on alcohol.
both with the Division of Em4 KLUII.IKIIN M MASHTTAPEMUIL 1' . .1I7.105
ployment.
FI Whicux E Oceanslde
!)(!.i)60 lies.
$100 Award
6 Viintu.ve M No Wantasrli . . . . !l(l.()03
Fifteen dollar grants went to
The globe circling trip departs
An Albany man and a Staten
7 Holvpdt E Miiieola
!>(i.1«0
8 (Mark V Hieksville
!l5.f)78 on July 2 for 28 days and for Island man shared a $100 award R u t h M. Burch, Albany, senior
9 Pa.viK! J4 HiMiipsteud
itr).««0
designer. Education De10 Divnnan M Seaford
D.T.SJia only $1,565 tour members will re- for improving the mailing system artist
1 1 I^onso M F r a n k l i n S
!!.1.I00
partment;
Sharon
A. Irwin,
Vi Keiidii.'k K W Hempetca.l
!;:,.:(H ceive air fare, all hotels, most! used by the Workmen's Compenl a Shaw 1) No Bellniorp
!t5..'133 meals, sightseeing tours, etc. Time | sation Board irx communicaiting Poughkeepsle, staff nurse, Hudson
14: Ditiiiiio J Massapequa
!l 1.840
15 KiisUo D Garden Cit.v 1'
iM.758 has been scheduled for leisure in vvith insurance carriers and self- River State Hospital; George W.
16 Abowilz B I'lainview
'H.tiO.'J Majorca and Honolulu in addiinsured employens. Michael Pomi- Betts, Newark, attendant, Newark
1 7 Fairi'll A M a l v e r n e
!»1.461
1 8 UcMlivo « W a n t a ^ h
!)l.;ir)0 tion to viewing the cultures of doro, Albany, and Peter J. Cos- State School; Mitchell D. Simon,
1» Clarke M F r a n k l i n S
!)).()00
Kenmore, senior hearing reporter,
2 0 Auifcniilick K Roslyn Hslrls ..ii:!.!)48 Spain, the Middle East and the tanzo, Staten Island, senior ex2 1 Muldm-r F Franklin S
!i:!.77:j Orient.
Division of Employment; and
aminers,
suggested
the
purchase
5 3 Manniim R No Bellniort'
i':t.()85
3 4 Kli'isi K Now Hyde P
i .(..-,83
A colorful, descriptive brochure of two 100 slot racks for sorting Joseph A. Rubinstein, Brooklyn,
85 Cilno K F r a n k l i n Sq
!i:t.r,(iii
investigator.
Workmen's
ComSB Fitzgerald J W Aniityvillc . . . .;»;!.'J10 of the trip may be had by writing mail to be sent to these coma 7 Mi'Loiiu'lilin D Merrick
!':i.();t6 either to Celeste Rosenkranz, 55 panies and employers. Bulk mail- pensation Board.
8 8 Nordalil E Uniondale
:l;^703
$10 Awards
39 Anderson L Hieksville
!);J.5l6 Sweeney St., Buffalo, or in the ings can be made this way. Pre§ 0 W i c . r n S Jericho
i)'J.20a
viously, each piece of mail was
Ten awai-ds of $10 each went to
Nolan M Mineola
!)^.i;J8 Metropolitan area to Mi'S. Eve
3 2 DeKrane.H S Massapequa 1'
!lrM03 Armstrong, 16 Florence St., Baby- separately addressed and mailed. Donald J. Johnson, Albany, ac3B (iroei)ler J Rooeevelt
ill.755
There are more than 730,000 count clerk, Department of Motor
34 I'atella E Elniont
!)1.741 lon, Long Island, N.Y.
3 5 CaWalian I Freeport
ill.0:10
notices sent out each year. In ad- Vehicles; Emella Orbacz, SchenThis
offering
is
strictly
limited
3 8 Van Valkenburir D Mpequa 1' !11.5!)5
3 7 Folde (; Mineola
(11.5110 to
CSEA members and their dition to work time saved by the ectady, principal file clerk, and
88 Qiiiney C No Merrick
ill.350
adoption of the suggestion, there Betty R. Spodak, Schenectady,
§9 (Jold K I'lainA'iew
Dl-lJUa families.
