COURT OF APPEALS RULES

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America*» Largest W eekly fo r Public Employee»
IVol. XXIX, No. 27
H
Tuesday, M arch 12, 1968
i s t o r i c
V
See Page 8
Pric« T «n CenU
i c t o r y
COURT OF APPEALS RULES
CSEA IS SOLE BARGAINER
N e g o tia tio n s W ith S t a t e
R e s u m e ; D e ie g a te s T o M e e t
By PAUL KYER
A L B A N Y — O n e o f t h e m o s t I m p o r t a n t v ic to r ie s In ibi
h i s t o r y w a s s c o r e d b y t h e C iv il S e r v ic e E m p lo y e e s A ssn . l a s t
w e e k w h e n t h e S t a t e ’s hig^hest c o u r t upheU d G o v e r n o r
R o c k e f e l le r ’s r e c o g n itio n o f G SEA a s t h e s o le b a r g a i n e r
for all S ta te workers except thosa
between CSEA an d the Rockefel­
In, the Division of Police an d th«
ler A dm inistration.
S tate U niversity system.
These negotiations were in te r­
The C ourt of Appeals decision
ru
p ted last Nov. 30 by a n o rder
ended weeks of fru stra tin g sus­
from th e Public Employm ent R e­
pense for th e Employees Associa­
lations B oard w hich told the Gov­
tion an d resulted In th e im m e­
erno r he could n o t bargain solely
diate resum ption of negotiations
w ith th e Employees Association
because other labor organizations
claimed to represent some of the
Social Security
sam e employees. Although CSEA
h ad w anted to continue neg«-tla«
tlons on any basis, the RockifeU
Coverage Opened
ler A dm inistration declared it waa
to conduct talks with
To All S ta te Aides impossible
39 groups of representatives an d
s ta te
C o m p tr o lle r A r t h u r voted for awaiting a final ruling
L e v i tt h a s a n n o u n c e d t h a t s o ­ by th e courts.
—
*eu here a r e some of the cleric*! employees
•w B ro o k ly n , Willowbrook, Bronx and Manhai*
S ta ts H o s p U a ls who dem onstrated l a s t week
c l e r ic a l
p
r
o
t
e
s
t
s
(Leader
S ta ff P h o to )
in front of Governor Rockefeller’s New York City
"X th a t some employees in their
titles had received only a one-srrade reallocation
'rs no upffradina: at all. (See story below.)
lericals Stage Wildcat Walkout
w ildcat w a lk o u t o f c le r ic a l e m p lo y e e s
m a in ly i n t h e N ew Y o rk C5ity a r e a ,
I* week a f t e r lo n g - a w a ite d a n n o u n c e m e n t
i^allocatio n o f S t a t e c le r ic a l e m p lo y e e s
M?
only o n e - s te p u p g r a d i n g f o r s o m e
1
n o r e a llo c a ti o n f o r o t h e r s .
J^hiie th e w a lk o u ts w e r e la r g e ly c o n f i h e d
^*Ripioyees in B r o o k ly n , B r o n x , M a n h a t an d W illo w b ro o k
S ta te
-U o sp itals,
Kesman fo r th « C iv il S e rv ic e E m p lo y e e s
• said a s o u r r e a c t i o n w a s r e p o r t e d f r o m
S t a t e a g e n c y ” a n d 't h W e w a s
a o u b t t h a t s o m e a c tio n w a s n e e d e d
itt
G o v e rn o r's o f fic e to d is p e l t h e b i t ^ ifl/
^ w id e s p r e a d a m o n g r a n k
® em ployees In t h e c l e r ic a l t i tle s .
i f e m p l o y e e s f r o m B r o o k ly n
fo llo w in g w ir e t o
^ ^ e rn o r l a s t w ee k . I t r e a d s :
li
y o u t h a t t h e c l e r ic a l
o p e r a t o r s a t t h e B r o o k ly n
P lta l h a v i d e c id e d t o r e t u r n t o
w o rk u n d e r p r o t e s t a n d w ill g iv e y o u u n t i l
M a r c h 26, 1968 to c h a n g e t h e t o t a ll y i n a d e ­
q u a t e r e a llo c a ti o n a s s u b m i t t e d b y J . E a r l
K e lly . I f n o s a t i s f a c t i o n is r e c e iv e d b y t h i s
d a t e t h e c le r ic a l e m p lo y e e s w ill h o ld a t o t a l
a n d u n i t e d w a lk o u t o n M a r c h 26, 1968. T h is
d e m o n s t r a t i o n w a s o n ly p e r f o r m e d to sh o w
y o u w h a t c a n b e d o n e a n d w h a t w ill b e d o n e
to re c tify th is in ju s tic e .”
c ia l s e c u r i t y c o v e r a g e Is n o w
b e in g o f f e r e d t o S t a t e E m ­
ployees’ R etirem ent System m em ­
bers who h a d previously de­
clined it.
The reopening opportunity is
provided by 1987 am endm ents to
th e Social Security Act.
Eligible are employees who re ­
jected coverage as Retirem ent
System m em bers in 1957 and
who are still employed and R e­
tire m en t System members when
th e coverage becomes effective.
The effective dates are E>ec. 31,
1968, or Dec. 31, 1969.
An employee securing coverage
(Continued on P a re 11)
To T he Brink
The S ta te ’s decision brought the
Employees Association to th a
brink of a Statewide “withholding
of employee services,” which waa
stalled only because CSEA had
begun to have some success In
the Legislatur,e In improving on
the G overnor’s original pay pro(Continued on Page 11)
Repeat This!
No March D elegates
M eeting This Year
• B r o o k ly n S t a t e H o s p ita l C le r ic a l W o r k e rs
ALBANY—The
Civil Service
681 C la r k s o n Ave. Employees Assn.’s regular W inter
B ro o k ly n , N .Y . delegates* meeting, usually in
M arch, will not be held this year.
L a s t w e e k , D r. T h e o d o r e W e n zl, p r e s i d e n t CSEA president Theodore C. Wenzl
o f t h e C iv il S e r v ic e E m p lo y e e s A ssn ., r e ­ announced la st week.
a c t e d s h a r p l y to t h e c le r ic a l e m p lo y e e s ’ s i t ­
The decision to om it th e trad i­
u a t io n . “ T h e y c e r t a i n l y d e s e r v e b e t t e r , , ” h e tional event waa prompted, ac­
s a id . “ W e d o n o t i n t e n d to l e t t h e s i t u a t i o n cording to Wenzl, by radical
changes In CSEA’s action tim e­
e n d h e r e .”
table resulting from im p’^menT h e m a tte r o f re a llo c a tio n a p p e a re d c e r­
tation of th a Taylo Law.
t a i n to b e A s u b j e c t o f n e g o t i a t i o n s w h ic h
W ithin th e ip a st y
Wenzl
r e s u m e d t h i s w e e k b e t w e e n G o v e r n o r R o c k e ­ said, in O ld e r to c o p e
th fastf e ll e r a n d t h e C S E A .
(Continued a n Pag« 11
R e s n le k C a n 't M a k e I t
LBJ-RFK Groups
S earching For '6 8
S e n a te
Candidate
R E S ID E N T J o h n s o n Is s o
In v o lv e d
In
th e
V ie t
N a m w a r t h a t a lo t o f D e m o ­
c r a t s h a v e b e e n w o rr ie d t h a t
he has n ot been paying sufficient;
a tte n tio n to running oth er p arts
of the government.
Like a n ordinary businessman
iCoutinued on Pag* 14)
P
CIVIL
Page Twa
U .S . S e r v i c e N e w s I t e m s
'■ ■ "
-
By
V IR G IL
S W IN G
=
=
=
=
=
P ro p o sed Pay In crease
F ig u r e s A re R e le a s e d
T h e F e d e r a l g o v e r n m e n t h a s r e le a s e d I ts p r o p o s e d n e w
t a l a r y s c h e d u le , e f f e c tiv e In J u ly , w ith I n c r e a s e s r a n g i n g
T h e F e d e r a l g o v e r n m e n t h a s r e le a s e d Its p r o p o s e d n e w
r o m th r e e to n in e p e r c e n t f o r 1.3 m illio n e m p lo y e e s.
Tlie increases were provided in
The 1962 pay bill—with the unions which represent Federal
rtiTiOunts to be determ ined accord- workers for their comments. The
iTjg to the Bureau of Labor S ta - final figures will be released later
tiflics 1967 salary survey. A fter but are expected to be substan­
ih e July increase and a July tially the same as those sent to
1869 pay hike, Federal employees the unions.
The proposed figures included
tixe to be receiving pay equal to
Iheir counterparts in private in- larger increases—n ear th e nine
percent top figure—at the higher
diistry.
Postal emloyees will receive a pay grades where there is a g reat­
Jjiit five percent increase in July. er discrepancy between Federal
The pay figures released by the pay and th a t in the private sector.
rcvern m en t are not final. They
The increase for GS-1 to G S-4
being sent to the employee employees will be a t the m inim um
figure of three percent. At G S rl6 ,
M a rc h 2 6 D e a d lin e
the increase is nine percent. The
GS-17 and OS-18 Increases will
F o r N a ssa u C a n d id a te s
MINEOLA—Independent nom - be smaller because of the restric­
tion which holds career salaries to
Jnfttions lor candidates for elec­
tion to the Nassau chapter, Civil the figure of level V of th e execu­
a t $28,000.
Service Employees Assn., m u st be tive schedule—now
• * •
submitted by M arch 26—which is
T he Civil Service Commission
£0 days before the May 18 bien­
has
announced th a t 45 percent of
nial meeting a t which candidates
all Federal •mployees now have
•will be elected.
'
Independent nom inating peti- exclusive representation by labor
organizations.
Hons m ust be signed by seven
The num ber covered, as of the
j!»rcent of the chapter’s mem/bers
^ o r 882 persons. The petition November 1967 survey, Ic 1,238,729
xnust include th e signatoire and employees—an Increase of 184,000
printed nam e of the persons sign- since the A ugust 1966 survey.
The American Federation of
Ang as well as his departm ent and
Jbcnoe address.
(C o n tin n e d wa P a g e
GRADE
I
TEAR
2
ram s
GS-1
$3,889
$lt,019
2
li,231
1»,372
3
li,600
^,753
»V
h
• i,3 l6
S
5,732
6
6,321
5,921*
6,532 '
I
6,981
7,2114
8
7,699
7,956
9
8,1,62
8,7Ii 1,
10
9,297
9,607
n
10,203
10,51t3
12
12.17U
12,580
12,986
3^3
ll»,l»09
H*,e89
15,369
Hi
16,9U6 17,511
19,780
16
Tuesday, Marcli 12, jr
LEADER
Jewish State Aides
Set Purim Party
Morris J. Solomon, chairm an oS
the sixteenth annual Purim Din­
ner of the Jewish S tate Employees
Assn. of New York has reported
th at more tickets are available
lor the M arch 13 affair a t
ria tn e r’s Club 100, 100 Norfolk
St., M anhattan.
Mrs. Rose Strow association
president- announced th a t the reg­
ular m eeting will be dispensed
with for M arch to give tim e to
celebrating Purim Holidays. To
assist Solomon and Mi’s. Strow
will be p ast presidents N athan
Rogers, A braham B. Shavelson
and Morris Gimpelson, the entire
sta fi of officers, also Louis
Berkower, vice-president, who is
authoi- of th e book “ W hat Do You
Think Of T h at D river’s Efriving?”
T he com mittee includes Doro­
th y Rapkine, Sylvia Miller, M a­
tilda Goldstein, A braham G arberg. Rose Feuerm an, Lillian
Zelman, Gladys Strlcoff, Samuel
Tannenbaum , Hon. Philip
P.
Wexner, B enjam in K iam er, Syl­
via G reenbaum , Florence Polett
and Mollie Goldstein.
I
*
I
I
♦
Y o u r
P u b lic
R e la tio n s
IQ
l y i E O J . M A R G O L IN
M r. M a rg o lin Is P ro f e s s o r o f B u s in e s s A dm in istratio n
t h e B o r o u g h o f M a n h a t t a n C o m m u n ity C olleg e a n d Adjur
IProfessor o f P u h lio A d m in i s tr a ti o n In N ew Y o rk Universlt
G r a d u a t e S c h o o l o f P u b lic A d m in i s tr a ti o n ,
N e c e s s a ry
R e a d in g
A L M O S T E V E R Y B O D Y ’S p u b lic r e l a t i o n s w a s showing
t h e s h o c k in g a n d c a n d id r e p o r t o f t h e P r e s i d e n t ’s Advia
C o m m is s io n o n C ivil D is o rd e rs .
F IN G E R S W E R E p o in t e d a t t h e F e d e r a l Governm
and
a relatively conservative
So again civil service is can
Congress: the natio nal welfare
in the middle, bearing the bi
system: the n a tio n ’s newspapers
of crititcism lo r which they
and radio and TV stations: the
N ational G uard, local police, not responsible.
NO MATTER HOW hard
m unicipal governments, labor u n ­
ions, private Industry, educators, civil servant tries to do his
real estate interests. Federal and honestly, efficiently and impa
sta te housing ojlicies, and, the ally, the bad public relations
biggest culprit ol them all—the all Uie groups a t whom fini
white racism w hich lives in the are pointed is bound to rub
h earts and minds ol all too m any on civil service.
Metropolitan Chapter
THUS, IT IS absolutely ne
Americans.
sary lo r th e civil servant to
Prosidents Conferred
CIVIL SERVICE people on
informed as to w hat the Pi
A presidents meeting of all mimiclpal, sta te and F ederal
d en t’s Commission discovered
chapter presidents in the M etro­ levels, are very m uch Involved In
w hat were th e scores of rec
politan Conference, in G asner’s practically all Uiesc areas and
m endations the Commission n
R estaurant, was held Monday, therelore are very m uch con­
to alleviate a very critical
M arch 11. Discussion concerned cerned w ith w hat th e P resident’s
uatlon.
concerted action to be tak en a t Commission found an d w h at cor­
THE SPACE OF this colum
a special delegates' m eeting on rective m easures are taken.
too lim ited to review all the
M arch 14 in view of recent deREGARDLESS OF how bad is
ings an d recommendations of
velopemnts regarding reallocation a law or how wrong Is a policy.
President’s Commissiion. Th
of clerks and th e Impasse of sal­ It Is the civil serv an t who Is
lore, for th e sake ol the fu
ary negotiations with the Gov­ called upon to enforce the bad
public relations ol civil ser
ernor.
law an d carry o u t tb« b ad policy.
we urge strongly as we know
th a t every individual in the
service get as much Informa
on this subject as is possible
THE CIVIL SERVANT wh
knowledgeable about the repoi
the P resident’s Commission
p r o p o s e d J U H 1 9 6 8 0 5 N IR A 1 PAY SCHEDUUS
add to th e good public relai
of civil service by using hii
her inHuence in lashioning
h iS
3
10-12
6 & 7
16-18
ture governm ent policies to
8&9
OVER 18
13-15
TEASS
viate th e conditions the (
JEkKS
JEASS
m sa
TEARS . ra u s
IXUB
m ns
mission h as uncovered,
JU ST TO GIVE our readej
$ li,llt9
$1*,1*08
«1*,538
|1*,668
$ h ,2 7 9
♦1*,798
♦1*,928
•5,057
h ea d sta rt on the Commission|
port, here are some of the
l,i9 6
lt,5 l3
5,078
1»,655
1*,937
5,360
5,219
5,501
cipal recommendations madej
• Creation ol two millij
5,060
lt,907
more Jobs, half in goverj
5,211*
5,521
5,828
5,367
5,981
5,671*
•f1
m ent and hall In private il
dustry.
5,1.87
5,658
6,000
5',829
6,31*2
6,68U.
6,171
6,513
• On-vihe-job tiaining
both pufeiic and private eij
6 ,U 5
■6 ,3 0 7
6,1*98
6,690
6,881
7,265
7,1*56
7,073
ployersj'
f
• S h arp i m p r o v e m e n t
.7,166
6,71*3'
6,955
quality ol th e schools
7,588
8,010
8,221
7,377
7,799
Ing disadvantaged chilcJr
through Federal funding
7,680
8 ,llt6
7,l4lt7
8,612
, ‘ 7,913
8,379
9^078
8,8U5
Improve, .the quality of teac
ing;
.8,213 ’ 8,1*70
8 ,i2 7
8,981*
9,21*1 '9,1*98
10,012
9,755
• Eptstbhsbment of naiio‘|
welfare standards;
9,026
9,308
9,590
9,872
10,1*36
10,151*
10,718
11,000
• E nactm ent ol an
houS
able Federal op«n
9,917
10,227
10,537
^
law}'*
f
^
.
■
'
'
10,8U7
11,1*67
11,157
12,087
11,777
l , . l i " l 9 i x ^ ^ l i o n decent N
the next 5
10,883
11,223
7 ,
1$
SERVICE
18,076
11,563
11,903
12,21*3
12,583
12i923
13*263
13,392
13,798
ll*,20l*
ll*,610
15,016
15,1*22
is ,m
15,81,9
16,329
16,809
17,289
17,769
l8 ,a iJ
18,729
18,61(1
19,206
20,1»39
21,098
21,757
22,835
23,596
2li,357
25,118
25,879
17
26,26U
27,139
?8,0li»
28,889
29,761*
18
30,239
2 2 ,lil6
19,771
23,075
26,61*0
20,336
23,73l»
27,l*(a
20,901
2l|,393
28,162
21,1*66
25,052
28,923
22,031
' '4
C reation of »
(Continued on
C lV lIi
S B B V lC *
A m e r i c s ’t
l o r P u b li c
W7
yioycei
j,
D aa« .
8*-.
D uane
BrldrePO*’*'
;.ll ,
St.. N—e w• I ' o ’’’' ’ gjan
Tel*l»ban»!