Tour Is Offered
Eligibles
40 l.owentlial H Jericho
ill.178
4 1 Snnimers B E Meadow
ill.170
4 8 Dnnne O Westbury
ill.105
48
O Mineola
ill.100
44 Sellak I man T Merrlek
iiO.!l78
4 5 Mun>l> M Freeport
i!0.1)60
4 0 Feroii O Hieksville
ilO.880
4 7 « o r w i l B New Hyde P
!IO.H05
4 8 Halfey 1- Mas.sapequa
!M).(til8
49 Uoelfler E eBthpaife
!!0.0:{1
50 Hurriiixion E Seaford
ii(l.(i'J3
51 Memlreski N Garden Sily ..!»O.I7fl
BJ! M . M o r r o w I Albertson
00.401
48 VereM I' Geeanfiide
il0.:i05
54 M u r p h y V New Hyde P
fiH.liitO
55 Soderberff 11 Folral P
i)0.080
5« Caniian D W Hempsle I , . . .:'0.0,")8
57 T n / l n k i e w i e z H N Bell ore ..110.(115
58 MiKiernan M N MaBsapeiina . , " ! ) . i l l 3
60 (iU'SH J Garden City
Ml.ri.'tl
60 ('harle.s I) Jericho
.S11.308
61 M. Keever L Merriek
S!l.353
Oa DaviH K Koekvil!« C
HII.!J85
6 3 KrIiMlinanii K Mineola
8!!.'l!.'3
0 4 S.'hn:il).)lk K Meadow
Sil.ltiO
«5 l.alino 1. N Valley S
SH.III15
00 Carl man V Oceansiao
Srt.8.'l(i
0 7 Tolnnh T Lynbrook
f-S.Oll
68 Orn-li in A Elniont
' 'vl;)!
«1> KaUleU A Great Nesk
''S.KtO
7 0 O Keefe J Hayvilel
SS.OSO
71 MorKaui T N Ma»»apeiiua . . . . : ' • i . o i a
7;3 7.ie«ler P Hempstead
^:7.7(I0
7 3 M.NMII.V A Valley St
'7.1111
74 Israel S Hellipatfe
: 7.1'J1
7 5 M a r l i n o J l.evittuwn
;.135
7(1 Cai.oie' P E Meadow
7.050
7 7 Cauim
V Ueeunside
:l.540
7 8 Berer I, Hieksville
• i.l30
7!» Oma#.t I K N Merrick
i;il.ilH3
8 0 Meii.lelow M Kockvi!le C
«.'..703
81 ha.Moiula D Hemputua
85.3111
Fallon M Westbury
.".-..370
• 3 Mullen (' Merriek
f . .IIG
• 4 Alpert (; K Meadow
K!..'11I3
^
Tiimen B N Bellmore
83.500
fe FerretII N Ma»sai)etiua
83.101
p O Bri-n J 0< ean»idd
8-.'.183
I h Sutvliloa P MineoU
81.021
PROTEST — A delegation of the Metropolitan Division of Employment chapter. Civil Service
Employees Assn., met with Division officials to
protest the proposed movinf of » local unemploy-
tion of two new units. The Village of Valley Stream, with over
140 employees, has recently elected to become members of the
chapter. With the cooperation of
the Village Board, an ordinance
was recently passed to permit
payroll deduction of dues and life
insurance. At a later meeting, a
program will be set up for these
employees.
Until a new Constitution is
formulated the following were
elected as temporary officers:
Willaim
Frolich,
president;
Frank Tschan, vice president;
William Henchcliff, secretary; and
Richard Sullivan, treasurer.
Mineola
Another unit added to Nassau
chapter has been that of the Village of Mineola. .A large percentage of the employees in the
Village have already joined Nassau chapter. At present a program has been submitted to the
Village Board and is under con-,
slderatlon by them. The Village of
Mineola has almost 100 employees
and it is hoped by Fiaumenbaum
that there will be 100 pei'cent
membership before long.
Temporary officers elected in
the Village of Mineola are:
Daniel Hoehn, president; Harry
Parrett, vice president; Edward
Hirt, secretary, and John Bertani,
treasurer.
"Mayor Stanley W. Kmuss and
the Board have been extremely
cooperative in the formation of
this new unit," Fiaumenbaum said.
unemployment insurance claims
examiner, both with the Division
of Employment; jointly to Martha
S. Hill, supervising nurse, and
Diana E, Rose, head nurse, both
of Poughkeepsle and the Hudson
River State Hospital; Alma B.
Duford, Ogdensburg, attendant,
St. Lawrence State Hospital;
jointly to John K. Welch, Leicester, head nurse, and George DeLong, Dansville, Industrial shop
worker, both of Ciaig Colony and
Hospital; William J. Keys, Geneva, senior account clerk, Willard
State
Hospital;
Richard
F.
Loucks, Marion, farm employment
representative. Division of Employment; Victor A. Cohen, supervisor of occupational therapy,
Gowanda State Hospital, Helmuth; and Michael P. Schinn,
Kings Park, supervising nurse.
Kings Park State Hospital.
Merit Certificates
Certificates of merit without
cash grants went to Thomas R.
Jacob, Schenectady, clei-k, Workmen's Compensation Board; Edward K. Preston. Rensselaer, principal offset printing machine operator, Divi-sion of Elmployment;
Percy Coombes. Belmont, janitor.
State University at Alfred; Carletin F. Boldt. Buffalo, head Industrial shop worker, West Seneca
State School; Shirley S. Brandt,
Brooklyn, compensation claims
examiner, State Insurance Fund;
Morris Feintuch. Yonkers. unemployment insurance manager, and
Dora S. Lipcon. Staten Island, unemployment insurance claims examiner, both of the Division of
Employment; and Joseph A. Rubinsteii), Brooklyn, investigator,
ment office from 1(81 East New York Avenur and Lucy A. Whittle, Jamaica, asBrooklyn, to another location. Shown above a n sistant workmen's compensation
Bob Daily, chapter president, and members of thi examiner, both with the Workmen'* Compensation Bosird.
grievance committee and DiviiiioD officials.
i
!
'
!
|
CIVIL
TuctJay, April 19, 1966
LeTTERS
TO THE EDITOR
(Continued from P a g e 6)
l»ltihout my knowledge, r a n out,
for ome item t h a t a n e f f o r t Ls
toeing m a d e to Increase the penDJons of reMfees. We are the work
liorfie« t h a t have been put out
to pasture a n d forgotten.
T h e r e Is before me the October
26, 1965 issue containing a n a r ticle t h a t Mr. Levitt would introduce a Cost-of-Living increase
f o r retired aides in the '66 Legislative
Session.
This
article
etatea: "The bill would m a n d a t e
fi funded supplemental pension
toased on the cost of living index."
I a m g r a t e f u l to Ml-. Levitt for
l)is e f f o r t s in our behalf. However, I do not feel our pensions
ehould be increased on the basi.s
of cost-of-living increases alone. I
believe when the salaries of S t a t e
employees are increased, a percentage of those increases should
be given to retirees or some other
euitable method devised to take
care of the people who worked
for so m a n y years and gave of
themselves so unselfishly in the
eervice of the State.
We are still men^bers of the
CSEA a n d I paid into this organiaztion for 42 Vi years and I
feel we can rightfully expect the
CSEA to do something in our behalf and not expend all their e f f o r t s on employees now in service.
I am not u n m i n d f u l of w h a t
the
Organization
accomplished
during my years of service for
t h e S t a t e of New York, and, I
believe,
the
greatest
of
its
achievements was the passage of
t h e Feld-Hamilton bill. Many of
the
present
employees
never
h e a r d of this bill although they
a r e benefiting by it. My pension
»ow, as are most of the S t a t e r e tirees, is based, partly on t h e
ealaries I received when S t a t e
employees were paid such low
ealaries, applicants could not be
found to fill vacancies. And, incidentally, our pensions are paid
f r o m a f u n d t h a t we contributed
to for years.
May I t h e n ask Governor Rockefeller or S t a t e Comptroller Levitt
or t h e Civil Service Employees
Assn. or all of you to espouse our
cause a n d not forget the people
who worked for the S t a t e of New
York for so many, m a n y years
ELEANOR M. R E P P
Rachester
Dental Hygienist
Open Continually
Applications ai|3 being accepted
by t h e New York City D e p a r t m e n t of Personnel until f u r t h e r
notice for a n examination for
dental hygienist.
Salary to s t a r t is $5,150.
(For f u r t h e r information and
applications c o n t a c t the Applications Section of the D e p a r t m e n t
cf Personnel. 49 T h o m a s Street.
PeR. Column
(Continued f r o m Page Z)
t h e report's writing is good, alt h o u g h here a n d t h e r e some
tighter editing would have helped.