T u b ’ iahed
25,7U
•T
^
’K m * "
rr,,fst1»y 1
1M9
f; of
K b e r J r AudU Bur.»u
r*t
Uons.
tet
]\farcli 12, 1968
CI VI L
SERVICE
LEADEI
Page Tlire«
[jte r W i l d c a t W a l k o u t
'lo s e
R a n k s
je fp
E a t h
\e lls
O
O
y s t e r
A
n d
L e f s
t h e r /
B a y
C S E A
U
n i t
( F r o m L e a d e r C o r r e s p o n d e n t)
MINEOLA— T h e N a s s a u c h a p t e r , C ivil S e rv ic e E m p lo y e e s
has o f fe re d to d e f e n d th o s e m e m b e r s o f t h e T o w n o f
iter Bay S a n i t a t i o n D e p a r t m e n t w h o p a r t i c i p a t e d I n a n
,gjl. w ild cat w a lk o u t l a s t w e e k a n d c a lle d o n t h e m t o
n s t r a t e t h e i r support of the
b e n e f i t s program now under if any mem,ber were absent. D on­
ovan refused the offer.
iotation.
be chapter president, Irving
Mrs. Jeanson said the organi­
iienbaum, in a letter to zation could not recognize any
warned the employees person who was n o t elected dem ­
participated th a t th e “u n - ocratically by his fellow members.
lijied and im petuous’ action
Flaum enbaum said CSEA’s legal
atened to underm ine th e b a r- service would be available to de­
for all town employees, fend the men against th e th r e a t of
out half of the 240 em ploy- fines a n d im prisonm ent presented
the Sanitation D epartm ent by th eir violation of th e Taylor
[ised the advice of one m em - Law. “These men were misled by
Daniel Donovan, by calling
irresponsible
leadership,
and
cic, March 2. Later, the town
some were intim idated,” P laum ena court injunction and the
baum asserted. “We have asked
tout collapsed.
them to close rank s and to sup­
Couldn’t G et Elected
po rt their fellow employees, and
fcnovan led the unsuccessful
th e ir fellow employees will close
pnstration after he had been
ranks with them for th e benefit
a seat on the bargaining
of all,” Flaum enbaum said.
littee. CSEA im it president
jrlce Jeanson explained th a t
The u n it’s newly elected officers
bvan had failed to win elec- are seeking a 10 percent, $500
to the Board of Directors. m inim um across-the-board salary
Irtheless, she said, he had increase for all, time and one h alf
offered an opportunity to for overtime, 20-year retire m en t
on the board’s negotiations. and a list of other benefits.
CH A PTER
IN S T A L L A T IO N
—
W estchester chapter. Civil Service Employees Assn..
recently installed new officers. L eft to right, are:
Ronald Mazzola, fourth vice president; H arriet
CSEA-Sponsored Action
Levitt P raises
seph Dolan Appointed First
lector Of Local Government
airs By Employees Assn.
[ALBANY—J o s e p h J . D o la n J r ., f o r m e r C S E A f ie ld r e p utative fo r t h e A lb a n y a r e a , h a s a s s u m e d h is d u ti e s a s
^’s first D ir e c to r o f L o c a l G o v e r n m e n t A ff a irs .
The new p o s itio n w a s c r e a t e d b e c a u s e o f t h e g r o w in g
i membership in local governthroughout the S tate and Association. His full atten tio n will
for a fulltime coordina- l>e devoted to assisting local gov­
handle the problems in ernm ent employees in resolving
questions on recognition and nego­
lirea.
tiations and in dealing w ith issue*
a resident of Albany, will
concerning the S tate Public E m ­
Rate the activities of local
ploym ent Relations Board which
adm inisters the Taylor Law.
T he fath e r of five children, the
new local governm ent director
formerly worked as a term inal
m anager for a trucking concern
and was a shop stew ard for the
In tern atio nal Chemical W orkers
Union.
A graduate of Siena College in
Loudonviile, Dolan also attended
Albany Law School. He is active
in the Elks, American Legion,,
and is a memlier of the In d u strial
Relations Research Association.
He Is a veteran of Navy service.
T e n n is
hsE P H D O L A N , J R .
nent
chapters an d units
i^sslst them with their
e is working closely
field representatives
Ls hbargaining
by the Employees
bI
D
Bo
T y
s.
n d s
^
A p p o in te d
u n O A - J . Arthur Tennis, has
been nam ed to th e Statew ide
M ental Hygiene Com mittee of th e
Civil Service Employees Assn. T he
appointm ent 1« fo r « one-year
term .
Tennis is a member a n d p a s t
president of the U tica S tate Hos«
p ital chapter, CSEA, an d tte a su rer of the C entral New York
Conference. He is a carpenter in
the hospital’s m aUitenancs de­
p artm en t.
G ille ra n
Smith, secretary; Michael Del Vecchlo, presidents
Leo J . M agnotta, first vice president; Jam es Dl
Santo, second vice president; Jam es A. Bell, tre a s­
urer; and Tom Luposeilo, installing officer.
C h a p te r
H o ld s
M e e tin g O n L im ite d
P ro te s t
R e a llo c a tio n
Keeping Supplem ental O f S t a t e C l e r i c a l A n d O f f i c e T i t l e s
Pension
Paym ents
A LBA NY — S t a t e C o m p tr o l­
l e r A r t h u r L e v i tt l a s t F r i d a y
e x p r e s s e d p le a s u r e
a t th e
p a s s a g e b y t h e L e g i s la t u r e o f
a bill to extend for another year
the paym ent of supplem ental r e ­
tirem en t benefits based on th e
Federal consum er price index to
retired meml>ers of th e New York
State
Employees
R etirem ent
System. This proposal was both
sponsored and endorsed by the
Civil Service Employees Assn.
“I am grateful to learn th a t
the Legislature has adopted this
m easure,’’'L ev itt said. “I am con­
fident th a t th e Governor will sign
it promptly.
A LBA NY — C le r ic a l a n d o ffic e w o r k t i
.h o a r e m e m b e r s
o f t h e G e o rg e T . G i l l e r a n M e m o ria l, D e p a r t m e n t o f T r a n s ­
p o r t a t i o n c h a p t e r o f t h e C iv il S e rv ic e E m p lo y e e s A ssn . w e r e
a s k e d a t a s p e c ia l c h a p t e r m e e t i n g r e c e n tl y to s ig n a p e t i ­
tion protesting th e recent l i m i t e d ------------------------------------------------All petitions m ust be in CSEA
reallocation of clerical an d office
headquarters by M arch 22. T he
titles.
• T he petitions are being signed idea for the petitions was form u­
by members in CSEA chapters lated a t a recent meeting in Al­
throughout the S tate and will bany of the special CSEA com­
eventually be sent to Governor m ittee on the reallocation of cler­
Rockefeller, Mrs. Ersa Poston, ical and office workers.
president of the S ta te Civil Serv­
The Employees Association h as
ice Commission, an d T. N orm an protested the recent reallocations
H urd, S tate Budget Director.
fContinued on Page 11)
Former Albany City Judge
Named To CSEA Legal Staff
‘I t seems to me th a t such a
m easure is particularly needed
this year in view of the 3.4 percent
A LBA NY —S a m u e l J a c o b s , a f o r m e r A lb a n y C ity ju d g e ,
rise In the cost of living index
during the year,” he commented. h a s jo i n e d t h e le g a l s t a f f o f t h e C ivil S e rv ic e E m p lo y e e s A ssn .
J u d g e Jacol>s, a r e s i d e n t o f A lb a n y , is a m e m b e r o f t h e
“The paym ent of a supplem en­
la
w
f ir m o f D e G r a f f , F o y , C o n w a y a n d H o lt- H a r r l s w h ic h
ta l benefit based on th e cost of
living index will do m uch to al­ Is retained to handle all of t h e -----------------------------------------------CSEA, Judge Jacobs Joined th e CSEA sta ff on
leviate the problems imposed by
F ebruary 1 and is working for
Inflation on persons forced to live
CSEA with John D eG raff Sr.,
on a fixed income,” Levitt said.
chief counsel, Jo h n C. Rice, a s­
The bill which was given final
sociate counsel, and Seth Towse.
passage last week by th e Senate
Serving as Albany City judge
will provide a supplem ent to the
from 1956 to 1962, th e new CSEA
entire retirem ent allowance based
counsel has been engaged in th e
on the. change of the consumer
practice of law for more th a n
price index from th e year of
35 years. Judge Jacobs was an
retirem ent to 1967. Paym ents u n ­
assistant corporation counsel for
der the new measure will begin in
th e City of Albany from 1945 to
October. T he c u rren t supplem ent
1956 and again from 1962 to 1965
is based on the change In the
when he became first assistant to
price Index from the year of re­
th e City’s attorney.
tirem ent to 1966.
Judge Jacobs also served as a
I n addition t o »extending sup­
counsel to the Albany County
plem ental benefits an o th er year,
W elfare D epartm ent. A graduate
th e legislation provides coverage
of Union College In Schenectady,
for a group of retired employees
Judge Jacobs received his law
who did not previously benefit.
degree from Albany Law School.
He is a member of th e Albany
SAMUEL JA C O B S
(Continued en P a |« U>
Going Places? Bee Page 1ft.
/
C i v i l
|P«g« Four ^
i
U .
S .
N e w s
S e r v ic e
(Continued from P age 2)
G overnm ent Employees
(AFLCIO) w ith 30(5,792 employee*. The
other m ajor representatives are
the National Association of Letter
C arriers ^APL-CIO) with 192,045
employees, th e M etal T rade Coun­
cils (APL-CIO) with 80,454 and
the National Association of Gov­
ernm ent Employees (Independent)
with 44,447.
T he figures do not refer to u n ­
ion membership—only to the n u m ­
ber of employees covered by exclu-sive representation.
The Post Office D epartm ent has
the largest num ber of employees
under exclusive
representation
•with 608,833 workers covered—or
Ite m s
percent of all postal employees.
The next largest am ounts arc:
187,468 civilian employees of the
Navy D epartm ent; 123,546 In the
D epartm ent of the Army; 78,574
in the D epartm en t of the Air
Force and 72,246 In the Veterans
Administration.
86
Nominations
for
the
1968
Rockefeller Public Service Awards
will be received through April 30
by the Woodrow Wilson School
of Public and In tern atio n al Af­
fairs a t Princeton University.
Each year the awards and a
$ 1 0 , 0 0 0 check are given to five
persons in Federal service for
"sustained excellence In service to
?<FRVICB
the nation." T he aw ards are pre­
sented each December.
Civilian m en or women In the
executive or legislative branches
of governm ent are eligible for the
award. Normally, candidates m usi
have been in governm ent service
for a m inimum of 15 years and
be between 45 an d 60 years old.
N om inations m ay be made by
any past or present Federal em ­
ployee. T hey m ay nom inate an y ­
one other th a n themselves, mem­
bers of their family or a superior.
A small orange and black lapel
rosette has been designed to be
presented along with with the
award. The lapel badges have been
sent to the 1 2 2 p a s t w inners of
the award.
N e w T r a in e e
m
■
Have You B een T elling Y ourself fo r Y ears ■
I should have finished
; H IG H S C H O O L ?
*
m
Now you COR AT HOME IN SPARE TIME. If 17 o r over, w rifc
fo r FREE Boohlet an d FREE Ltssoii. A ppro ved fo r Vcferons.
■
m
AMERICAN SCHOOL. Dept. fAF.59
130 W. 42 St., New York, N.Y. 10036, IR 9-2604, Day o r Night
Send me your f r e e 56>pa9e High School Booklet
__
N a m e ______________________________________________ A g e ______
^ p t.-
Address
City __
State.
_Zip
OUR 71st YEAR
E llio t B. E d le y o f L ittle N eck,
L.I. h a s b e e n a p p o in t e d a s a n
a t t o r n e y t r a i n e e w ith th e W o r k ­
m e n ’s C o m p e n s a t i o n B o a r d o f th e
S t a t e o f N ew Y o rk , a c c o r d in g to
a n a n n o u n c e m e n t b y S .E . S e n io r,
C h a i r m a n o f t h e B o a r d . E d le y
h a s b e e n a s s ig n e d to t h e B o a r d ’s
No I n s u r a n c e a n d E n f o r c e m e n t
S e c tio n .
P lu m b e r E xam
W r i t t e n e x a m s h a v e b e e n g iv en
by t h e C ity D e p a r t m e n t o f P e r ­
s o n n e l t o 184 c a n d i d a te s fo r lic i e n s e d m a s t e r p lu m b e r p o s itio n s
i w ith t h e C ity .
I n t r o d u c i n g a n e w p r o d u c t in t h e G a r r a r d L i n e . .
th e
s y n c liro n o u s
w itii
m a g n e tic
IV Io d u le
SLx,
c a rtrid g e
p re -in s ta lle d ,
p re -m o u n te d
on
its
base
M ODULE
new
of
a
h ig h
new
tu rn ta b le
e x c e lle n c e ;
concept
in
c o n v e n ie n c e
o u ts la m lin fi a u to m a tic re c o rd p la y i i t f i u n i t c o m p l e t e w i t h it s o i v n p r e v ia tv h v d , h i^ h q u a lity n w g n e tic ca rtrid f^ f, p re - m o u n t v d o n its o w n c o o rd i n a t v d busv, p o w e r e d h y G a r r a r d ' s
m a tc h le s s
SYNC H RO NO U S
C ity
In s p e c to r
K ey
A n sw ers
W h e r e to A p p iy
F or P u b lic Jobs
The following direcUuQs
leu
where to- apply to r public
A re R e le a s e d
and hon to reach destlnationt
T h e C ity D e p a r t m e n t o f New fo rii City « a the
P e r s o n n e l h a s r e le a s e d t h e ssratem.
r a tin g key a n sw e rs fo r th e
F eb, 16 w r i t t e n e x a m f o r i n instltutlonal Inspector positions.
NEW CORK C 1 T ¥ - T h e appu,
The answers are:
cations Section of the New Yof^
1, B; 2, D; S, €*, 4. C; 5, D City D epartm ent of Personnel ti
8 , B; 7, C; 8 , D; 9, D; 10, B
located a t 49 T hom as St..
11, D; 12, A; H, C; 14, C; IS, A YorJt, N Y. 10013 I t Is ’ three
18, A; 17, C; 18, C; 1», A; 20, C blocks north of City Hall, on*
21, C; 22, D; 23, C; 24, A; 25, D block west of Broadway.
26, C; 27, C; 28, B; 29, D; 30, B
AppHcations: Piling Period ^
31, C; 32, B; 33, D;
Applications Issued and received
34, C: 85, C; 36, A; 87, D; 38, B Monday throu«rh Friday from |
39, C; 40, D; 41, B; 42, D; 43, B a .n . to 5 p.m., except Thursdoy
44, C; 45, A; 46, B; 47, C; 48, C tiom 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., and
49 B a n d /o r D; 50, A; 51, C St>turday from 9 a.m. to 1 2 noon.
52, D; 53, A; 54, C; 55, B; 56, D
Application blanks are obtain*
57, A; 58, D; 69, B; 60, D; 61. C able free either by the applicant
62, C; 63, D; 64, D; 65, C; 6 6 , B in person or by his representative
67, B; 6 8 , D; 69, A; 70, C; 71, C a t the Application Section oi tiie
72, D; 73, A; 74, B; 75, D; 76, C D epartm ent of Personnel at 49
77, A; 78, B; 79, A; 80, C; 81, B T h o m a s-S tree t, New York. N Y.
82, D; 83, C; 84, C; 85, A; 8 6 , D 10013. Telephone 566-8720
87, D; 8 8 , C; 89, D; 90, C; 91, B
Maned requests for appIicatloQ
92, B; 93, C; 94, A; 95, B; 96, B blanks m ust Include a stamped,
97, A; 98, C; 99, A; 100, C.
self-addressed business-size enTelope and m ust be received bj
th e Personnel D epartm ent at least
five days before th e closins date
Home Ec. Trainee
tor the filmg of apphcaiions.
Completed application formi
Key A nsw ers Given whlcb are filed by mall must b«
sent to the Personnel Department
R a tin g k ey a n s w e rs fo r th e
and m u a t be postm arked no later
F eb . 26 w r i t t e n e x a m fo r
hen the last day of filing or ai
h o m e e c o n o m is t t r a i n e e p o s i­ stated ctherw lse In the exam*
tio n s h a s b e e n r e le a s e d b y t h e ination announcem ent
City Depai-tment of Personnel. The
Tlie Applications Section of
key answers are:
the Personnel D epartm ent is new
1, A; 2, D; 8 , C; 4, C; 5, D th e Chambers S treet stop of the
6 , D; 7, A; 8, A an d /o r D; 9, B
m ain subway lines th a t go througb
10, C; 11, B; 12, A; 13, A; 14„ D
the area. These are the IRT 7th
15, C 16, D; 17, A an d /o r B Avenue Line an d th e IND 8tb
18, A; 19, A; 20, D; 21, C; 22, B Avenua l.lne. T h e IR T Lexington
23, D: 24, C; 26, D; 26, B; 27, D
Avenue Line stop to use Is the
28, A; 29, D; 30, C; 31, A; 32, B Brooklyn Bridge stop and the BMT
33, D;
QT and RR local's stop is City Hall
34, A; 35, B; 36, A; 37, A; 38, C Both lines have exits to Duani
39, B; 40, B; 41, D; 42, C; 43, B
Street, a short walk from the Per44, B; 45, D; 46, B; 47. C; 48, A sormel D epartm ent.
49, A: 50, D; 61, A; 52, A; 53, A
54, A; 55, A; 56, D; 57, C; 58, C
59, A; 60, C; 61, A; 62. A; 63, A
STATE— Room 1100 at 27a |
64, A; 65, B; 6 6 , C;
67. D: 6 8 , A; 69, D; 70, A; 71, C Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10 0 0 7 ,
72, C; 73, C; 74, B; 76, D; 76, B corner of Cham bers St.. telephone!
O orernor
Alfred |
77, B; 78, C; 79, A; 80, B; 81, A 488-6606;
82, D; 83. C; 84. B; 85, D; 8 6 , D E, Smith S tate Office Building and
The S tate Campus, Albany; Sul?«
"7, B; 8 8 . C; 89, B; 90, C; 91, B
750.
Oervesee Building 1 WesI
92, A; 93, C; 94, B 95, C; 96, B
Genesee St.; S tatf Office Building,
97, D; 98, B; 96, A; lOO, A.
Syracuse; and 500 Midtown Tower,
Rochester. (Wednesday only).
Candidates may obtain applies
tlons for S tate Jobs from loc»l
Retired Employees
offices of th e New York Stfctij
Employment Servlee.
CITY
STATE
SLX
a
Tue«<?ay, Marcli 72.
tFADEH
M OTOR.
If you are interested in a really fine
autom atic turn tab le, with every quality
feature fo r which G arrard is noted, b u t
would also like th e convenience of hav­
ing your u n it com plete w ith a pre8#‘lected cartridge and pre-m ounted
base, I lie MODULE SLX is your logical
choice.
Module SLX conies to you w ith a first
quality, high compliance diam ond stylus
magnetic cartridge which has been
m atched by G arrard engineers to the
ultra-low mass tone arm system of this
splendid instrum ent. T h e dynam ic tone
arm has been carefully counterbalanced,
and the tracking force accurately p re ­
set. Audio and AC lead-ins are attach ­
ed. In short, th e SLX is th e c o m p l e t e
record playing section of y our music
system—ready to plug into y our o th e r
components and play.
P A C K A R D E L E C T R O N IC S
33 U N I O N S Q U A R E W E S T
NEW YORK CITY
OR 4-4320
A ssociation Names
A City Hall liaiso n
W a lte r A. M c D o n a ld , a r e ­
t i r e d m e m b e r o f t h e N ew Y o rk
C ity T r a n s i t P o lic e fo rc e , h a s
b e e n a p p o i n t e d by G e r a ld
Parley, president of the New York
City Civil Service Retired E m ­
ployees Assn., as the association’s
City Hall representative.
McDonald will bring into his
new appointm ent m any years of
political experience — experience
which he gained in the political
arena, where he has been active
all hU life.
He was th e youngest deputy
collector of Internal revenue
when h« was appointed to the post
a t the age of 18 by the th en Presi­
dent Woodrow Wilson and served
in this position under President*
Wilson and Haxdlng.
McDonald la now a resident of
Brooklyn, residing In Bay Ridge
(Continued on Face 1&)
FEDERAL
FEDERAL — Second 0.S
Senrlct Region Office. News Build­
ing, 220 Eaat 42nd Street (at Jnd
Ave.), New York, N.Y. 10017, Ju«
west of the United Nattons build'
ing. Take the IRT Lexington
Line to G ran d Central and waW
two blocks east, or take the »hu
tie from Times Square to Orsn |
C entral or th e IR T Q ueens*Pi»^
Ing train from any point on
|
line to the G rand Central
Hour* arc 8.S0 a m
Monday through Friday.
° jjJ
Saturdays 9 a.m. to 1 P
>hone 573-6101.
Applicatlonir are also
able a t m ain post office'
the New York.
N.Y..
cne
y o rs. r.
*•. -Pos*
;
gfBoards of examiners
tui
tlcular I n s ta lla tio n s off
tests also may be
further i n f o r m a t io n
giopei)
tion f o r m s No
a r t r e q u ir e d with
*
l o t application for©**
,
'■A
CIVIL
fiif^llav,
Supply Board
^ds Civil Engrs.
City Board of W ater SupThe
j,as immediate provisional
.niiigs at $10,750 a year for civil
Jjnceis wltti New York State
JJpssional engineer licenses and
^rlcnce In w ater supply design
s t r u c t u r e and equipm ent for
construction
projects,
pjfed States citizenship U not
luired.
Benefits include four weeks of
(lual vacation, sick leave cumulirt to ISO dayf. free health and
gpital insurance, and 11 paid
irly holidays.
further details are available a t
B o a r d of W ater SuiH>ly’s adinistratlve ofllces, Room 1317.
Wall St.. New York, New York
)05 , phone (212) 566-4710.
EQUIVALENCY
U n itfu e
N o w
W o H c - S tu d y
O ffe r e d B y
BIdg. Supervisors
Acctpftd fo r Civil Svrvie*
Job Prom otiM
Building m aintenance supervi­
sors are needed in Suffolk County
a t $113 to $168 a week. Piling
ends April 17 for th e May 11
written test for appointm ent to
the positions which have no resi­
dence requirements.
High school graduation and
four years building m aintenance
experience are needed J o r the po­
sition. F^irther inform ation and
applications may be obtained from
the Suffolk County Civil Setrvlce
Commission a t County Center,
Rlverhead.
O thtr P u r p o f c s
prepare* )t*a to
k* t h e S t a t e R d u p . l t l o n
I> 6 |> a rrn i« n t
iim iniitinn
for
»
H tth
8 elio « l
D I |tlo m » .
ROBERTS SCHOOL
W. 57th S t, New y»rk 1»
PLaza 7*0300
iMse send me F R E E Informion.
W « u n d e rsta n d .
ime _________________________
W a lte r B . C o o k e
___________________
F U N E R A L S F R O M $250
Ph.
N a v y
L a b o r a to r y
Call 293-0700
to re a cn a n y of o u r
9 neignbor>K»od c h ap e l.
in th a Bronx, Brooklyn,
M anhattan a n d Q ueens.
The
■ ■
Save money on your
next visit to New Yorl
Check into Iho SheratonWlanfic Hotel! The special
weraton-Atlantic rate for all
government employees and
families will save you
money.
OFFICE HOURS: MON. TO F R l. 9:30 A.M. to t P.M.
— Closed Satardays. —
55
Y e a rs
^9.00 single
H4.00 double
f«at Location-Arcade con2 * f'otel to Penn Station
SJril “
Squart
Samo block as EmBuHding. Subways
C A R P E N T E R
CLA SSES MEET FRIDAY AT 7 P.M .
E xam O fF ieiolly O r d e r e d
S alary $10,587.50
CLA SSES N O W MEETING FOR NEXT EXAMS
MANHATTAN: T uesdays a t 1 :)5, S:30 A 7:30 P.M.
JAMAICA: W e s d n e td a y i a t 5:45 ft 7:45 P M.
GUADDS-ARMED
BOOD
ALL
n i
MANHATTAN: M ondays a t 1:15, 5:30 o r 7:30 P.M.
BEHEFITS
SH IFT S - STEADY
WORK
Op«MiR9 s all beret.
H IG H S C H O O L E Q U I V A L E N C Y D IP L O M A
CLA SSES MEET IN M A N H A T T A N A ND JA M A IC A
NO AGENCY FEE
M ust
Ituve p e r m it to
C a ll M r. L an e
c a rry
P R E PA R A T IO N FOR
pis to l.
PL 7 -9 4 0 0
S U P E R V IS IN G
Shoppers Service Guide
G « I^ T I m A u M i o r l z e d C S E A L i c e n s e P l a t * S U ™
5*^
S E lk
^OCm
S t..
OVKMt.
Tha
p la t*
*•
v h le h
fight under the hotel,
on your next trip to New
Atlantic^
Sheraton-
» . h 'S S :
which la m M throavb CSBA Headquartan.
aeUa tor S I. caa alao b * ordered th ro a tk
In M a n h a t t a n , M o n d a y s o r W e d n e s d a y s a t 6 P.M .
In J a m a i c a , T h u r s d a y s a t 6 :3 0 P.M .
P R A C T IC A L V O C A T IO N A L C O U R S E S :
Lleenaed by N.Y. S t a te — A n p re v e d f e r V eteran*
• AUTO MECHANICS
• DRAFTING
• RADIO, TV & ELECTRONICS
De Yoh H a v e a F o r tu n *
In Y w r P o c k e t
F«(l»ral, city
«.ll '*‘* '■ ” •5700.
* '» er« to n
C L E R K -S T E N O
C LA SSES MEET
from
Sh e r a t o n
o f E x p e r ie n c e In P ro m o tin g t h e
M o r e Than Half a M illion Students
Educafion of
P A T R O L M A N
H e lp W a n t e d - M a i*
Ca b d r i v e r s . F uU or P art Time. I f you
d on 't h a r e « Hack Lloen*o. we will help
you r e t one. SOS W. «S St.. NTC.
Tel.: 248-9434.
IN S T IT U T E
FIREM AN
To K eep In fo rm ed ,
F ollo w T h e L e a d e r.
EXECUTIVE Direclor lo r NYC Anti-PoTerty Asenc.v. Broads administrative and
•upervi.sory exparionc* required. Should
be fstnlUar with the poverty p ro jram .
College deyree. Salary S15.000. Send
resume to M n . Theresa Scotto. c / o
Sonth Brooklyn Community Anti-PoTerty Corporation. 78 Livinf»ton Streat
Brookl,vn, N.Y. 11301.
DELEHANH
'MANHATTAN: I I S EAST IS ST.. N e a r 4 Ave. (All S v b w o y t)
I JAMAICA: 89-25 MERRICK BLVD., b e t. J a m a i c a ft H llUida Avet.
H e lp W n t c d . M a le
Hr*'
O p p o r tu n ity
T h e U .S. N a v a l A p p lie d S c ie n c e L a b o r a t o r y in B r o o k ly n h a s a n n o u n c e d a f iv e - y e a r
w o r k - s tu d y p r o g r a m fo r p e r s o n s i n t e r e s t e d in a n e n g i n e e r i n g o r s c ie n c e c a r e e r . A p p lic a ­
tio n s m a y b e file d u n t i l M a r c h 31.
T u iti o n a n d r e l a t e d fe e s w ill be p a i d f o r y o u n g m e n a n d w o m e n d u r in g t h e A rs t a n d
fifth year of study a t a n accred­
ited college. They will also be able go to school for b o th semesters. half years—OS-4- ($4,995); a fte r
to pay for m ost o f the remaining In the next three years, they will completion of th ree -fo u rth s of th s
costs with money earned during altern ate full-tim e work with full­ credits for a degree—O S - 5 ($5,work periods a t th e Laboratory, time study. During the final year, 585).
Flushing and W ashington Aven­ students will complete th e ir re ­
Upon completion of th s pro­
ues.
quirem ents for a bachelor of sci­ gram, students will be appointed
C andidates m ust be high school ence degree.
a t th s OS-7 ($8,084) level for a
graduates by Ju ne 1968. T he posi­
Applicants m ust have a grade position a t the Laboratory,
tions OF>en are in the fields of average of 85 or ran k in the upper
S tu dent trainees who receive
electrical engineering, electronic one-third of their graduating financial assistance m ust sign a
engineering, m echanical engineer­ class. They m ust also rank In the declaration of Intent to rem ain
ing, chemical engineering, m etal­ upper third of the College B oard’s an employee of the D epartm ent of
lurgy, chem istry and physics.
scholastic aptitude test scores. the Navy upon graduation for one
D uring the first year, students Candidates with college work m ust year for each year of financial
will work during the sum m er an d have a B average or higher.
aid—normally for 18 m onths.
Most of the participating col­
T he laboratory employs 1,150
leges
are
in
the
New
York
m
etro­
civilians
and Is one of the m ajor
in v e s tig a to rs
politan area, though the Univer­ laboratories under th e Chief of
T he Suffolk County Civil Serv­ sity of M ichigan’s school of naval
Naval Material. Its electronics, m a­
ice Commission is seeking social
architecture Is Included. Brook­ terial sciences, physical sciences
service investigator candidates for
lyn College, City College of New and navigation divisions are in ­
positions a t $138 to $194 weekly
York, Polytechnic In stitu te of volved in top-priority Navy re­
with the County D ep artm ent of
Brooklyn and P ra tt In stitu te are search and developemnt work.
Social Services. Filing ends March
among those in this area.
Applications an d fu rth e r infor­
27 for the April 27 w ritten test.
S tu d en t trainees will normally m ation may be obtained by calling
Candidates m ust have a degree
enter the program a t the GS-2 the student trainee placem ent co­
in criminology or a related field
level ($4,108 a year). W ork per­ ordinator a t 625-4500, ext. 491.
and one years crim inal investiga­
formed later In th e program will C andidates should subm it a com ­
tive work. A New York driver’s
be a t the following levels: afte r pleted employment form 57 to the
license is also needed but there
one year of college train in g — laboratory’s civilian personnel o f­
are no residence requirem ents.
GS-3
($4,466); afte r two and one- fice.
Applications and further inform a­
may be obtained from the
Commission a t County Center,
Rlverhead.
DIPLOMA
Idresa
Pag« flT«
D u e f o r a in c o m e t a x r e f u n d ?
IVhy n o t t a k e It in S a v in g s B on ds
tion
— y o u r m o n e y w ill g ro w a n d grow .
SCHOOL
|nlTal*nry
LRADER
Eleclrioa! Instrnolors
Electrical appllcance repair In­
structors are being sought a t $ t.0 9
an hour for positions w ith the
City Board of E ducation's M an­
power
Development
T raining
Program.
Ciandidates m ust have a high
school or equivalency diplom a and
nine years full-tim e experience in
trouble shooting repair of elec­
trical appliances Includinf w ash­
ing machines, dryers, refrigerators,
broilers, toasters an d electric
irons.
Resumes of experience and edu­
cation should be subm itted to the
MDTP a t Room 814, 110 Living­
ston Street, Brooklyn, N.Y. 11201.
C u s to d io n J o b s
T he Suffolk County Civil Serv­
ice Commission has openings for
Telephon* O p e r a t o r
head and chief custodians at
Xhe written prom otion exam $5,500 to $7,000 and $6,500 to
given last week to 326 candl­ $8,000 respectively. A May 11
es for senior telephone operat- w ritten test is scheduled with
filing to end April 17.
posltlons with the City.
H ead custodian candidates m ust
have completed the eighth grads
SPECIAL BUY!
and have one year’s experience in
C O R V E TTE '6 6
building cleaning an d m a in te n ­
DR HT. AC. 4 SP. 4 2 7 EN G .
ance work. Chief custodians m ust
am f ' j r RADIO. POS TT RA CT IO N
L IK E N E W .
have completed high school and
have four years building m a in ­
LUBY
irrnt Klv(l./»9 Rd.
BO
3-7 7 6 0
tenance experience. T here are no
residence requirem ents.
Applications and further in ­
Frfim r* F o r V o a i
form ation m ay be obtained from
the Commission a t County Cen­
ter, Rlverhead. N.Y.
H IG H
V» W iek C e iir s *
S K I! V I r E
A ddlsg MaciiiNss
T y p e w r its r i
M lm .iographi
A d d ressiag M a e h ta ss
Ouarantae4, Aiaa Rantala. K ep ali*
A ll. LANGUAGES
TYPEWRITER C O .
O H e lM S-SOSA
I t s W. SSrd ST.. NEW r u R E 1, M.V.
FIND TILE! valua of youf coini In tiM
1968 editlOB of tho OKicial Black Book
o f U.S. Colm, from 1703 to data.
A wealth of o thar Information. Sood
$1 00 In oheok or money order, to :
L. Ray. O.P.O. Box 230*. New York.
CEMETERY LOTS
Baaufrful nen-faetarl«n mamorral part
in Quaant. On* to 12 ioubla lot*.
PrivoT* ownar. For furthar information,
writa Box S4I, Laadar, 97 Ouana St.,
N.Y. 10007. N.Y.
— Fcr
License
DELEHANTY HIGH SCHOOL
A c e re d lte d by i e a r d e f Regent*
ft*01 M errick Boulevard, J a m a ic a
^
4 C eflege P r t ^ r m t o r y C o -fd ttc a ffo n a f A e o i h m i e
H Ig k Sckool. S e c refo rfa f Train ing A vaifabla
f e r G I r l i a* an E lective Supplem ent. 5p »e ta l
P f p ' a r a t l o n In Science and M a th e m a f le $ f o r
S fad eet* Who Wish to Q u a lity f o r Toehnologleat
mad In g ln o o r in g Coifeges. D rl v o r Edu ea tloa C ou rt aa.
F o r I n f o r m a tio n on All C o u r s e s P h o n e G R 3-690 0
CIVIL
Page
i
E
A
tEADER''
LETTERS T O
T H E ED IT O R
— GouiH
l
SERVICE
. d
e
R
W
Americans largest Weekly tor PuhUe Employeea
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations
P u b lish e d e v e ry T u esd a y b y
LEADER PU B LIC A TIO N S, IN C .
212-IE ebm an 3-A010 U r g e s G o v e r n o r T o
t 7 Duane S ir c e t, New Yerii, N.Y. 10007
Jerry F in ke lste in ,
Letters to th e editor m ust be
signed. Names will be wfthheld
from publication upon request.
They should be no longer th an
300 words and we reserve th e right
to edit published letters as seems
appropriate. Address all letters to:
T he Editor. Civil Service Leader,
P u b lish e r
Tuesday, Mair.T,
m
C iv il S e r v ic e
L a w
&
You
By W ILLIAM G O FFEN
(Mr. Goffen, a m em ber of the New York Bar, teaches law n
College of the City «f New York, Is the author • ! many booki
articles and co-authored **New York Criminal Law.” )
L o o k In H is O w n
C ity E d ito r B a c k y a r d
V irg il
C arol F . S ra ilb , A s s i s t a n t E d i t o r
Editor, T he Leader:
N . H . M ager, B u s i n e s s M a n a g e r
A c c id e n t D is a b ilit y R e tir e m e n t
An observer of the New York
scene
would
suggest
Governor
Advertising Representatives:
T O E S T A B L IS H t h e r i g h t to a c c i d e n t d isa b ility
Rockefeller take a careful look a t
A L B A N Y — Joseph T . B ellew — 303 So. M anning B lv d ., I V 2>5474
m
e
n
t, t h e e m p lo y e e m u s t sh o w (1) t h a t h e Is Incapacitate
K 1 N (;S T 0 N , N .Y . — Charles Andrews — 239 W a ll S treet, F E d era l 8-8350 his own backyard If he wishes
to sally forth across the land of­ f o r t h e p e r f o r m a n c e o f se rv ic e , (2 ) t h a t s u c h Incapacity
10c per copy. Subscription Price $3.00 to m em bers of th e Civil
fering his services as a good t h e n a t u r a l a n d p r o x im a te r e s u l t o f h is g o v e r n m e n t s«rvi(
Service Employees Association. $5.00 to non-members.
a n d (3) t h a t h is d is a b ility w a s n o t t h e r e s u l t o f willful ne
caretaker.
So fa r th e Governor h as been lig e n c e . I n t h e r e c e n t c a s e o f M a t t e r o f M e rig o n e v. lowei
’
T U E S D A Y , M A R C H 12, 1968
fortunate in his relationship with (N ew Y o rk L a w J o u r n a l , D e c e m b e r 29, 1967), Ju d g e Har
his S tate employees—b u t Is the B. P r a n k h a d to r u le w h e t h e r t h e e m p lo y e e ’s in ju rie s we
honeymoon about to end with an t h e n a t u r a l a n d p r o x im a te r e s u l t o f t h e p e r f o r m a n c e of
explosion? There are rum blings of d u ti e s o f h i s p o s itio n .