P i a s e s such as " t h e poor we
have still with us" and a sentence such as ,"Preventlng addiction is a special concern with the
increase
in
addiction",
could
h a v e been better left Inside the
typewriter.
HOWEVER,
THESE
minor
f a u l t s are more t h a n neutralized
by the overall excellence of the
planning,
layout,
illustrations
« n d production. By and large,
« n excellent a n n u a l i^eport f r o m
which we c a n all gather useful
p a t t e r n s and techniques.
LEADER
Scandinavian And
Grand Tours Now
Open For Bookings
Asst. Stotlstfcloii
Open For Filing
On Continuous Bosis
T h e New Yorli City D e p a r t m e n t of Personnel is accepting
applications on a continual ba«l.s
for a n examination ac assistant
statistician.
Starting salary In this position is $5,760.
Candidates will not be required
to take a written test.
F o r f u r t h e r information a n d
applications c o n t a c t t h e Applications Section of t h e D e p a r t m e n t
of Per.sonnel 49 T h o m a s Street.
SERVICE
A tour of Scandinavia and a
Grand Tour of Europe will
both depart on July 19 for 22
days each and are open for
National Parks
& West Coast
Tour Now Open
bookings now to Civil Service E m ployees Assn. members, their f a m ilies a n d friends.
transportation, porter a n d guide
service.
G r a n d Tour
The G r a n d Tour of Europe is
designed especially for persons
visiting abroad the first time. It
will take 08BA members to Holland, Switzerland, Italy, France
and England a n d o f f e r scenery
ranging f r o m t h e Alps of Switzerland to the canals of Venice. Also
included are visits to Rome, the
Fi'ench Riviem, Paris, London and
Amsterdam, T o t a l price is $835
and Includes all items mentioned
for t h e Scandinavian Tour.
A full description of the Western Tom* a n d t h e possible extensions can be h a d by writing to
Irving F l a u m e n b a u m , P.O., Box 91,
Hempstead, Long Island, N.Y.
Do roil Mted A
High School
Equfvoleney
Diploma
Applications for the Junior civil
engineer e x a m i n a t i o n are now
being accepted by t h e New York
City D e p a r t m e n t of Personnel on
a continual basis.
S a l a r y in the position is $7,100
to s t a r t .
A qualifying written e x a m i n a tion Will be given to candidates
on the day of filing application
For f u r t h e r I n f o m a t i o n and
applications contact t h e Applications Section of the D e p a r t m e n t
of Personnel, 49 T h o m a s Street,
New York City.
IBM
for CITII lerrloe
for perional latfiTTaotloii
e Weeks Conrie Approvwl by
N.Y. State Education Dept.
Write or Phone for Information
Easttrn Sehoel
j Nowe
I A<J<lrest.
I
I
Please
wrtie
me,
free,
about
Name
Addrees
Boro
TR 6-7760
YOU
THE ARCO
Zip
I'l
PASS
STUDY
BOOK
Clerk New York City
$3.00
Post Office Clerk Carrier
$3.00
Senior Clerk
$4.00
Bridge & Tunnel Officer
$4.00
College Deferment Exam
$ 1.95
Postal Promotion Sup. Foreman $4.00
Chu
SCHOOL DIRECTORY
Janitor Custodian
$3.00
Storekeeper G.S. 1-7
$3.00
Motor Vehicle Operator
$4.00
Engineering Aide
$4.00
Vacation Playground Asst.
$3.00
SanHation Man
$4.00
Patrolman
$4.00
Contoiiis Previous Questions and Answers ond
SprUDEMY
^
n o Be A t p w l « l l i t
Oflier Sultoble Study Moterial for Coming Exams
ORDER DIRECT—MAIL COUPON
study With Speclilists';^
27 YEMS DEVOTED TO TEACHING STENOTYPE
OUR ONE COURSE TAKES iOU FROM
UGINNER JO SJENOJyPE REPORTER
C Mo.or
. DAYS or EVES.
S5c for 24 hours spteiol dellvtry
C.O.D.'s 40c oxtra
JOMo.CourS* • or ONLY SATS.
Free Typing A Trankcrl;>t ion
ENROLL NOW FOR APRIL CLASSES
r W O 2-0002
Leorn Troctor Trailtr Bus Driving in Th« Bronx
Sanitation — P.O. Tests — Individuel Training Only — Road Tests — Rea. Rates.