B a c k T o T h e T a b le
work stoppages, even If they take
P E T IT IO N E R , A N ew Y o rk C ity f ire m a n , w a s undeniat
IT H a n h is to r ic r u lin g by t h e C o u r t o f A p p e a ls, t h e place under other names.
p
h
y
s
ic a lly I n c a p a c i t a t e d f o r t h e p e r f o r m a n c e o f h is dutl
And S tate employees feel th a t
C ivil S e rv ic e E m p lo y e e s A ssn. w a s c o n f ir m e d b y th e
aa
t
h
e r e s u l t o f I n ju r i e s s u s t a i n e d in a n a u to m o b ile accidei
have
ju
st
grievances.
As
to
wages,
h i g h e s t c o u r t in t h e S t a t e a s t h e so le b a r g a i n e r f o r m o s t
H
o
w
e
v er, h e w a« d e n i e d a n a c c i d e n t d is a b ility pension
th
e
Governor
It
offering
a
low
S t a t e w o rk e rs , a d e s ig n a tio n o r ig in a lly g r a n t e d t h e m l a s t
an d unacceptable eight percent t h e g r o u n d t h a t h is I n ju r i e s w e re n o t t h e r e s u lt of
N o v em b e r.
increase—low an d unacceptable s e rv ic e b e c a u s e t h e a c c i d e n t d id n o t o c c u r w h ile h e was
T h e c o u r t ’s d e c is io n c a m e j u s t In tim e , f o r t h e n e w
because this will be th e first raise d u ty .
fis c a l y e a r b e g in s in a m e r e t h r e e w e e k s a n d t h e r e is m u c h
in two years, a period of marked
A T T H E T IM E o f t h e a c c id e n t, t h e p e titio n e r , a fli
t o b e d o n e in t h e w a y o f n e g o tia tio n s b e tw e e n t h e R o c k e - inflation. While dram atic pen­
g
r
a
d
e f ir e m a n , a lle g e s t h a t h e w a s a s s ig n e d to perforin t|
. fe lle r A d m in i s tr a ti o n a n d t h e E m p lo y e e s A sso c ia tio n .
sion advances have been made
B e c a u s e o f a d is r u p ti o n o f ta lk s , t h e G o v e r n o r p ro p o s e d In other agencies, the G overnor’s d u tie s o f b a t t a l i o n c h ie f.
T H E P E T IT IO N E R a t t e n d e d a fire a t 12:16 a.m . on tJ
a n e i g h t p e r c e n t s a la r y I n c r e a s e o n h is o w n . O b v io u sly , budget said n o t one word about
t h i s w a s n o t t h e w ay p a y ta l k s w o u ld h a v e e n d e d h a d Improving S tate pensions, which d a y i n q u e s tio n a n d r e t u r n e d t o E n g in e C o m p a n y 321 a t B
t h e r e b e e n p r o p e r n e g o t ia t io n s a n d S t a t e w o rk e rs h a v e e v e ry clearly could stan d equalizing and a .m . H e s o u g h t s le e p in g a c c o m m o d a tio n s a t t h e firehou
r i g h t to e x p e c t t h a t t h e f i r s t o f f e r w ill n o t r e m a i n t h e f in a l updating. How will the employees b e c a u s e h e h a d t o r e t u r n to d u t y In a fe w h o u rs , but
rea ct to this?
f a c ilitie s w e re a v a ila b le . H e t h e r e f o r e w e n t to his^mothej
a n s w e r to t h e i r p a y d e m a n d s .
Governor Rockefeller still has h o u s e t o o b t a i n s o m e sle e p . A t 8:50 a .m . o n h is way b a k
F o r tu n a te ly , n e g o t ia t io n s h a v e b e e n r e s u m e d n o t o n ly
to take care of these problems to E n g in e C o m p a n y 321, h e s u s t a i n e d d is a b lin g accident]
o n w ag e h ik e s b u t a lso o n I m p ro v e m e n ts i n r e t i r e m e n t a n d
w ithin th e S tate family If his In ju rie s .
o t h e r b e n e f its , a l l s o re ly n e e d e d to k e e p p u b lic e m p lo y e e s
arm our Is to reta in Its sheen.
a b r e a s t in t h e c u r r e n t t i d a l w av e o f I n f l a t i o n a f f l i c t i n g
T H E C O R P O R A T IO N C o u n s e l o f t h e C ity o f New YoB,
J. R. BENSON
t h e c o u n try .
M anh attan s u p p lie d t h e r e s p o n d e n ts w ith a n o p in io n t h a t a s a geneij
• • •
W e w is h b o t h s id e s w ell a n d p a r t i c u l a r l y h o p e t h a t
r u l e a n e m p lo y e e “ Is n o t I n ju r e d In t h e c o u r s e o f employme
h a s t e w ill n o t m a k e w a s te In t e r m s o f p r o p e r e f f o r t . T h e
i f t h e i n j u r y o c c u r s a f t e r h e c o m p le te s h is d u tie s on
R e a llo c a tio n S o u g h t F o r
R o c k e f e lle r A d m in i s tr a ti o n h a s h a d C SE A d e m a n d s f o r so m e
w a y h o m e o r o n h i s w a y t o h is p la c e o f e m p lo y m e n t.”
tim e . W e t r u s t t h e y h a v e m a d e u s e o f - t h e u n f o r t u n a t e d e ­ G r a d e 4 K e y p u n c h e r s
JU D G E F R A N K , h o w e v e r, o b s e rv e d t h a t t h e Corporatlj
la y s in n e g o t ia t io n s to c o m e u p w ith so m e f a ir , e q u ita b le Editor, The Leader:
C o u n s e l’s o p in io n o v e rlo o k e d t h e f a c t t h a t t h e petitior
A ttention all S tate civil service
a n d j u s t p r o p o s a ls f o r t h e CSEA n e g o t ia t in g t e a m t h i s w eek .
w a s r e q u ir e d t o b e o n d u t y t w e n t y - f o u r h o u r s a day. A1
employees. The S tate workers
would like to know w h at’s hap­ t h e C o r p o r a tio n C o u n s e l d id n o t c o n s id e r t h a t th e petitio
fir’s t r i p to h i s m o t h e r ’s h o u s e to o b ta in s le e p m a y have be
pening, Gov. Rockefeller!
A
F o r w a r d
S te p
We’d like to call all S tate em­ in t h e c o u r s e o f h is e m p lo y m e n t u n d e r t h e w o rk in g con^
a y o r J o h n V. L in d s a y h a s in c r e a s e d , t h r o u g h e x e c u ­ ployees’ atten tio n to the latest tio n s p r o v id e d f o r h im .
IN T H E C A SE o f S h a f r a n v. B o a r d o f Education,
tiv e o r d e r t h e m in im u m s a la r ie s o f r e g is t e r e d p r o ­ step m anagem ent h as tak en to
create
dissention
among
employees
r
e
m
e
d ia l r e a d i n g t e a c h e r s u s t a in e d in j u r ie s In a n automob]
fe s s io n a l n u r s e s f r o m $6,400 to $7,000 to a id r e c r u i t i n g e f f o r ts .
and keep a portion of us in fi­ a c c i d e n t w h ile d r iv in g t o w o rk . H e r te a c h i n g sp e c ia lty i
T h e $7,000 f ig u re b r in g s th e s e p r o f e s s io n a ls I n to lin e
nancial bondage while liberating q u ir e d h e r to t e a c h a t tw o d i f f e r e n t s c h o o ls w h ic h were i
w ith s a la r ie s b e in g p a id I n p r iv a t e a n d n o n - p r o f i t h o s p ita ls
others.
r e a d ily r e a c h e d b y p u b lic t r a n s p o r t a t i o n . O n t h e day of t
w ith i n t h e C ity o f N ew Y o rk .
As grade four employees who
a
T h is a c tio n b y M a y o r L in d s a y is a f o r w a r d s t e p to c o m ­ were n o t reallocated, we find it c c id e n t, s h e t a u g h t a t o n e s c h o o l a n d t h e n h a d to visit t
b a t t h e s e rio u s s h o r ta g e o f n u r s e s In N ew Y o rk C ity h o s ­ difficult to believe th a t m anage­ o t h e r s c h o o l f o r a f a c u lty m e e tin g .
T H E W O R K M E N ’S C o m p e n s a tio n B o a r d fo u n d th at t
p ita ls . I t w ill c e r ta i n ly a s s is t t h e w o rk b e in g d o n e by t h e m ent would give a select few
c o m b in e d e f f o r t s o f b o t h t h e C ity P e r s o n n e l D e p a r t m e n t ’s this award, while leaving the rest a c c i d e n t o c c u r r e d w i t h i n t h e sc o p e o f t h e t e a c h e r ’s emplo
R e c r u i t m e n t D iv isio n a n d t h e N u rs e r e c r u i t m e n t s e c tio n o f to “make do” w ith w hat we have. m e n t b e c a u s e s h e w £ s r e q u ir e d to u s e h e r p e rso n a l aul
We’re all subjected to th e same m o b ile i n g o in g t o a n d f r o m w o rk . T h e A p p e lla te Divlsl<
t h e D e p a r t m e n t o f H o s p ita ls .
taxes, living expenses, etc.—there­ T h i r d D e p a r t m e n t , a g r e e w i t h t h e B o a r d b e c a u s e by
fore why add fuel to th e fire by n a t u r e o f h e r d u tie s s h e wjls r e q u ir e d to h a v e h e r auton
providing a "select” group of em­ b ile a v a ila b le a t h e r e m p lo y m e n t s itu s . A ccordingly,
SO C IA L
ployees with “aid ” (reallocation) w h ile d r iv in g w a s a r is k o f e m p lo y m e n t.
B S l r ii
while leaving th e rest of us “high
u t iw r
IN R A L P H V. B o a r d o f E d u c a tio n , a w idow o f a C
TiiiS r '
and dry.”
e m p lo y e e s o u g h t a n a c c i d e n ta l d e a t h p e n s io n fro m the N
W hen will m anagem ent begin
Y o rk C ity E m p lo y ies* R e t i r e m e n t S y s te m . T h e
to correct the gross inequities and
HAS B££N ESTABLISHED FOR
neglect Instead of abusing dedi­ a g a i n w a s w h e t h e r t h e e m p lo y e e ’s in j u r ie s w ere susta^^
w h ile h e w a s p e r f o r m in g a d u t y i n t h e c o u rs e o f h is emp
cated workers.
STATE f u n d KEYPUNCHERS m e n t a s R e g is t e r o f t h e C ity o f N ew Y o rk . A t th e tim e o
New York, N.Y. I n ju rie s , t h e e m p lo y e e h a d l e f t a c a m e r a s h o p w hose ser
l l SIGNATURL____________________ ill
• • •
h e u tiliz e d f o r d e v e lo p m e n t o f a m ic ro film process o
FOR SOCIAL SECOWTY fliPOStS * NOTfM DWTfOWI
c
o r d in g i n s t r u m e n t s o f c o n v e y a n c e a f f e c tin g th e title o
U rg e s P e n s io n C r e d i t
U.l. DII»AflTMffNT OP
MIAtTN. leuCATION. ANDMLrAMK
p r o p e r ty .
.
fOCIAl MCtffllTYAOMlNI«TiATI«H
F o r F e d e ra l S e rv ic e
OA8IMBU
T H E L O W E R C o u r t d is a p p ro v e d t h e d e a t h
Are my earnings for last year end of the year an d notify the So­ P r i o r T o C i t y J o b
th e g ro u n d t h a t th e a c c id e n t o cc u rre d a fte r
J
likely to affect the num ber of cial Security A dm inistration then Editor, The Leader:
w
h
ile
t
h
e
e
m
p
lo
y
e
e
w
a
s
o
n
h
is
o
w
n
tim
e
.
T
h
e
Cour
•hecks I could receive?
how much I earned?
The new City pension plan is
If your earnings in 1967 exceed
For m any beneficiaries having great, b ut it will n o t benefit p e a ls , h o w e v e r, s t a t e d t h a t I t c o u ld n o t re a so n a b ly
t h a t t h e m o m e n t t h e e m p lo y e e l e f t t h e c a m e r a
flSOO for the year, you may not to pay back benefits w hich were
certain older employees unless
be paid all your benefits. The not due them generally works » such employees receive credit for d u ti e s t e r m i n a t e d . T h e r e t u r n to h is office o r to his
• x a c t am ount of your benefits will hardship. For th is reason, the So­
prior Federal service tow ard City n e c e s s a r y t o t h e d u ti e s w h ic h b r o u g h t h im
tfepend upon your total earnings cial Security Administration preto t h e c a m e r a s h o p . T h e r e f o r e , t h e r e w a s n o subs a
retirem ent.
an d when you worked.
fers to pay benefits based upon
d e n c e to s u p p o r t t h e c o n c lu s io n t h a t t h e acclden
Assemblyman
Fusco
prefiled
* • •
your estimate a t the beginning of Bill No, 1340-A which would have a f t e r t e r m i n a t i o n o f t h e e m p lo y e e ’s performa^^
W hy c a n ’t I jui»t wait until the the year to prevent (»v«rpayments.
(Continued on Page 10)
(Continued on Page ^0)
E d ito r
Swing, A s s o c i a t e E d i t o r
P aul K yer,
Joe Deasy, J r.,
W
M
Q u e s tio n s a n d A n sw e rs
E
CIVI L
,(Jay, March 12, 1968
fue«
jgx Commlstiener
I ^j^y.^<3overnor Rockefela n n o u n c e d h e wiU send
h S e n a t e for confirm ation
‘ n o m in a tio n
of Sam uel E.
of New York City as m em f the State T ax Commission,
P I term ending Dec. 31, 1972.
"Xe g a l ”
n o t ic e
Vo 5676, 1966. — CITATION. —
PFOPf'K OF THE STATE OF NEW
Bt the Grace of Ood Free anil
Hniit To the heir* a t law. next of
rt s t ' r i b u t e e * Of JE A N N ETT E OAKV rtecpn-ed. if living and if any of
^ he
*o *h*i*“
•®i. iiiHtribiiteed, leKateei, executors,
nsiraiois. assipneei and B U c c e s s o r a In
, wl)o«e names are u n know n and
1 hp a s c e r t a i n e d afte r due diligence;
?;• aKK HEREBY CITED TO SHOW
L .l a v b e f o r e t h e S n r ro ra te ’s Court,
t
Yor k C o u n t y , at Room 504 In t h e
r U nf R e c o r d s In th e County of New
i l i i New Y o r k , o n
April 2 , 1 9 6 8 , at
AM
* certain w ritin r dated
tic '
which h a s been offered
LmbatP b v W ALTER FIDEI.ER . r e .? jt D.’S Elm Road. Briarcliff Manor,
ahoiild not b« probated as the last
•nil T r « t a m A n t . relatin«r to real and
nal p r o p e r t y , of JE A N N E T T E OAKT
who a t the tim e of h er
ih » r e s i d e n t of 340 West 6 5 th Street,
ihe C o u n t y of New York, New Y ork.
A ttested
and Sealed, F e b ru a rr
HON. S. SAMOEL DiFALCO,
Surrogate, New York C o u n tr
WILLIAM 8. MULEN,
Clerk.
,bert k . r i c e
Kait 4*211(1 St.
Tork. iN.Y.
Civil
S e r v i i e
SERVICE
LEADEE
Television
Fire D epartm ent train in g p roTelevision program s of Interest
to civil service employees are
grum. '‘Portable M etal Ladder."
broadcast daily over WNYC, 9:00 p.m.—New York R eport—
C hannel 31. N ext week's program s
Lester S m ith hosts interviews
are listed below.
w ith City officials.
Mvndajr, M arch IS
Tuesday, M arch I I
4:00 p.m.—Around th e Clock—
N.Y.C. Police D epartm ent tr a in ­ 4:00 p.m.—Around th e Clock—
ing program : "Crime Scene
N.Y.O. Police D ep artm ent tr a in ­
TacUcs”.
ing program : “Crime Scene
6:00 p.m.—Com munity Action—
Tactics” .
Exam ination of health an d wel* 7:00 p.m.—W h a t’s New In Your
fare services.
Schools—C urrent
inform ation
about the City's schools.
7:30 p.m.—O n th e Job—N.Y.O.
Paft 9mnm
W«dnesd»F« M arch 20
4:00 p.m.—A round th e Clock—
N.Y.O. Polio* D epartm ent tr a in .
Ing iMrofram.
5:30 p.m.—W h a t’s New I n Your
Schools.
7:30 p.m.—O n th# Job—N.Y.O.
Fire D epartm ent train in g pro­
gram .
S:00 p.m.—In th e Law L ibrary—
"D rafting Sales C ontracts in the
U niform Commercial Codes.”
Thursday, March 21
4:00 p.m.—A round th e Clock—
N.Y.C. Police D epartm ent tr a in ­
ing program.
7:30 p.m.—O n th e Job—N.Y.C.
Fire D epartm ent train in g pro­
gram . “Hose S tretching.”
10:80 p.m.—C om m unity Action—
E xam ination of health and w iU
far* services.
Friday, M arch St
4:00 p.m.—A round the Cloeic-*
N.Y.C. Police D epartm ent trata«
ing program .
10:00 p.m.—In th e Law L ibrary—
"D rafting Sales C ontracts In ttM
U niform Commercial Codes.”
Saturday, M arch Si
7:00 p.m—Com m unity Action—
Ted Thackrey hosts program .
7:30 p.m.—O n th e Job —N .T .a.
Fire D epartm ent train in g pco«
gram . "Hose Stretching.**
B e n e fits
fo r P rotectio n
. . . s o m ore
w ill b e secu re.
R esea rch
fo r P rotectio n
. . . so m ore
w ill live.
98B-8S47
LEGAL NOTfCH
THE PE O PLE OF THK
OF NEW YORK. By the Grace of
Free and Independent,
Attorney General of th e State o f
TorU, Timophey K udatsky, The City
New York, Departm ent of Social S«rTtie City of New York, D epartm ent
HoKpita^fi. Mid T h e distributee* of
^Bondzy. also know n aa Jenny Bondze
Jeiine Bondze, deceased, whose names
post office addresses are u nknow n
cannot after dilirent inauiry be a«irtiiaed by the petitioner herein, b e in r
peitoni Interested a« creditors, distrlor otherwiM in th e estate of
nil Bondzy. also known aa Jenny Bondxe
Jenne Bondte, deceased, w ho a t the
of hor death was a resident of
East 86th Streat, New York, N.Y.,
Send G R EETIN G :
the petition of T he Pu b lic Adliilritor of the County of New York,
riot his office at Hall of Records,
■too, Borourh of M an h attan , City
County of New York, tm adminisir of the grooda, chattels and credits
, Hid di'opased:
|T oo and each of you a"e hereby cited
ihow cause before the Surrogate's
lurt of New York County, held at the
kU of Records, in th e County of New
pk. on the 0th day of April 1908, at
o'clock in the forenoon of th a t day,
tbe account of proceedlnga of The
lie AdminiHtrator of the County of
Tork. as adm inistrator of th e rood*.
t(I> and credits of said deceased,
paid not 1)8 judicially settled.
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF. We haye
"(d the seal of th e S u r ro ra te ’a Court
of the said County of New York
til be hereunto affixed.
M) WITNESS, HON. S. SAMUEL
DiFALCO, a S u rro ra te of o u r
»aid County, a t th e County of
New York, th e 7 th day of Feb­
ruary, in the year of o u r Lord
one thousand nine hundred and
•ixty-eigrht.
C!crk of the Surrogate's Court
William S. Mullen.
tation.
I.EGAL N O TICE
[ON. — t h e PE O PLE OF TH E
OF NEW YORK. By th e Grace of
•rtf'* and Independent. To A ttorney
«ral of the State of New York, Michael
Klizabeth Lotrue, Jo h n Loirue,
^ ? u e , Marjorie Losrue. Williatii
s. Huffh Losrue, Hugh Lorue. Mary
Oomto, Elizabeth McGettiean, MarUd. v, Hiieh Scott, Sally R erurdi.
Losrue, Joseph Lopue Michael
uni
Logne, Jam es J-. Logrue,
w1
o* Great Britain, Consul
of Irealnd, WaWer B. Cooke. Inc.,
V*® .'liBtribut^ o f , Cormac Lo^uo.
Bi.
Logile and Carmac
. ■ deceaeed, ,whoM names and p o s t
L JMrewps are uffknown and Cannot
nil
Inquiry be aocertained by
peiitioner herein, b e in r th e persons
creditors, dfatributeas o r
b
estate of Cormac Lorue.
( j
C. Loarue? and Cartnac Lo*
■yeaned, who at the tim e of hie
(«i K “
•'esldent of 223 East 1 7th
Ifci, n "
N.Y., Send GREETIN G :
petition
of The x^Diic
Public Admin/V# *u
Aamm*
■ hi.
County of New York, haT \ Bnrn.I'u *■'
Recorde, Room
Hij
9*
of M
M aanhattan,
n h a tta n ,
City and
and
ton,,
" ^ o '’k, as adm in istrato r of
• cliattels and credits of said
,
^
It claims the lives of more children
aged four to fourteen than any
other disease . . . Today, Leukemia
Is incurable, unpreventable but not
Invincible. Men, women, children
. . . executives, laborers are
open targets for this disease.
This month. The Leukemia Society
will ask your support for funds
to continue its program of research
which, hopefully, will lead to
both a preventive and cure. Research
means knowledge . . . ninety
percent of all that is known about
Leukemia has been learned through
research in the last ten years. When
you are called upon, make a
contribution to your local Chapter
of the Leukemia Society.
NEW YORK STATE'S
NO. 1 QET'WELL CARDSI
hereby cited
V ^ before fhe S u r ro ra te ’e C ourt
u
Hall
County of Newi York,
day of April 1968, at ten
of th a t day.
proceedings o f The
_i *’''1 creil
^
THE STATEWIDE PLAN Is a health
care .protection plan . . . devised to
meet the specific needs of those
In public employment. The combina­
tion of benefits provided through
Blue Cross, Blue Shield and Major
Medical makes it among the most
liberal programs of Its kind. For
example, your Statewide Plan ID card
Is accepted by every hospital In
the world. That means world-wide
protection with no red tape.
Should you need hospital care. Blue
Cross pays the cost for 120 days of such
car'e including room' and board. It
also pays for operating room
expenses, general nursing care,
drugs, medicines and many other
services.
Blue Shield provides for surgery both
In and out of the hospital, anesthesia,
in>hospital medical attention and
maternity benefits.
Major Medical. . . provided by The
Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
. . . covers catastrophic illnesses
as well as day to day expenses such
as home and office calls, prescribed
drugs and medicines, private duty
nursing and all professional and
hospital services.
These are the benefits offered by
THE STATEWIDE PLAN that are not
available under any other contract
for which public employees In New
York State are eligible.
See your Personnel or Payroll Officer
for complete inib|mfltlon^ ^ o iit how
ybU may join TH| 3tATEWlbE fiLAN.
Leukemia is commonly referred
to as a disease of the blood but it Is
actually a disease of the tissues
which produce the blood cells. One
American Is stricken with Leukemia
every ten minutes. . . one person dies
from Leukemia every forty-five
minutes. Approximately 70,000
Americans will be afflicted each
year . . . annually. Leukemia kills
almost 15,000 people In our country.
Of til.
too*!*. oh»t-
.WHKRuor. w . h .T .
Surrogate's Court
County of New York
affixed.
“ ON. S. SAMUEL
•aid Cnnn* * Surrogate of o u r
New
County of
C rv
l a y o f Feb.
thou.-n!!
°
hundred and
to ^
u
S- Mullen,
* • ! the Suri'ogate'e C o u rt
Clerk
B L U E
C R O S S
S y m b o ls
of
S tc u fiif
B L U E
S H IE L D
A llA N V • l U r r A t O • J A M iiT O W N . N IW Y O « K . l O C H K T I * • SV IA C U SE . UTICA . WATIRTOWM
TH E STATEWIDE P U N -
COOROINATINa OFFICE ~ 1218 WESTERN AVENUE, ALBANY, N. V.
CIVIL
Kaffe Elp[h»
SCKTICC
44
4ft
46
47
48
90.0 49
89.* ftO
.......... 89.8 «1
89.8 5 2
88.6 S 8
88.5 64
88.4 66
88.3 66
88.0 67
87.7 68
87.7 6 0
87.0 6 0
87.0 61
86.6 02
86 5 63
86.8 64
85.6 6 5
............ 85.5 66
85.2 67
85.2 68
85.2 69
85.0 70
84.4 71
84.4 72
84.0
83.5
83.2
1
83.0
2
82.6
3
82 5
4
82.5
5
82.0
6
82.0
7
8
81.7
Eligibles on S ta te an d C o u n ty Lists
B I.E C T R O M C
7
«
»
JO
J1
32
J3
14
IB
Jfl
17
18
J»
SO
tZl
22
23
24
25
«fl
27
28
20
SO
31
82
S3
COM P
O FER
TRN K
34 Ree<ly R Albany
...............
10
11
13
18
14
15
10
17
18
18
SO
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
.3 4
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
.8 3 .3
,8 1 .6
'Vincent J I ^ u d o n T ill * ................... S9.C 86 Ford E R rn aielaw
Dafan ii P O«weco ..............................MI . 6 86 Sokoloff I J a m a ir a . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 1 . 4
.8 1 .S
Brciflin G A l b a n y ................................., 8 8 . 8 87 Shafer N Albany ..........................
RU 'kert
T A lb a n y
.........................87 .8 88 Konie/ewakl M Albany m . . . . . . . . 8 1 . 3
.8 1 .1
89
EnKliRh
B
Troy
.........................
Mntll P A lb any ...................................96.8
.8 0 .4
f t u r a k T W a te r v l ie t ........................ 94 .1 40 DeWoir C SyracuM . . . . . . . . . .
.79.1
..........
..
41
Sheldon
N
Netvtonrllle
S tarlfa
R O n e o n ta
.......................... 82.1
.7 8 .1
GeiK^r ' S A lb an y ...................................0 1 .0 42 Alexander 8 L ockport ...............
.7 8 .0
43
Ricci
T
W
aterford
........................
I’ulHnnky P A lb an y ........................ 8 0 .7
.7 7 .«
44
B
Ip
m
a
B
kly
n
.............................
T e al D A \e r i ll P k ..............................90.8
.7 7 .1
46
Barlkow
ski
T
Schencctady
..........
S h e r r y G Menancln ................................ 00.1
.7 6 .5
47
K>'ck
M
Albany
.............................
AlmeiOa A Hx .......................................8 9 .(J
F ran K fl! a F Coeynian ....................89.3 48 Howe G Schenectfidy .................... . 7 6 . 5
.76 .4
40
Rocken<<!ire
P
Albany
....................
S h ay P V a la lie ...................................88.5
Weikh r .SfhcnectHdy .........................88.2 50 Kandoian H W atervliet ............... .7 6 .4
.7 6 .3
51
W
h
i
m
p
le
W
T
r
o
y
.............................
S now R A lb a n y ...................................88.1
Pinliow»>Ul L Scheneclatly ................. 87.8 52 Harte R Elf>mer* ......................... .76.2
.76
.1
Hick* W A lb a n y ..............................87 .4 53 Nairle R Bu ffal o .............................
Goad N A lb an y ...................................87.3 54 A<lnmK B Albany ............................. . 7 5 . 7
.75.5
.............
M nlline
P L e b n o n Ctr ...................8 6 . 6 55 FaFolino L Delmar
A<l«ni»
G .^l)>any ............................. 86.1 56 Zink B Schenectady .................... . 7 5 . 2
W ojnar
R S chen e ctady ................... 86.3 57 Kwiatkow^ki 8 Scottia ............... .75.1
Bailey A NYC ........................................85.2
CHIKF INfiTIT 8 F T » 8VPVR
Ziiy ar J
H ud son
..............................85.1
1 Gero M Wae*atc ......................... 06.1
Ravida
A A lb a n y ............................. 84 .9
2
And
lew W Howelli ...................... 06.0
Dzinnki
S R c n t s e la e r ............... , . . . 8 4 . 2
3 Y a le * N
Syracim e
................................ 05.6
Crall J T ro y ........................................ 83 .8
4 Mp.'iiip.v D P e r r y p b i i r p
................. 93.7
M o b rm n n n H S ch ene ctad y .............. 8 3.7
5 Kennedy J NegconFet .................... 93.5
f’alin A T ro y ........................................ 83.4
6 Rowe K BinRhamton .................... 9 3 . 3
H o p k in r J A lb an y ..............................83.3
Kolf> K A lb an y ...................................8 2 4
7 .Sntilh J OKdenabnr* .................... 91.8
8 Heiierl»in R M t Morria ............... 01.3
S m e t h n r f l D S ch en e ctad y ...............82.3
9 lyohar B Bx ............................. ........ 90.2
P a n i o ’o B Bx ........................................ 82.3
AM PEX
D u t t o n R C o T a r P ...................
E c rm a a B P o u rh k a a p iU . .
W a a t & G o w a n d a ..........................
B e im e l J
S t o n y P | ...................
M o rto n
W
Seneca
...................
K ayea
W a M aic
......................
K lin rm a n F M id d le to w n . .
M ahoney
N ew H a rtfo rd
H iffcin a O W a a ia ie
..................
C o le
B
B u ffa lo
. . . . . . . .
C o lem a n R B ro c k p o rt . . . .
H actin ra
E
R om e
...................
U m atetter J N ew H a rtfo rd
C l o t i i A R o m e .................................
M e rritt J
P earl
R ire r
..
M o ffit
M
Sonyea
..................
C a!enda
R
W ilto n
. . . .
A t o H R L y o n s .................................
W alch R R o n k o n k o m a . . . .
F a llrse n
E
M t
M o rria
..
B u tch er R
D a y to n
..................
C a r l a e n D S t a t e n l a l ..................
N e iin e r
P
B u ffa lo
..................
Foxx
L
W illa rd
..........................
B ailey L
O vaquara
..................
M organ
F
M ech an icrll
..
K o lo d y J O ra n K e b u rr
. . . .
F rid le y D M a c d o u s a ll . . . .
O le e n
O C a l v e r t o n ..................
Sw anson 6
M t M o rria
..
G ray
H
.S y raciifie
..................
T e l l e r D P i n e B u e h ..................
Z>
R
42
Pagano
P
43
D eR orbo
M t
8
M o rria
U tic a
Tuesday, TVfarcK 12,
LEADER
. . . .
. . . . . .
.fli.s.
MiMer J Buffalo . . . . . . . .
LaitoTaki W . Bic ............
Barry M Brentw ood . . . .
Kirk 1 L a ck aw an n a . . . <
Lovely L Verona Bcach
D u jat R Ctl lelip ..........
Pemberton 6 W illafd . . .
Uhiendorff W ForeatTille
Arias 8. M illertnn
Wrisley R P la ttsb u rg h . . .
MscKenney T Lancsfcter
Binirham H Rlchfld Spem .
Brown 6 OeWego . . . . .
Foote D Joh n so n City .
E c k elb erter D Conklin .
Jackson B P a w lio r . . .
Clark W Walden . . . < .
Lewis K Rochester . . .
Worden A Wingdale . . . .
Perfetti J C o r t l a n d .............
Miner E Wilton ...............
Richarde W O gdensburr .
MsGuire D In te rlak e n . . .
Paige M Buffalo ...............
Shaw J Mnrcy ....................
Miller R Albany ...............
Smith T H u n t ..................
Steyens B NYC
.............
Fu ller B Poukhkeep*-!*
.81 .0
.81 .0
.80:8
.80.6
.80 .5
.8 0 ..3
.80 .0
.7 9.8
.79 .7
.7» .«
.79 .6
.7 9 .6
.79 .4
.7 9 .3
.7« .2
.78.0
.7 9 .0
.7 8 .9
.7 8 .8
.78 .0
.78.2
.78.1
.77 .7
.77..3
.76 .8
.76.5
.78.1
.76.7
SR EDITORIAL CLERK
Steinhilper J Ghent .
K ahn J Setaiiket . . .
K uperman S Albany . . .
Jones G Buffalo ..........
Oleary C Glen* Falls .
Conte M .Mbnny ..........
Sehl J Albany .............
RoBenberg E W antagh
.. 93.2
..9 1 .4
..9 0 .4
,.9 0 .4
,.9 0 .0
,,8 9 .6
,.8 7 -6
, .87.1
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8B.3
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
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. [ i | ’
.....................................'
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J
R om e
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M enschel S C om m ack
S a s s o P S t a t e n 1*1 . . . .
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(ConUuned on pare
LBOAL
9
)
NOTUB
F n . E No. 307, 1PB8,— SDPPLEM knt^
CITATION. — TH E PEOPLE Ok“ T ui
STATE OF NEW YORK. By the Grace" f
God Free «nd Independent,
To file heirs at law. next of kin
distributees of JACK AMSKL, d c f a ,^
if livinir and if any of Iheni hp dead )J
their neirs a t law. next of l;in,
butees, leiraleea, execulorg, adtninisii-.Ufir*'
assiifnees and successorB in iiilcrrM w(,o«
names are unknow n and cannot he
tained a fte r due dillirenpe.
YOU ARE HEREBY CITKD TO iJHOff
CAUSE before the Surrogate's Court, New
York County, a t Room 50^t in the Hall
of Records in the County of New York
on April 30. 1»68, a t 10:00 A M , why
a t^ rtain writing- dated Novcinher 6ih
1055, which baa been off<‘rpd for i)robai«
by HELEN YOUNG. re«idinc at l.sjg
Walton Avenue, Bronx. N< w York, should
not be probated as the List Wi!|
Testament, relating: to real and personM
property, of JACK AMSEL, Dfcea.nil, who
wa« at th e time of his doath a reMdenl
of 216 East 12th Street, New York
City, In th e County of New York, .New
York.
Dated, Atteeted and Sealed,
March 4th, 1968.
HON. SAMUEL J. SILVEItMAX,
(L .S .)
Surrogate, New Y’ork (’ountjr
Wiliam S. Mullen,
Clerk
DELSON & GORDON. ESQS.
230 P a rk Avenue
New York, New Y ork 10017
212 MU 6-8030
N ew York
S tate
Employees:
N O W W
SOLID STATE
STEREO TAPE
RECORDER
9 J o n « a C Bklyn ..........
1 0 N e v llt A A lb a n y
...............
11 8 h e Ito n ’ O
K enm ore
1 2 S ciillin
E
S to n y
Bk
|
13 K enney
M
G re e n b u ih '
1 4 Z ab riftlcle D D e l m a r
1 6 C a e t l e B N « w B a l t i m o r e ...................................9
16 B rengel
M
B k ly n
........... ......................... ...
r am
m t on n
.......................... .. ..'I
1 7 O ’B r i e n J
B i n cr f e m
18 W u ra tlin
L
R e a d se la e r
.■.«e
10 Zem m el
R
J a m a ic a
.711 a
20 T hom as D
A lb an y
K e ^ c d n ip
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ALL-STEREO MUSIC CENTER
985 Music Center..$599.95
830 Speakers
99.95
Reg. $699.90
n
^
S te re o
ta p e
p u rch a s*
T»p«
cl
$ 3 9 .9 5
any
A m pex
P |a y e r-R « F o r< l« r.
CITY, CALL CH 4-0700.)
S h e ia to n H o te |
& M o to rIn n £ '
CIVIL
TneeJfly^ Murcli’ 12, W68
SERVICE
Digibles
(Cmitlnaed t r o m P a r e 8)
11 P esM J W alworth ..........................77.4
1« M erola A Staten I t l ....................... 77.1
SC PT IKD IN V E S T LABOR EX
1 Cohen B Jackson Qt«
..............100.0
» FiBhman S Flusing ............................ »».0
S Thompson R Bklyn ............................ 95.0
4 D a rlin r F C an a n da isua ...................94.0
..................... Sa.O
« Wolf M Bklyn
• Kaplan M Qceamide ........................90.7
7 0«M BaB B A rdsU r .............. . . . . K 9 . 0
• Penner K Bklyn ................................. 88.9
• Hurchinaon J W atervliH ..............8«.3
10 H a rd inr R K«nmore ....................... 88.0
11 Cohen E Bklyn ................................. 85.6
IS Levy H Bx ........................................ H5..J
l a 'Tobias J Queens YiU ...............
14 Ellia M Antoria ...............................«81.»
I V Greenxpan n IMainrisw
........... 80.6
1 9 Ray J B in rh am to n ............