Teamster Training —> Bronx Professional Driving School, Ed. L Grant H'way
at 170th St. — JE 8-1900
iMONROE
n w n K W E INSTITUTE—IBM
i n a i i i w i B ^ i V N i wCwO
K aUs R
s S E S S I ^ k o i a l
SKftVirKS TKSTS. Swltcbbofti'd. Eleotiic Tyfius, NCR Bookkteuin* niailiine. H.S.
KgijlVAl.KNCY,
I^yuJ & Air-Linu ueoretariul. Day & Evti C.'aHi>e«, Vet Auiuv'd.
M«)uru« iiufeiutw I j u t i t u t e . Euet T i i u t o u i A v e .
Bu«toa lid., fiioiu. M l 3t-600U.
the
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT class.
pfaone or Mall Orders
Zone
to O n e H.S.
7 2 1 BROADWAY, N.Y. 8 (near 8 S t )
10 A.M. to 6 P.M.
Saturday 11 A.M. to 6 P.M.
I
Admit
Eastern School • AL 4-5029
All Books Ordered toforo
12 Noon Mailed Sowo
Day
Blvd., Jamaica
C«l>'.
j^ionday OiM« «:30-8:;t» P.M. or
Wertnwdny Class fl:30-«:a0 P.M. or
SndirdHy CIhns 9::(0-11::<0 A.M.
I I E. 125fh St., N.Y.CIty 35, N.Y,
Fill In and BrliiK roii|i«iii
Merrick
INTENSIVE COURSE
COMPLETE PREPARATION
PAUL'S BOOK STORE
! • Oiir Guast at a ClassI
115 Eoit 15 St., Monhotlon
ADMINISTRATIVE
ASSISTANT
FOR ALL TESTS
^^^
of groduotion from a 4year High School, It it valuable to
non-graduates of High School fort
• Employment * Promotion
• Advanced Edutotionai Training
• Personal Satiifaction
O u r Special Intensive 5-Week
Course prepares for official exams
conducted ot regular intervals by
N. Y. State Dept. of Education.
Alteiid in Manhattan or Janialoa
KNKOI.K NOW! Classes Start
In MaiiliaKan, Moii., .-\)irll •j.Mli
6::i0 or 7:ao I'.M.
In JaiiiaU'M, TiifM., April '/{Dili
5:4.% or 7:1.% I'.M.
j tl-Ol
PZ....L1
CITY EXAM COMING SOON FOR
ARCO ROOKS AVAII.ABLB AT
^ m ^ ^ T h l s N.Y. State diploma
DELEHANTY INSTITUTE
Boro
Write or Phone f o r Information
DIPLOMA
I
Nam*
YU 2-4000
jUlk [quivalenai
\
P l e u e write n a free about the Hlvh
Sehoel BqulTalener elaae.
* LOW COST—MORE HOURS
•
COMMERCIAL PROGRAMMING
•53 I'way Icor. 14 St.) N.Y., N.Y.
a\OH SCHOOi G E T
B
A L 4-S029
721 Broadway N.T. S ( i t 8 St.)
• KEY PUNCH
$90 For 60 Hours
TO HELP
F i o m here, travelers will go
on to the magnlfioent Pacific
Coast drive to Monterey. After
staying h e r e overnight, t h e j o u r ney will continue down t h e coast
through Carmel a n d S a n Luis
Obispo and then on to S a n t a B a r bara with its f a m o u s old missions.
Next stop Is Los Angeles sightseeing will include a visit to a
movie studio. I n addition to other
sightseeing, * tour members will
have .some free time to wander on
their own.
Wind up of the trip is a visit
to Las Vegas, where arrangements
can be m a d e for a n overnight visit
to Grand Canyon. Extensions may
also be m a d e for a 6-day trip to
Zion Natoinal Park, G r a n d Canyon a n d Bryce Canyon and Salt
Lake City. Piice of the extra six
days is $99 a person. Price for
the 15-day trip Is only $520 plus
tax.
Jr. Civil Engiiit«r
Exam is Now Open
T h e n o r t h country pi-ogram will
offer visita to Holland, Denmark,
Sweden and Norway a n d will also
include a visit t o England and
Application for either vacation
Scotland. I n addition to visiting
Scandinavian capitals of Copen- trip may be h a d by writing to
hagen, Oslo a n d Stockholm t h e r e Claude Rowell, 64 Langslow St.,
will be the popular three-day Rochester, N.Y.
journey among the f j o r d s of Norway. A full pi-oga'am of sightseeing
LEARN
CO.EP
• 1401 — 1460
in the other cities of Am.sterdam,
PROGRAMMING
London and Edinburgh is also i n $225 . 180 Hours
cluded.