7(S.H
anniversary
sale celebration
C H IEF STEAM ENO
1 Nanieny A Epeertsville ...................99.5
a McKee T Buffalo ................................ 99 0
3 Januszkiew icz K Cheektowagra . . . . 8 8 . 6
TMRilWAY MAINTNC ASST
1 Sepello J Kirkville ........................... 9 0 .S
9 W hittem ore C C hatham ...................87.4
3 Gilbert C M amaroneck ...................86.8
4 Lanphere E Ripley ................................. 85.!)
6 Benton R Newbnrith ....................... 84.9
985 Music Center
AMPEXHU-STEREO MUSICCENTER >3>sp«.k«.
............
83.9
7 Sponnble R Am<iteri]nm . . . . . . . . 8 1 . 3
8 Meslck J Catsklil .................
...7 7 .8
9 Johnson L Newtonvli^e
.7 6 6
1
2
3
4
ASST TOLL E4 1 I P MAINT 8PV
Bu«chnian R A u b u r n ............................ 82.1
Davis W Phelps ................................. . .7 9.7
K apner M Catdkill
.................. . . . 7 9 . 0
Temkftvich W S n j d e r
.............. .77.4
CH IEF ACCOUNT CLERR — E R IE CO.
^ Bradovlch K L a c k a w a n n a ...............
SUPERVISING A m ilS S IO N S CLERK
1 Phelps A Buffalo ...................
Hl«
DIK OF .MTR VHCL PLD OPEK
1 .Gimpelson M J am a ic a
.............. .94 .0
Rochester ..................... 85.7
5 Solodow W Albany ..............
85.‘i
4 R o rers N T onkers .................
82.2
a Schechter A
C H IEF ACCOINT CLERK
1 Donohue M Bnffalo ■............................ 8S.7
2 Miller E Bnffa?o ................................. 80.2
SENIOR P A R l.M U T I'E L EX A M IN ER G -t7
1 Podmajprgky G HartdOale ........... 10«4
2 Lewis M Want,iRh .................................975
3 Reozko Z E Meadow ....................... 925
4 Bode J Merrick ...................................... 885
6 Nugent J Bklyn .............................. . . . 8 2 2
1
2
3
4
$599.95
j f i z m
<699.90
1
2
3
4
5
B
7
8
9
SR ELEC COMP Ol’ER
JoiiFs E Albany ................................Sfi i
Culver G Troy ...................................... 8.T.7
Hayden J .^niisferdam ........................<!l.9
Bott C Troy
................................. .7 8 .0
B urt W Atlaniont ................................. 77.9
Wednenbine C Albany ......................7fi.7
Euechlei
D Schenectady ..................7tM
Reed R Rcnhselacr ...............................75.8
.\m m erall J Amsterdam .................7.'».8
1
2
3
4
6
6
SI1PV MTR CHAKRIER INCESTGTK
Gorman L Caniillus ........................... flO 3
Meehan F Albany ................................. 90,1
Ginimo A Franklin Sq ...................... 88.9
Chapman H Seneca ............................ 80.3
Valentine D F r a n k f o rt ..................75.8
Verde A Bklyn ......................................'4 . 0
HIGHWAY MAINTNC EXGR —
E R IE COUNTY
D n ia r I Buffalo ................................90 7
Balia R Buffalo .................................. 88,8
Selmpnsberger J Buffalo ..................83.6
Kase M VV S e n e c a ............................... 83.6
SR TAX ACOITNT CLERK —
E R IE COUNTY
1 Wild 0 Buffalo .....................................86.0
1
2
.3
4
S r P E R V IS lN G P A R I - M I T I E L
EX AM INER G-20
Nugent C Seaford ...............................957
Dineen J Meadow ..........' . ................... 9M0
Connelly A New H jde I ’k ...................840
Coffina« T Bklyn ................................. 805
sum
M OD EL 9 8 5 /8 3 0
81) PV ELEC COMIp O PER
1 Cbizzolin C Menands ...................... 9.').I
2 McNab
L Rexford .......................... 85.7
a Gordon
P Albany ........................... 81.»
4 Brundege G Schencctady . . . . . . . . 80.4
6 Keyes T Albany ................. ..............'9..'*
6 - Milos S Troy ......................................79.7
7 Louch G Plainview .........................79.2
» Disisto D Niverville
...................78.6
9 Snnkeri) R Albany ............................ 77.0
10 Gapp T Schrnc'-tady ...................... 'ib.l
0 Sand F A ltaniont
iion txMM to >9 CMidldatcs for
f r « m o f i« i i <i x o m t
The City D ep artm ent of P er- power cables foraman poaltlona
^nnel h«« given w ritten prom o- with the Tranait Authority.
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Y E A R 'S 1 0 B E S T
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-N .Y .
VNntlen for the Screen and Oirecied by
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S O IM
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LINE OF B E a & HOWELL
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8 7 th S t r e e t , N e w Y o rk , N e w Y o rk
EN 9 -6 2 1 2 : 6 d a y s p e r w eeic M o n .-S a t.
— SANDYDENNIS- KEIR D l i m - ;\NNE HEW'OOI)
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T w ic e t h e b r ig h t n e s s w ith
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CIVIL
Page Ten
U tic a T o
C re a te
A L B A N Y --C re a b io n o f t h e
p o s itio n o f p e r s o n n e l d ir e c to r
o f t h e C ity o f U tic a h a s
re c e iv e d th e e n d o r s e m e n t of
the 1 5 0 0 ,0 0 0 -member Ctvll Serv­
ice Employees Association.
“Utica Mayor Dominick Assaro has told us th a t the person
filling the proposed position would
OIXY
KXAM COMINO SOON
FOR
CLERK
$i.:w v o
A N f»
u r
INTENSIVE C O U R SE
COMPLETE PREPA RA TION
C la s t
M « ttt
S a tH rd o y*.
^
N oon
■e q in n ifig M a rch 16fh
W iilc
II- l ‘li(inr> f o r
In frii'in iilio n
E a s te r n S c h o o l * AL 4 -5 0 2 9
T31
B R O A D W A T f,
P le a se
O L F .R K
w rite
N .T .
in«,
8
(n p ar
free,
8
N ew
P e rs o n n e l D ire c to r
coordinate an effort to establish
a much-needed salary plan for
th e CHty’a em ployees/' a CSEA
official said. "T his Is one of
CSEA’s m ain objectives for U tica
employees, and if the person who
filled the new post would fa ­
cilitate its im plem entation, then
we are very m uch In favor of
Its creation," the Employees Asso­
ciation .spokesman said.
Assaro, who assumed office last
Jan u ary , said in a recent news
release that he would ask the
City’s Board of Estimate and Ap­
portionm ent to create the position
effective March 1, 1968. Asaaro
stated th a t “the personnel direc­
tor would be responsible for pre­
paring a job classification and
salary plan for 1969.”
The Mayor also pointed to
“serious Inequities in the salaries
paid to City employees,” and “dis­
crepancies In job classification.”
th f
S C I lO O /
course.
[ q u lv a lm ii
Name ...............................................................
^Addros* ........................................
Boro
DIPLOMA
.............................................P Z . . . . W
Thu N .Y.
S ta t* d ip lo m a
Is fh » U g o l o q u l v a ltn t
o f g r o d u a t lo n fro m a 4y o a r H igh S c h o o l. It it v o lu o b l* to
n o n - g r a d u a t o i o f H igh S ch o o l fo ri
Do You N e e d A
• Em ploymanI * Pr«m «ti«n
• A dvanced fd u c c rtU n il Training
• P e rta n a l S allifv clU n
CfluiVafency
for cItU senrice
for personal •atisfaetioo
VIU la
and
B rln r
DELEHANTY
IIB
PlcuBc- write me free about tba Hivb
IclionI Kqulvalencjr class.
Name
Boro
• I'O l
IS
Coupon
M a rrlc k
A dd reli
4 am alc»
AJmh Im On* H.S. Biiulif. Chit
D e c rie s D is re g a rd
the effect o f giving City em O f L ow er G ra d es
ployees credit f w ^ p rio r Federal
In C l e r i c U p g r a d i n g
service.
I urge everyone with prior F ed­
eral service to write to their State
S enators e n d S ta te Assembly­
men to support this most im port­
a n t legislation. I n addition. Reso­
lution No. 11S4 is pending In the
City Council providing for the re­
quired hom e rule message. I t is
urged th a t employees w rite to
City Councllmen to pass this
resolution.
In m y case, with the eight years
of prior Federal service, I would
have a total of 26 years of serv­
ice and would be entitled to a t
least 55 percent of my last year’s
salary. W ithout the oredit for eight
years of prior Federal service, my
pension will omly amount to
21.6 percent of my last year’s
salary. I am to old, to work even
additional years to make a total
of 25 years. Also, I am too old
to work two additional years and
w ait 5 years to receive the higher
pension.
MRS. IXJD.
M a n h attan
IF . . . you want to halp quali*
fiad applicants start • luerativo
caraar in tha fastatt-growing
fiald of data proeatting —
..
I a»r.................
............................................... P Z . . . L 1
Letters To The Editor
IF . . . you ara willing to l»o
trained and want high oarningf
and prattiga in tho odueation
fiald—-
M a n h a tta n
B lv d ..
—
Call Mr. MMrpfcy Ro^Utrar Af
8 6 7 - 8 5 3 0
SANITATION
for
L I A R N T O D R IV E
T R A C T O R T R A I L E R ,.
TRUCKS o r BUSES
•
CO ED
Days, Evot.. Sat.
LEARN TO PR06RAM
CH 2-7547
N o w y o a c a n le a rn th e c o m p u te r prog ra m m in f
more
IB M
In d u stry
and
C la s s ifie d I n s tr u c tio n
M a le & F e m a le
t o fill a 1 7 , 0 0 0
s ta rtin g p o sitio n . I n th re e y e a rs y o u c an
KEY P U N C H
Y e s , c o m p u t e r p ro g r a m m in g is a w a y
$99 FOR 60 HOURS
to m o v a a h e a d fast. Y o u c a n b eco m e a n
m P A R E !!
Ju st a few h o u ra o f h o m e stu d y a w eek.
P h o n e: C H 2 -7 5 4 7
W o rld 's Largest* A u fo S chool
J
OM
r- ■ ■ :
I -name
hom«.
________________ _
Editor, The Leader:
T he recent reallocation of cleri­
cal positions is considered by
clerical employees a t Miatteawici
S tate Hospital to be most unjuil:
and unfair. A one-grade increa^i
in all clerical positions would hav#
alleviated th e situation, althou^U
n o t resolving th e problem.
The raise did not include the
lowest-paid clerics who work foe
tlie S tate at poverty level salarlei.
Several thousand grade 3 clerks
work for a salary of approxi­
m ately $3,650. T ypists and maU
supply clerks work for the same
salary. H iis salary condition i«
ridiculous an d it Is impossible t<»
recruit com petent people a t this
level.
W hy did th e D epartm ent of
Civil Service discrim inate agatn'ili
th e grade 3 employees? Was it
an oversight, o r done with in ­
tention?
Something should be done Im­
m ediately to alleviate this unfdiic
condition.
The reallocaion of one grado
was given in m ost cases, to grada
4 and grade 8 positions. All grid#
8 positions, such as senior records
medical clerk, were n ot Included.
Most o ther clerical grades w-Jt®
not included.
W here is th e justice? Matte-i*
wan chapter of the Civil Servloa
Employees Assn. goes on recot 1
th a t a ju s t solution of the typist
and m ail and supply olerks
elevated to grade 4; And that thJ
other titles be so adjusted. Or id*
7 and 8, Including the senior
m edical records clerk.
Also a ju st and fair raise
these lower grade? would ba *
m inim um of $I,00() In piacj of
tlM eight percent granted by tti»
Governor.
NICHOLAS S. FERRONfip
p resid en t
C I T Y ______________________________________________
{-OTATE^
_
FREI
L IP E T IM I
PLACEM ENT
S E R V IC E
A C C ID E N T S
and
A D JU S T C L A IM S
Earn
S200
w e e k (F u ll t i m e )
D IR E C T O R Y
Keypunch. T ab w ir ln t .
C o m p u ta r
P ro rra m m in c .
I 'U E F A R A T I O M
B 'O E C I V O . S E R V I C E T E S T S . S w i t c h b o a r d . E l e c t r i c . T y p l n * .
NCK
B o o U k e e p in t
m a c h in s.
H .S .
E Q U IV A L E N C Y .
D ay
A E ra
C lassea.
I
FREE BOOKLET - BE 3-591 0
ADVANCR iUSINESS INSTITUTR
I I W. i t a d St.. N.Y; 1. N<Y;
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LEGAL SECRETARY
FREf
M A C H IN E
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S t» n o (.v p e
P ro fessio n als”
A p p ro v ed b y V . S. Govt, fo r Foreign Student* ^
E nroll N O W f o r A p ril C lasses!
>
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tu tu ra .
No
aga
or
a d n e a tlo n
re q u ire m e n ta .
F re a a d v iso ry
ola« « n M > t
s e rv ic e . C all n o w .
M atteaw an chapter, CSEi'
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or caU
IBM C O U R SE S
to d a y
I A t » R E S 8 ________________________________________
M EDICAL SECRETARY
B R
I
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y e a r y o u 'e a s b a tra in e d
hours
APPVO. FOR FOREIGN STUDENTS
U5W.14thSt.,lttSi7Av«.,KYC
IN S T R U C T IO N
—
w ith o u t
o r te c h n ic a l
ii^ -d a m a n d p ro fe s s io n a l p r o g r a m m e r w ith
1f«7 EOUirMiNt
llO O fl ilUTO DRIVING SCHOOL
TRUCK a n d B U S
M O N RO E INSTITUTE
hom e
e a r n $10,000 • y e a r . . . o r e v e n m o re!
T R A C T O R T R A IL E R
S C H O O L
at
n e e d 60 ,0 0 0 p r o g r a m m e r s . I n le s s t h a n a
$275 FOR 180 HOURS
LOW cosr
p ro fa sa io n
train in g n eed ed .
COMPUTERS
SPECIAL RATES
-
C O M P U T IN G
l e a v i n g y o u r JM>. N o m a t h
IB M /^ 6 0
(C L A S S 3 )
.
interview.
A T H O M E !
A n r n t i I f S t i t i D t p t t t E 4 « catlM
t i r V tt« f» n t T taia ttirs u m u
Mm Mstwtyclii
' P.O. Truck Practice
$12.00 per hr.
personal
L E A R N
• Jik AtfviSMy Stniei 'sm iMtet*
• littro ctiii M Fiirtii* k AMiriua X tri
MEN
a
(Continued from Page 8)
financed In stitu te of Urban
Com munication to train and
educate journalists In urban
affairs an d to bring mora
Negroes to journalism ;
• Decentralization of city
governments to make thetu
more responsive to the needi
of the poor and placing poiica
officers, w ith a higher per­
centages of Negroes, in th«
slums to ac t as advocates
o t the people as well as ke©^
ers of th e peace.
WE DO NOT hesitate for »
m om ent recom m ending th a t evsiy
olvU se rv a n t study the Cotum ission’s report, which totals mora
th an 700 pages of text and 32
pages of photographs In a paper­
back book. The future of civil serv^Ice public relations makes it wot bii
the special effort.
(Continued from Page 6)
COUNSELORS
INSTITUTE i
S t.,
F u rth e r Inform ation and a p ­
plications m ay be obtained from
the City D epartm ent of Person­
nel’s Applioation Section.
Full o r P art Time Counselors
Nam*...........................................
.............................................................
Iddre^c ..............................................
Ea«t
C andidates m u st be high school
graduates w ith three years ex­
perience In housing m anagem ent,
warehouse m anagem ent, inspec­
tion of supplies and building fa ­
cilities or supervision of building
m aintenance a n d repair or ele­
m entary school graduates with
five years such experience.
E D U C A T IO N
SIS j
E a s t . II S ch o o l AL 4 -5 0 2 9
721 Broadway, N.Y. 3 (at 8 St.)
The City D epartm ent of Person­
nel Is seeking Civil Defense shelter
inspectors for vacancies in the
D epartm ent of Public Works. Fil­
ing ends M arch 28 for the June 4
w ritten test for the position*
which pay $6,750 to $8,550.
L a w C o lu m n
Write or Phone for Information
P . R . C o lu m n
For Shelter Inspector
(Continued from Page 6)
duties.
IN DECIDING the Merigone
case. Judge F ran k held th a t it was
arb itra ry and capricious to have
refused a disability pension on
the basis of the facts in the re ­
cord.. Judge P ra n k accordingly re ­
m anded th e m a tte r for a deter­
m ination w hether the petitioner
was injured while actually In the
perform ance of duties required of
him in the course of his employ­
ment-
•r OUR autsr
t; WccUn Courot! A p p i ovrd by
N.V Htulf Rduonllon n<T>l.
File UnM Mareh 26
A w ritten exam will be given
this week to 137 candidates for
housekeeper positions, according
to the City D epartm ent of P er­
sonnel.
att«n«l lo U tnlu ittaB or
ENKOr.L NOWt Ciasse* start
In Manhnttan, Mond»r> March 18tli
Ne«t« Honilnjrt A WMlReHdayg at
or 7:.'I0 P.M .
In Jamaii-a, Tiiesda.r, March 19th
Meats Tueadayi A T h a rtd a rt
at B:4.n or 7 :4 5 P .M .
D ip lo m a
T itle
H o u fe k ee p er T est
O u r S p c c i a l I n to n t iv o 5 > W « ik
C o u rt* p r o p a r o i f o r o fflctol o x a m t
c o n d u c l t d a t r o g u l a r In lo rv o li b y
N . Y. S ta t« D i p t , o f Educotiort.
H ig h S c h o o l
Tuesday, March J2, 1968
LEADER
Assaro said th at th e personnel
director would be responsible for
recruiting, promoting and re ­
warding, according to a salary
plan.
Representatives of CSEA, which
has about 280 members in the
City departm ents, met with Mayor
Assaro recently to discuss th e im ­
plem entation of a salary step
system.
S. Samuel Borelly of the Utica
CSEA unit, who is chairm an of
the Association’s county executive
com mittee, viewed the adoption
of the plan by 1969 as “realistic.”
The plan would cover incre­
ments, longevity and hicentive
provisions.
S t)
about
SERVICE
wo
|
2-0002
2 S 9 BROADW/ty
(tralo
'w
to- Chambers St.. Broookljrn Bridge o r City Hall Stattoa«>
--
CIVIL
Tuesday, Marcfi^ 12, 1968
SERVICE
TF4DER
Paffr ETevea
C o u r t O f A p p e a l s U p h o l d s Westchester County PERb
C S E A A s S f a t e B a r g a i n e r Members Are Appointed By
(Conttaued flrom F a fe 1)
posal of eight percent, across-theboard for all employees.