A tour to the West Coast
Totfil price of the Scandinavian
that will feature Yosemite tour is $899 a n d includes round
National Park and will offer trip jet air fare, all hotel rooms,
a side trip to Grand Canyon mos't meals, sightseeing, land
is now open to members of the
Civil Service Employees Assn.,
their families and friends.
The 15-day journey will leave
from New York on two different
dates—July 10 a n d August 14.
T h e program for each tour will
be the same. Partdcipants will fly
by jet to San Piancisco a n d a f t e r
a thorough visit of this charming
city, depart for Yosemite P a r k by
way of a beautiful scenic route
t h r o u g h valleys, forests and the
Sierra Nevada Mountains. Accomodations will be In Yosemite
Lodge.
Fifteen
LEADER BOOK STORE
97 Duane St., New York 7. N. Y.
eopios "tof books «ii«ckoil obovo.
;nclos* check or moaoy order for $-
Picas* stntf mo
N^
Address
City
Sfeto .
• • sure to iaelude S% Soles Tax
Page Sixleea
CIVIL
SERVICE
CSEA Croup Life Plan
Enrollment Is Extended
ALBANY—The deadline for enrollment, without medical examination, in the group
life insurance plan of the Civil Service Employees Association by new applicants age 50
or under, has been extended through April 30, it has been announced.
The open enrollment plan had been limited to the month of March but, because
of the heavy response to the of- plan Is made possible by the Life Insurance P l a n Is Installed,
fer, it has been extended for the
ever-Increasing membership be- c a n apply for coverage.
additional 30 days, Joseph F.
Applications and
explanatory
coming insured. The total memFelly, CSEA president, said.
bership of CSEA is now more literature can be secured from
Felly pointed out some of the
any CSBA chapter or department
than 135,000.
advantages to be gained by enS t a t e police, prison guards and representative or f r o m Associarolling In the plan. Among the
other members who have hazard- tion Headquaters a t 8 Elk Street,
features he mentioned are:
11 Park
Place,
ous employment usually have to Albany and
• No medical examination for
pay additional premiums for life New York City.
applicants under age 50 who
insurance, but in the CSEA group
have not been previously repected
Life Plan, cost to all members,
for this insurance on the basis
regardless of employment is t h e PW Chapter 8,
of a medical examination.
same.
• Premiums are waived if you
Any member of CSEA, or eli- Hears Social
should become permanently and
gible employee who joins, em- Security Talk
totally disabled as described In
ployed by the State or any polit h e plan,
POUGHKBEiPSIE—Members of
tical subdivision or school dis• Ten per cent additional intrict in which the low cost Group the State Department of Public
surance guaranteed until Nov. 1,
Works District No. 8 chapter, Civil
Without additional charge.
Service Employees Assn. heard
• Triple
indemnity
in
the
William S, Drescher, district
event of accidental death at no
mana«er of the Social Security
liadditional charge, as described
AdmlniistraUon for this
area,
in the plan,
spoke on Medicare recently at
• Low cost—much less t h a n
Aloy's Gardent Restaurant.
you can arrange through regular
OXFORD — A St. Patrick's
Dreacher, according to chapter
Channels, regardless of whether
Day Party was held recently president J o h n R. Deyo, apoke on
your occupation is hazardous.
by the Civil Service Employees enrollment, eligibility, benefits
The 30 per cent additional inAssn. chapter, of the W.R.C. and the other aspects of the new
auranoe furnished prior to Nov.
Home, Oxford at tlie Cansawacta progi^am being administered by
1, 1&61 Is incoi-porated into the
the Social Security office.
basic amounts Issued under the Country Club.
Gail Miller and Gordon AckerAbout '50 members and guests
plan effective t h a t date,
to enjoy
the m a n were In charge of reserva• Payroll deductions make it were present
evening beginning viith a turkey tions, according to J a m e s J .
easy to pay.
Morlarty, publicity director.
To date, nearly $30 million has dinner at 7 p.m.
A purse was presented to each
been paid to beneficiaries under
t h e CSEA group life plan. The of the retiring employees by prescontinued development of thei. dent Lillian Gray to Mrs. George 10 Agencies Join
Miles, Archie Miles; a n d Miss
Harriet Bullock, who was unable Statewide Plan
Smithtown Unit
to be present.
William G. O'Brien, BlueCrossJoseph L.. Marso, Superintend- Blue Shield Manager, the S t a t e Dinner-Dance
ent of the W.R.C Home, present- wide Plan, announced today t h a t
T h e Smithtown Central School ed to Mrs Dorothy Hayes, medl10 new agencies have joined the
District No, One unit of the Civil cal-soclal worker, a certificate of
Statewide Plan as of April 1.
Service Employees Assn. is spon- achievement for completion of a n
They
include
six
townships,
soring a dinner and dance at the Inservice training course lu "Case
two villages, one central' school
Bavarian Inn, Smithtown Blvd.,
Studies In Supervision".
district and one fire district.
Lake Ronkonkoma, on Saturday,
Installs
Officers
"The number of agencies which
May 14. Tickets are $6 per perBenjamin Roberts, CSEA field have joined since the first of this
son. The pubUc is invited and
tickets may be had by calling representative, installed the of- year Is 38, bringing the total
Wirs. Violet Krispien, ANdrew 5- ficers for the coming year as number of agencies now particpating in t h e Statewide Plan to
»319 o r ' P h i l l p D'Amato, ANdrew follows:
1,039." O'Bi-len said.
President,
Lillian
Gray;
vice
e-342.
president, Ann Sherman ;secre"The ever-Increasing number
tary, Clarissa Wallace; treasurer, of public sei-vice employees and
Doris Fuller; delegate. Alan Win- their dependents who are enjoying
ans; alternate delegate, Lillian the unique protection of t h e
Gray and the executive commit- Statewide Plan is most gratifying
tee: R u t h Ryan, Wilson Hem- to us hei-e at Blue Cross-Blue
strought and Katherine Lewis.
Shield," he concluded.
New Drive For 1 /60th Bill
(Continued from Page 1)
ors of all retired State employees,
whether members of the Retirement System or not. It would be
effective next October 1 and would
affect all State "employees retiring a n d dying through the follolwlng Sept. 30. To be eligible
a n employee must have 10 years
of full time S t a t e service within
the last'15 years prior to his retirement.
Passage of the legislation and
subsequent approval toy t h e C3k)veriior Is oomidered excellent by
the OSEA for several reasons.
First, a n identlical bill was introduced under the sponsorship of
W . R . C . Home
Unit Installs
Manhattan State
Elects Officers
The new officers for the
coming year of the Manhattan State Hospital chapter,
Civil Service Employees Assn.,
were elected recently.
The results were; president.
Rose Battle; first vice president,
Alexander Shaw; second vice
president, Eugenia Chester; third
vice
president,
MTS.
Charles
Loucks; recording secretary, Sophie Slutz; treasurer, Leon Sandm a n ; delegate, Amos Royale and
alternate delegate, Doris Roberts.
The Board of Directors election
resulted in the naming of Kenn e t h Lee, Cleopatra
Ransom,
Alma Hayes, Cleveland Hayes,
J a m e s Fields, Willie Butler, Kenneth Best, John Wallace, Heyford
Benjamin. Thelma Ramsey, Carrie Williams, Jean Jones and Sylvia Dancy.
Fred Cave, f i f t h vice president
of the Statewide Association and
Thelma Ramsey, chairman of the
nominating committee of the
chapter, Sylvia Dancy, Car"ie
Williams. Heyford Benjamin and
Cleopatra Ranson counted the
votes.
Tuesday, April 19, 1966
LEADER
Strike Forgiveness
Creedmoors
Show
Starts
On April
26
This years show at the
Creedmoor
State
hospital,
"What Makes the World Go
'Round?", is a mirthful songfest about . . , Love.
The State hospital's All-Patients
Annual Show will run for five
days begiiming Tuesday April 26
and closing Saturday, April 30.
Natlonaly famous for the quality of their yearly shows, the
patients and staff of Creedmoor
are going all out this year to
maintain their high standards of
production
and
performance.
Their goal Is to a t t e m p t to better last year's presentation, "The
First' 300 Years Are T h e Hardest", but judging from the reviews of t h a t production, audiences should be more than happy
with its equal.
Tickets for "What Makes The
World Go 'Round" are $2.50 each
a n d can be purchased by writing to t h e Recreation Director,
Creedmoor State Hospital, Queens
Village, New York. The Hospital. In which Assembly Hall t h e
show will be held, is located In
Queens Village on Union T u r n pike. Curtain time is 8:30 p.m.