The Employees Association is
eeeking a 20 percent raise w ith
a $1,000 m inim um ; a fully retro ­
active l/6 0 th retirem ent plan;
T\holly-paid health Insurance and
c a £ h paym ents for unused sick
leave, am ong o ther benefits.
Dr. Theodore C. Wenzl, CSEA
president, and Solomon Bendet,
chairm an of the organization’i
salary committee, said they plan
to continue to negotiate on the
basis of those dem ands listed
above.
Two Miajor Factors
At Leader press time, plans
were being m ade for quick re­
sumption of negotiations because
of two m ajor factors: CSEA m ust
repo rt an y progress o r lack of
it to a special delegates meeting
here on M arch 14 and th e new
fiscal year begins April 1. only
three weeks away.
I n w riting th e m ajority opinion
for th e C ourt of Appeals, Judge
Charles D. Breitel noted:
C o m m is s io n e r M
H o n o rs 4 6
A id e s
u rp h y
T a x D
e p t
F o r L o n g e v ity
S t a t e T a x C o m m is s io n e r J o s e p h H. M u r p h y p r e s e n te d
a w a rd s t o 46 T a x D e p a r t m e n t v e t e r a n s a t t h e t h i r d a n ­
n u a l D e p a r t m e n t a l S e rv ic e A w a rd s D i n n e r M o n d a y n i g h t a t
L ongcham ps R e s ta u ra n t, M a n h a tta n .
Senior Corporation Tax E xam ­ corporation ta x section a n d LUiner Jacob Zucker wa§ presented liam W allenstein, of the transfer
with * plaque noting 4A years of an d estate ta x section.
sei-vice w ith th e State. He began
Awards for 30 years’ service in ­
his career in 1&22 a s a. clerk in cluded: H erm an Baum , Abraham
the Motor Vehicle B ureau and Diamond, David Esrick, Simon
transferred to th e Corporation Fetter, A rthur Fields, Sol X.
Tax Section in 1929.
Qoldstein, E dna O. H agan, Max
Miembers of the S tate Tax Com­ Hauser, C arl Ifshln, Jack Jacob­
mission as well as Albany an d son Louis Lazovlck, H arry Le­
New York bureau heads attended vine, Louis Markowitz, George
the dinner honoring T ax D epart­ M encher, Sam uel MUller, Jacob
ment employees in th e six New Pine, E m anuel H. Popowitz, Ele­
York Metropolitan Regional of­ an o r M. Puleo, Irw in Rechtweg,
fices.
N orm an Richards, Sam uel SchThose presented w ith awards for muckler, A braham Semberg, J a ­
40 years’ service were Sidney cob E. Solomon, V incent C. T yBimberg, of th e truck mileage sec­ m ann, Jacob S. Weiss, David
tion; Jacob Leinwander, of the Wexler, H arry W itt, H erm an
W orthm an.
Those honored for 25 years’
service were: B ernard B erm an,
M e e tin g O ff
Florence Berm an, Madeline Brady,
(Conttnned from Page 1)
Selm a Cohn, M yrtle Filansky,
breaking developments in the H ym an Friend. A rthur S. Hirsch,
State’s new collective bargaining G odfried Jacob, Eli Lind, Jesse
environment, CSEA h as bad to Nowak. Evelyn Riodan, Alexand­
schedule four ex tra delegates’ er Siegel, Irving Solomon, N ath ­
meetings in addition to the regu­ a n Weiner. Sam uel Zara.
lar Fall and W inter conventions.
I n addition, 14 guests with more
These additional meetings were
than 40 years’ seiTice attended
all of an emergency nature, called
th e dinner.
to i*esolve specific problems, re ­
The Invocation and benediction
quiring Immediate attention by
were
given by the Rev. W illiam J.
the full delegate body.
Rlnschler, assistant pastor of St.
A set p attern for CISEA’s a n ­ Andrews Church, in the M a n h a t­
nual business tim etable has yet ta n Civic Center.
to emerge, according to Wenzl.
Regional T ax Supervisor Ben­
Leaders of the Employees Associa­
jam in B. Berinstein was chairm an
tion feel th a t th e organization will
of th e dinner committee. He was
have to rem ain completely flexible
assisted by A rth u r Fields, ’Thomas
»nd continue to deal w ith im ­
F. Moran, G ertrude B aer and
portant developments as they
W illiam K itay.
occur.
Wenzl cited, as a case in point,
the possibility th a t delegates a t
the coming M arch 14 meeting
Jttight schedule still another fol­
low-up meeting to evaluate fu r­
ther progress on CSEA’s benefits
program by a certain deadline.
It would seem ra th e r undesir®ole, from this standpoint es­
pecially, to plan on having the
waditional W inter o r Spring
nieeting,- he said.
In any case, Wenzl said, since
ne Statewide delegate body wUl
w meeting on M arch 14 th e regunieetlng this year would
unnecessary and, in the
lUiiit
officials, would con^ unjustifiable expense.
Reopen Social Security
(Continued from Face 1)
under th e reopening m ust pay
contributions on his covered wages
retroactive to the coverage d ate
already designated by th e em ­
ployer. An employee’s m axim um
oontributibn is $2,263.20 for the
1068 reopening o r $2,638.80 for
th e 1969 reopening. Miatching sums
m ust be paid by th e employer.
P aym en t in a lum p sum is re­
quired by th e Social Security Ad­
m inistration. An employee may
tran sfe r th e am ount from his R e­
tirem ent System annu ity fund.
Comptroller Levitt said.
“T he S ta te ’s new fiscal year be­
gins April 1 an d the budget and
appropriation bills m ust be pro­
jected and adopted before then.
The m atters of time, budgets and
appropriations, a« well as the
special obligation of public em­
ployers, m ay well explain the
conferring of power to recognize
an d negotiate with employee o r­
ganizations untram m eled by rep­
resentation dispute proceedings.”
CSEA lost th e first round In the
Supreme Court b u t won a reversal
of th a t loss in the Appelleate Di­
vision; th en cam e the final and
m ajor victory in th e Court of
Appeals.
Michaelian And Supervisors
W H IT E P L A IN S — A r t h u r E. B a y lis o f S c a r s d a le , S
m a n a g e m e n t c o n s u l t a n t , D a n ie l A. L y n c h o f T u c k a h o e , a n
a t t o r n e y a n d C h a r l e s L . C u r r a n o f Y o n k e rs , a n a t t o r n e y ,
w e re a p p o i n te d b y C o u n ty E x e c u tiv e E d w in G . M ic h a e lia n a s
W estchester County’s first Public
He is a specialist In industrial
Employment Relations Board. The
Board Is being established in ac­ relations law. He was a delegate
cordance w ith C hapter 392 of the to the 1967 New York S tate Con­
stitutional Convention from t h a ^
New York S tate Laws of 1967,
In announcing the appoint­ 35th Senate District.
He is a member of the B ar As­
ments, M ichaelian stated, “’The
Public Employees F air Employ­ sociation of the City of New Yoi'k
m en t Act of 1967 extends to gov­ and serves on its committees of
ernm ent employees th e sam e Labor Law and Social Security
rights of collective bargaining as Legislation. During war years.
enjoyed In private industry. How­ Lynch was a member of the N a­
ever, it prohibits strikes by public, tional W ar Labor Board and th«
employees. T his new public em ­ Wage Stabilization Board.
Lynch is currently a m em ber of
ployment relations board will es­
tablish procedures in m a tte rs of the Panel of A rbitrators of th«
American A rbitration Association.
employee representation and col­
T he Federation Mediation a n d
lective bargaining in accordance
Conciliation
Service, the N ational
BEA C O N — N ic h o la s J . F e r - w ith th e new law. T his will be a M ediation Board, and the New
r o n e , p r e s i d e n t o f t h e M a t- bipartisan board comprised of York S tate Board of M ediation.
three citizens who hold no other
te a w a n c h a p te r, d v l l S erv ­
Lynch h as served as an Im­
public office.”
ic e E m p lo y e e s A ssn ., h a s Is­
p artial arbitrator in well over 100
T he public employment rela­
sued a statem en t declaring th a t
labor disputes. He Is a m em ber of
tions board will be completely
th e recent reallocation of cleri­
the Society of the F riendly S o n i
separate and a p a rt from the
cal positions is considered by cler­
of S ain t Patrick. Leewood Golf
county governm ent as a n im par­
ical employees a t M atteaw an State
Club and a member of th e Amer­
tial citizens group. I t is to this
Hospital to be m ost u n ju st and
ican A rbitration Association.
body th a t employee groups may
un fair.”
M ichaelian Indicated th a t upon
appeal in th e event of a sta le­
Ferrone continues, “A oneconfirm ation of th e nominees by
m ate on wage and salary nego­
grade Increase In all clerical posi­
the Board of Supervisors he h a d
tions would have alleviated the tiations.
designated Baylis as chairm an of
T he County Executive appoint­ the board.
situation b u t n o t resolved the
ed Baylis for a one-year term to
problem.”
He said th a t a recent raise did expiie Dec. 31 of th is year, C ur­
CSEA Files A ppeal
n o t include the lowest paid clerks, ra n for a three-year term to ex­
who work for th e S tate a t w hat pire Dec. 31. 1970 and Lynch for
he called “poverty-level salaries.” a five-year term to expire Dec.
Several thousand G rade 3 clerks 31, 1972. M embers thereafter will
work for a salary of approxim ately serve for six-year term s. T he
$3,650. Typists and m ail an d sup­ Board of Supervisors confirmed
ply clerks work for th e same th e appointm ents this week.
salary. He said, “This salary con­
Baylis Is president of A rthur E.
dition Is ridiculous an d it is im ­ Baylis & Company Inc., consul­
possible to recru it com petent peo­ ta n ts to m anagem ent In the fields
ALBANY—T h e C ivil S e r v ic e
ple a t this level.”
of transportation, m arketing, and E m p lo y e e s A ssn. h a s f ile d a n
Ferrone asked, “Why did the distribution. In addition, he Is n a ­ a p p l ic a tio n f o r a 15 p e r c e n t
D epartm ent of Civil Service dis­ tional director of th e N ational g e o g r a p h ic p a y d i f f e r e n t i a l
crim inate against th e Ga-ade 3 Committee on In tern atio n al T rade on behalf of statio n ary enghieer*
employees? W as it an oversight Documentation, a New York and in the New York M etropolitan
or done w ith intention?”
W ashington based n o n -p ro fit re­ Area.
“Something should be done im ­ search organization working to
In a comm.unique to J. E arl
mediately to alleviate this unfair reduce and to simplify docum en­ Kelly, director of th e S tate Divi­
condition,” he adds. “T h e real­ tation work involved w ith In tern a­ sion of Classification an d Cbm location pf one grade was given. tional trade.
pensatlon, CSEA pointed o ut th a t
In m ost cases, to G rade 4 and
C urran was bom In Yonkers, stationary engineers In private
G rade 8 positions. All G rade 8 educated In Yonkers schools, and industry In the New York area,
positions, such as senior records attended tihe W harton School. comprised of New Y ork City a n d
m edical clerk, were n o t included.
University of Pennsylvania. He the adjacent counties of Nassau,
Most other clerical grades were
completed Columbia University Suffolk, W estchester, and Rock­
n o t Included.
School of Business, and also land, earn an income fa r In ex­
“W here is th e justice? M a tte a­
cess of those employed by t h t
F ordham Law School.
w an chapter o f CISEA goes on
State.
He
was
assistant
corporation
record th a t In recommending th a t
Statstics of the U.S. B ureau of
counsel
of
the
City
of
Yonkers,
typists, mall clerks, supply clerks
Labor S tatistics were cited a«
served
as
city
m
anager
of
the
and clerks be elevated to G rade
showing publicly employed s ta ­
4; an d th a t the other titles be so City of Yonkers from 1952 through tionary engineers now earn IB ,.
adjusted; G rade 7 an d 8, includ­ 1963, and was a delegate from the percent less th a n those In private
ing th e senior medical records 34th Senate D istrict to th e 1967 industry, in the area surveyed.
clerk.” He also called for “a just New York S tate C onstitutional
CSEA urged Kelly to give
an d fah: raise for these lower Conveoitlon. He is still vice-presl- prom pt approval to its request,
grades” a n d said th a t would be dent of the Board of Education nc/Ung th a t com parable wauea
a m inim um of $1,000 In place of of the City of Yonkers, and h as should
accom pany
com parable
th e eight percent g ranted by the been engaged in the private p rac­ work.
tice of law. He Is a m em ber of
Governor.
th e In teraa tio n a l City M anagers
Association, th e City Club of
New CSEA Attorney
G i l l e r a n C h a p t e r Yonkers, the W estchester B ar As(Contlnaed from Page 3)
socla/tiion, th e Yonkers Lawyers County B ar Assn., S tate M agls(Continued from Page S)
because they excluded m any of the Association, and the Friendly Sons ti'ales Assn., and B’nai B ’rith. He*
lower grades which deserved to be of St. Patrick.
served as president of th e Albany
upgraded.
Lynch has practiced law in New Lodge of Elks an d is vice-presi­
T h e S ta te ’s action h a s stirred York S tate for th irty years. A dent of the Leukemia Society of
u n rest am ong S tate employees graduate of Holy Cioss College America.
Judge Jacobs is m arried to the
and F ordham University Law
throughout th e State.
The meeting was called by Johrv School, he .is a member of the form er Shirley Alfred an d Ut the
father of five chlldien.
W. Raym ond, chap ter president. \ law firm of King and L yich.
Mattewan Chapter
Protests Lack Of
Clerical Upgradings
Pay Differential For
Stationary Engrs.
Urged In City Area*
Y !V.
CTVI L
Ione years experience or two years
such experience. P u r th ir inform a­
Senior street club workers are tion and applications m ay be ob­
being sought for positions with tained from the Application Sec­
the City Youth Board a t $6,400 tion of the Cltjr D ep artm ent of
to $8,200. Piling ends M arch 26 Personnel.
for the position—with appo int­
m ents based o n training and ex­
D e v e l o p m e n t A sst*
perience.
In dustrial developm ent assist­
Candidates m ust have a bache>
lor’s degree and either a m aster’s ants are t i e i m sought by the
degree in psychology, social work, Suffolk County Civil Service com ­
recreation or related fields and mission for positions «k $7,800 to
S tr e e t C lu b W o r k e rs
5ERVTCI 5
be filled at a May 11 w rlttw i
exam. Filing ends April 10.
T here are no residence re q u lrtmentB for the positions which
dem and high school grad u atio n
and foiur years experience with a n
advertising agency, public relations
firm o r p la n n in i organisation.
Applications an d fu rth e r inform»>
tlon m ay be o btained from the
Commission a t C ounty C onttf,
Rlverhead, N.Y.
TuesUay, UTarcIi 12. l%g
S u ffo lk llly s tr a to r s
Illustrators are needed in S u f­
folk County for positions a t $125
to 917(1 a week. Filing ends April
M for th e May M w ritte n test
for appointm ent to th e positions
which have n o resldenca requ ix tm ents.
O andidatee m ust have «lther a
degree in a r t « r a high school
diplom a an d six years cxperlonce
in a r t a n d U lustratloii in connec­
tion with highway, architectural
or engineering projects. FurtUer
Inform ation and applications may
be obtained from th e County Ctvu
Service Commission a t County
Center, Rlvcrhead, N.Y.
ik ic lis iiiitli E xam
W ritten
exam inations
were
given last week by th e City De.
p a rtm e n t of Personnel to 544 cai^.
dldates lo r Uacksmibb’s helper
positiont.
If it's robberies
and murders and
rape you’re after,
don’t look at us.
Introducing
tiie daiiy papertiiafs liite
notiling eise you ever read.
The NewYori( DaiiyCoiumn.
That’s right. Fifty top columnists
and editorial cartoonists (including
soma who are newto our town) are
coming to New York in this first-of*
its-kind tabloid daily. The only
paper devoted entirely to opinion,
controversy and entertainment.
And plenty of it. You’ll see commen*
tary... cartoons... satirizations...
fresh ideas... outrageous views. All
fromsome of the most opinionated
people In the world. Rightists,
leftists, middle of-the-roadists.
They’re all here. They’re all to­
gether. And they’ll ail be beautifull
RobartAltan
Josspli Altop
C hw iM B artM l
Phyllis Batt«U«
BflttyBMl*
Poppy Cannon
OlsKCaisinI
JohnCtuimbMrfaln
Mamuia Childs
f t u i Conrad
BobConildfne
John Crosby
j9an«0iKO<|
DanOowling
Roscoeorumfflontf
**Th«Economlt¥*
John F itc h a tt
HyGardnar
Harry QoMaa
EdHhHaad
Erie Hoffar
RobartHutehtnt
Frank Intarlamil
Russall Klrd
Jo « ^K ra8
Irene Corbaify Kuhn
David Lawranes
J.A .U vingstaa
Don Maclean
DorothjrMannaft
Bill Mauldin
Ralph McQIN
Marianna Means
EusantMUIar
Raymond Motey
Edward P. Morgan
Edgar AnMl M ownr
Jim Murray
JackO'B rian
William PahimaiU)
•■PMnch"
Victor R M
Inez Robb
Elmer R o esin tr
Joseph R.3latfla
Roger Spear
Henry J . Taylor
William S. Whit*
Emily Wilkens
Walter Winchia
80CIETY.THETH£ATRE«TVREVIEW S«F1NANC1
(INCLUOINQ STOCK-OF-THEDAY) • FASHION •
SPORTS • FILMS • CARTOONI • CROSSWORO
Hots Of people think a newspaper fsnt ■
newspaper unless it'a bursting with “raw'*
newswYouknow, likewlreMniioebulleHni^
flashM, up-to'the-mfnuto reports, and so
on. O.K., so weTri not a newspaper in tha
*'rawnews" sense. What we are is the ona
andonlydailythattakesupthe newswhera
tha others leave off. We examine It tnte^
pret it. Comment on ft Poke fiin at It Yea,
andfrequently, anticipateIt Allforjust 10#
acopyl Infact, wethlnkour NewYoilcDally
Column will turn out to be the paper that
New Yorkers (advertisers and readers)
have been waiting for all their Itvei,
A g e n c ie s a n d
A d v e r tis e r s !
mdMrdKsimin, AdvertisingDirector
SOSL42nd9t.NewYork XOOlf
UUmyH<tt9-9043
livnrnnl(sWeln.Pubirshar
NewtonOlike«,PreskiSflt
N.H. Msiir, BusinessManager
WlUiamE.TsyIor,Editor <
i^on KudeltEditorialConsultant
The New York Daily Colum n. It g o e s beyond th e n ew s.