Marcy State Credit
Union Holds Dinner
UTICA—Tlie Maixjy State Hospital Federal Oi-edit Union held
Its 15th annual dinner meeting In
Twin Ponds Golf Club, with
George Butler presiding.
Following the dinner, directors
and committeemen were elected
a t a meeting of the alhare holders.
Reports showed a significant Increase In a s s e ^ during the past
year. Members voted fOr a 4i/a per
cent dividend.
Speakers for the evening Included Albert Mai-alne, representative of the New Yoi-k State Federal Qredit Unions; Albert Lemke,
district director-at-lai«e; Helen
Mills, director of the Utica and
Rome Area Federal Credit Unions.
Southern Conf,
Sets Meeting
CENTRAL ISLIP PARTY —
A retirement party was given
recently in honor of Nunzio Uacqua, a carpenter employed at the
Central Islip State Hospital for the past 28 years. The dinner .and
festivities were held at the Golf Clubhouse and was attended by
approximately forty couples including Dr. Francis J. O'Neill and Mrs.
O'NeUi. Dr. O'NeiU is tlie director of Central Islip State Hospital. Seen
above are (left to right), Robert Bei-ntxky, Nunsio liacaua, Joseph
Mullady and John Bird.
Assembly Speaker Anthony Travla
and passed by the Democraticcontrolled Legislature of last year
but vetoed on technical grounds
by Rockefeller. Second, at th»
time of the veto, the Governor expressed his sympathy with t h e
purpose of the bill and recommended t h a t the Employees Association work with the Division
of the Budget and the Department
of Civil Service this year to overcome its deficiencies.
I n addition, while addressing
delegates a t the CSEA a n n u a l
dinner last month, the Governor
pledged his support this year for
the bill.
MIIDDLETOWN—The Southern
New York Conference of the Civil
Service Employees Assn. will hold
its spring meeting a t the Middletown State Hospital on April 27
at 7 p.m. All member chapters
ar^ ui-ged to send delegates to this
meeting. H a r r y Albright, CSEA
counsel, h a s been Invited to recap
legislative matters.
(Continued from Page 1)
2. "Absences necessitated by
the strike shall be excused without charge to leave credit."
3. "Employees shall be credited
with a full day of compensatory
time off for each day or p a r t
thereof worked during the strike."
4. "Employees shall be^ compensated in cash a t
regular
straight time r a t e of pay f o r
hours they were required to work
beyond their normal work day."
5. "Employees whose c u r r e n t
overtime credits exceed or which
by the addition of compsensatory
time off credits for the period
J a n . 1 through J a n u a r y 13 would
exceed the allowable limit under
the attendance rules (30 days)
will be compensated in cash a t
regular straight time rates for the
hours In excess of the allowable
limit."
6. "Heads of those agencies in
which the granting of all of t h e
compensatory time off would seriously disrupt efficient operations
and hamper adequate service to
the public may request from t h e
Director of the Budget authorization to pay cash compensation In
lieu of compensatory time off
for t h a t portion of the compensatory time off t h a t t h e agency
Is unable to absorb."
7. "Agencies are authorized to
submit vouchers for abnormal
expenses
for
transportation,
parking, and subsistence for e m ployees where these are shown
to be necessary to enable the e m ployees to meet the State's r e quuements."
Buffalo Unit To
Honor Retiree
BNFFAIiO—The Bfuffalo Competitive unit, Ei-le chapter, Ciivl
Service Employees Assn., Is sponsoring a retirement dinner h o n oring Mi's. Alice Gary on Tuesday May 10, a t 6:30 p.m. a t the
Hertel I n n , 1150 Hertel Avenue
off Delaware. Ticekts are $4.25
and may be obtained
from
Henry R. Powel, 77 Pierce St.,
Buffalo. Deadline is May 4. Ann
K . Willner is dinner c h a a i r m a n .
Medicare
(Continued from Page 1)
In the S t a t e Health Plan will be
excluded fi-om the State plan. I n
addition, tihe contributions of
these persons to the State plan
will be reduced by $3 or $6 per
month, to offset the same cost
for Medicare coverage.
The new legislation Is necessary to overcome the new $3 or
$6 per m o n t h payment
that
would he required of employees
whose contributions already ar«
bemg paid for through the use of
accucanulated sick leave credits.
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