CIVIL
^2, IO<59_____________
SERVICE
LEADER
P « ii Thirl
'^Borrection Conference E lecb Albert Foster
^ g /vN Y —Albert F oster was
jmously re-elected to his
^entb
term as president o t the
{iev
jifW York State D epartm ent of
C e r r e e t i o n ’ s Civil Service Conferat Its an^nual meeting here
jfcfntly. Foster is a correction
officer at D annem ora
ftflte Hospital. The conference has
j i i e m b e r s correction employees
jjcjr the fifteen State prisons and
youth cam ps. This
'
LEG A L
K O T IC E
— CITATION. —
rKOPLE OF THE STATU OF NEW
yOHK By *he Grac* of God, F r e t and
ir ,i ,|Y i K i r n t .
^
Attorney General of the State of
I(f« York Ayoub, c o n tln fe nt «o1e lejrmil executor named in the October
ij
"'■'I
codicil thereto dated
Mt'H'ber 14. 1961, 8tith<>ntic>i(ed copiee
If »lii'h «!■*! on file in the Surrogate'e
Coin'
York County,
yidiirune Lebon, contingrent executrix
j., iiif terms of the October 15. 1949.
(fM.iir)'niary instructione. an authenticated
»pv of which is on file in the S u rro ra te 's
Cciirt. Nt'v York County,
(1,1, lie I.aarent. contingent beneficiary
ill the October 15. 1949, testamen^ry 'nf^truction* .an auth en ticated copy
(f which IS on file in th e S u rro g ate’e
i‘f;Drt Nt"' York County, ^vhose domicile,
jf
unknow n and, if she sur,lT(ii the Jcccdent herein and died subi^iiuiilly to her legal repreeentatives, her
if any, her distrlbuteee. as:iiid suoce«*ors in intprest, all of
v)i(in and whooe names and domiciles are
iji.pnrwn and cannot a fte r due diligence
l( .utrfained,
Maijf Monero, contingent beneficiary
Ti,, (d >n the codicil of September 14.
iD&I 10 the October 16, 1949, will,
i.ithn/iicated copies of which are on file
)n tl f Siirrogate’e Court,
New York
Comit.T and
Tlif unknown distributees of Andre
Ja(< ii's I’atres. also known as Andre Pages
jml A Pages, deceased, who and whoee
»nd doniicilee are u n know n and
tani ot after diligent inquiry be aacertainsilt!, if dead, to their legal represonUiivff their husbands o r wives, if any,
tril their distributee* and successors in
h)t*r(ct all of whom and whose names
»nd ilomioiles are u nknow n and cannot
ififr due diligence be ascertained.
YOl ARE H ER EB Y CITED TO SHOW
before the Surrog ate's Court, New
Tcik bounty, a t Room 504 in Ihe Surrof#tf> Courthouse in the County of New
Tcrk cn March 29, 1968, at 10 a.m . why
I (f Itain writing dated Tangiers, May
S4, 1954, which h a s been offered fo r protate by Ihe Public A dm lniatrator of the
Ccuni.v of New York, h av in g his officet
ti HI Chambers Street, New York, N.Y.,
ilioulil not be probated as th e Last Will
inl Trti.nment relating to real and per­
il na' nroperty fiu a te outside of Morocco
cf Andre Jacques Pagee, also known as
Am're Pages and A. Pages, deceased, who
il thf time of hi* death wag a domiciliary
ct fi Rue Rubens, Tangiers, Morocco, and
»liy l.nters of A dm inistration c.t.a. should
I'd I t lesued thereon to the Public Adtcnifiiator of the County of New York
»'"l h r such other, f u r th e r and differwt -'lief as to the Court may seem just
In ibe 111 {.'raises.
attested and sealed F eb ruary #,
group m eets with the Commis­
sioner of Correction relative to
>
R E A L
correctional operations and prac>
tices.
O ne of th e highlights of th is
« s F o r S a le - N « w J t r s « y
m eeeting was th e unanim ous vote H«B nis
E R »E N
CO
(tS
M Ib
NTC)
of th e representatives to support H O M ES!
HOM ES! H OM ES!
A IX
8T T L B 0,
S IZ E S
A tfD
P R IC E S
the Civil Service Employees Assn.
TO A a V A L lF IE D B V Y E E
In a "work slow-down” if neces­
LOW
DOW N
PY M T.
G .l/a N O D O W N
sary. Correction employees are
aroused to this action because the H A N D E L S M A N
Governor of New York h a s failed B ca liy C « . B r o k e r — O p e n 9 im 9 P .H
IT T C > L A 4 - « 2 1 « , N .i . T K a H c e k S - 1 2 2 3
to recognize S tate employees In
allowing them to negotiate for F o rm s & C o u n t r y H o m e s —
benefits as provided by th e T ay ­
N ew J e rs e y
lor Law which w ent into effect
iM t of Retirement Homea
Inarms — Eatatea — Acrcage
in Septem ber 1967.
Farm & Home Realty
Vawton.
NJ (Cloaed on Sundays)
O ther officers elected were:
D onald Ter Bush, correction offi­
S t. A lb o n s
cer from W oodbourne Prison as
BRICK. S bcdrooma, tin basement, birch
vice-president and F ia n k Leon­
cab., wall oven, wliite oak floors. Only
9 200 dn. on contract. CaM M r. Bailey,
ard, correction officer from Sing
739-6498.
Sing Prison, as seer eta ry-treasurer.
W E ST BRONX
C .D . C o u n s e l
Lt, Gen. M. J. Asensio, S tate
Civil Defense director has a n ­
nounced
th e
ap pointm en t of
Julius Volker as counsel to the
S ta te Civil Defense Commission,
Volker, a life-long resident of the
town of Lancaster, Erie County,
served as a S tate Assemblyman
from 1944 to 1966.
Ifltt-
iJFAL'
HON. S. SAMUEL DiFALCO,
Surrogate, New York County
William S. Mullen,
Clerk
8 lam
e h o rs
C A N
HOLIDAY HILL
Box 295
New Port Richey, Florida
SAVE ON TOUR MOVE TO FLORIDA
Compare our coat per 4.000 I b e t o
St Petersburg from New York City,
$4U6:
Philadelphia, $382:
Albany.
$432. For a n eatimate to any desti­
nation in Florida write SOUTHERN
TRANSFER A STORAGE C 0„ INC.
Dept. C. P.O. Bo* 10217. S t . P - ' w
burg. Vinrlda
CAMBRIA HEIGHTS
$ 2 1 ,(MO
All brick. Ranch type res. Like new.
All n n s on 1 fir. Modern kitchen &.
bath,
sumptuoUB basement, garage.
40 x100 garden plot. Im m ediate occ.
S t u a r t , F lo rid o
R ETIREM ENT HOMES
SO.SOO. uv
EVERYTHING IN REAL ESTATE
L FULFORD. S H U R T .
FLA.
W RITS REQUIREUEN^rS. Ph. 287-128S
L O N G ISLAND H O M E S
Ave.,
Jam aica
RE 9-7 300
S A N D S , 2 0 40 N S U R F R D .
B A LI H A I, 31 0 M C K IN L E Y ST.
RENT OR BUY!
Det Colonial. 8 rme. 4 bedrme, plus
full bRmt, attic ............................ $20,900
NOTICE Is hereby given th a t Liquor
License No. 1 HL 822 has been issued
to the undersigned to sell boer, liquor,
o r wine a t refah in a hotel, under th e
Alcoholic Beverage Control Law a t 10829 E. 42nd Stret, New York County,
N.Y. for
on premise* conaumption.
Realty Hotels. Inc. (H otel Commodore)
109-29 E. 42nd
Stret. New York,
N.Y. J0017.
SPE C IA L CIVIL SERVICE
R ELO C A TIO N DEPT.
QUEENS *
P H O N O « K A i» N
GUTLEBER
9 6 - I t LIBERTY AVE..
OZONE PARK, N.T. 11417
CAPITOL HOMES
H o u s e F o r S o le L o u rc lto n . L.I.
C a p ita l
R4»
D Istrle t
T ears
for
O ver
SIX ROOMS,
baihg. fin
Fi 1-1693.
1593 C e n t r a l A v e ., A lb a n y
UN 9 -0 9 1 4
Live O a k , F lo rid a
R E TIRIN G ?
IF
YOU like unspoiled n a tu ra l beauty,
clean air, good fishing and huntiug,
privac.v then buy land n e ar th e Suwan­
nee River. W. J. Rogers, Realtor, Box
37. Live Oak. Fla.
VERY GOOD Investm ent, 24 Acree, Corn­
er, 4 lane Highway, 11 Milee, town,
Light. Telephone, Well. home. Business,
Factory, 2 miles Crose S ta te Canal.
$12,500 cash. Clarence Laeette, Broker,
11 West Spring St., Green Cove Spring!,
Florida (3 2 0 4 3 ).
S U .9 9 0
lo n ch
QUEENS VILLLAGE '
$24,990
3 Ineeni* A pts.
All rooms on 1 floor—m aster
size bedrooms plus fin. bsmt.
r e n ta 1 apt. F ront & re a r
patios, garden grounds. Mo­
dern thruout.
Det. legal 2 fam. consisting
of 5-4 & fin. bsmt. apt. G ar­
age. Mod. kite. & baths, Ige.
plot. Live R en t Free!
QUEENS
CAM IRIA HGTS,
$31,990
4 & 5 Rm. A pts.
4 year old det brick & shin,
legal 2 family selling below
orig. cost. U ltra mod kit w ith
wall ovens. Hollywood bathe.
All appliances.
HOM ES
OL 8 -7 5 1 0
17 0-1 3 HILLSIDE AYE.. JA M A IC A
OL 7 -7 9 0 0
A V E , JA M A IC A
W ALK TO SUBW AY
BRICK, STO N E &
TIMBER
Corner - exceplional location • 6 V4
rooms, 4 bedrooms - modei-n k itc h ­
en - neneational b atew en t. Neat
landscaped groundi!. Refrigerator,
waeher, near sohoole and sh o p ­
ping centers, abort walk to sub­
way. BRING ]N $700 A OWN
THIS HOME I
NEW HOMES — Resalce — Low Down
Paym ents for G.I.s World W ar II A
your special reqiiircmentH o u r specialty.
FRANKEL. 43 St. Beach Channel Dr.
GR 1-9689.
L E G A L 2 -F A M IL Y
Consisting ot 2 beautiful iipartmeiits - 13 ronis - 3 bathn - 4()x100 landscaped grounds • Only
sh o rt w;i!k to «ubway - I t has
everything: oil iieat, 3 relrigedators. modern streamlined kilcheuM fully e<iuippeii. sensational
busemnnt • Kvery important ex­
tra being left by owner • Small
down
ija.nncnt newied. Owner
m ust move - SACRIFICE I
b u tter ly
T ro y , P e n n o .
FOR SALE
Farms, up to 600 seres,
•tocked & equipped or bare, country
homes,
town property,
north-central
P rn u a. Eiidlese M ountains Area. HAR
OLD P. FRENCH. Broker. Troy, Pa.,
Wayne J. Ward, Salesman, GilletU P a
7 1 7 M 6 4643.
JA M A IC A N O R T H
$ 2 8 ,9 9 0
WALK TO SUBWAY
H O LLIS N O R T H
$1 8 ,9 9 0
F o r R o c k o w a y , Q u e e n s . L.l.
1*94 - 2nd AVENUE. N. Y. 28
*«WEEN 87th & 88th ST.
SA 2-0771
R ET IR EM EN T or VACATION! Buy In
beautiful Vera Beach. Illuetrate<l list*
ings available on homes, $8600 to
$22,500. Specify requirements. DeKoM
Realty, Box 291, Vero Beach, Florida.
MANY OTHER 1 & 2 FAMILY HOMES AVAILAILE
QUAINT COTTAGE WITH 1 ACRE.
Q uiet Village near eeaahore, n r store,
churches, r<i*qut‘nt bus service to
K.Y. 2 story fram e dwelling, 3 bedn n e ' bath, lav,
Ige garden plot.
Trees & shrubs, aged owner m ust
•e).\ $5.1H)0 cash. Shown by apt. only.
A, W. KELLEY, BKR.
Cor. Bay 4 School Streets
fiarnegat, N.J, 08006
i ’iione: 698-4141
In c.
attached Tudor, S
gnrage & extras
Det. E ng Colonial. 8 Ige
rooms on a large landscaped
plot. Mod. kltch. & baths, gar.
All appliances. Move right In.
H o u s e s F o r S a le - N e w J e r s e y
Co .,
V e ro B e ac h , H o r i d o
G r e e n C o v e S p rin g s , Flo.
HOLLLIS
$17,990
4 Ic4r« « ai*. 2 l a t h s
H o u s e F o r S a le R o o s e le v t, L.I., N.Y.
H IL L S ID E
brick,
b tm t,
ST. ALIANS
i Yr. Old I r k k
7 ROOM Split, garage.
baths, fin.
betnt. Sacriflcc, f l l , 2 0 0 . Call 61C AT
e-0727.
A B C O REALTY
a p p l ia n c e
Jerkins, Dept. 8-12, Chamber
of Commerce, Bos 1371,
ST. PETERSBURG, FLA. 8S7S1.
Over 1,000.000 Visitors a Tear
Now Prefer St. Petersburg I
LOOKING FOR VALUE?
F o rm s ft C o u n t r y H o m e s
O ra n g e C o u n ty
VAN WVCK GARDENS
DETACHED
INCOME PRODOCINO X FAM ILY
Detached, 6 & 4 rooms, 2 c ar garage.
REDUCED FOR QUICK SALE $21,750
$600 cash & NO CLOSING COSTS. GIs.
CAMBRIA HEIGHTS
flS.WeO
Lovely Detached 7 room Ins brick
colfHiial. IVi baths, 3 m aster bedrooms,
u ltr a modem th roughout,
E L E C T R IC
C.S.L,
Ml 1-10 08
A S s i s i s t a t e e m p l o t e e s HI
FINDING APARTMENTS AND
HOMES IN THE CAPITAL DISTRICT
F R E E !4EKVIC|i/— NO OBI.IOATION
lo
CAPE COD, fine i-esidential area, 4 bedrms,
2 batlts. detached garage, fin Usmt.
$18,500. BURMAN REALTY
(61 6 )
PY 6-7600.
V n ilT E
NASSAU X^OUNTIFJl
3, 4 AND 6 BEDROOM HOMES
FROM $10,000 TO $26,000. A V ER ­
AGE MONTHLY PAYMENTS $12fi.
H o u s e F o r S o le
SufFolk C o u n ty
O
"LIVING CITY"
For your vacation o r happier retli*ment on a moderate Income, choose a
winner! Come to St. Pete, fam ous sunahlno resort, principal d t y of PINEL*
LAS COUNTY* — th e WINNER of
the 1967 LOOK MAGAZINE — NA­
TIONAL MUNICIPAL LEAGUE "ALLAMERICAN CITY" AWARD. T e e l an
average of 360 day* of lunshine each
year. Purest air, healthiest climato.
Swmmling on clean, white beaches.
Fishing
boating, golf, fine home*,
hotels, motels and guest houses In all
price ranges. Wide variety of Res­
taurants. Attractions, Sp ectator Sporta,
Churches.
Hobbies- and
Retirement
Activitiea
W RITE TODAY for on r
new SO-PB “SUNSHINE ANNUAL"
& "LIVING IN ST PETERSBURG.”
They're F R E E I Remember, too —
Florida ha« NO STATE INCJOME TAXI
U.S. G OV ERNM ENT H O M E S
$400 DOW N
N O C L O S IN G FEE
FIRST-MET REALTY
5 9 7 -6 2 0 0
S e rv in g
A O
ON AMERICA'S NO. 1*
^ow weekly rates. $30 up on beach
ncludes everything. Write for free
!oiorful deteaile.
B ronx S p e c ia l
M O RR IS PARK
NOTICE is hereby given that Liquor
License No. 1 HL 789 haf< been isf>ue<l
to th e undersigned to sell beer, liquor,
or wine at retail in a hotel, under the
Alrtiholic Beverage Control Law a t 29-61
E. 4 5 th Stret. New York County, N.Y.
lo r on premlsee consumption. Realty
Hotels, Inc. (Hotel Roo«eveIt) 29-61
E. 46th Stret. New York, N.Y. 10017.
P O R T A B I .B
FREE FLORIDA BOOKS
HOLLYWOOD lE A C H . FLORIDA
Bulk Aereas*
Retirement Borne*.
Bueineseea i p
the Tri S ta te area.
GOLDMAN AGENCY
S f Pike. Port Jervis NT < a U ) S&«-»22S
STBKBO
VENICE FLA. — INTBRESTEDT
SEE H. N WIMMERS, REALTOB.
ZIP CODE S8B8S
for Retirement Home In Florida, near
Clearwater 3 Bedroome. Masonry from
$6,490.00, including lot and Garage.
Complete and ready to move into:
paved atreeta, f 3 9 per month. (Cover
principal and intereet)
app. taxes
nearly about $20.00. Lake stocked
with Fish, 4 Shopping C en ten ; all
Churchea COMMUNITY RECREATION
HALL. etc.
c o m m u n ity c lu b liv in g fo r
Limited Ineome Retirees
Write for Free Booklet Today
81 E 200 (Kedfd Pk Blvd.) Open Sun
liilltilde
^
V en ic e, F lo rid o
Y O U
AFFORD
$1.00 p e r doy
del. brk. Poes 3 ap ts (2^42 garages. N ear schools and
................................'. .$ 2 ,6 0 0 down
l<iS-12
V A L U E S
ijoyYour Golden Days " F l o r i d a
FEINBERG BROS. 9 3 3 -1 8 0 0
NOTICE ie hereby given th a t Liquor
License No. 1 HL 229 has been i<«ued to
th e undersigned to sell beer, liquor, or
wine a t retail In a
hotel, und er th e
Alcoholic Beverage Control Law a t 33-36
E. 4.Trd Street, New York County, N.Y..
fo r on premieee coniaumption. Realty
Hotels. Inc. (Hotel B iltm ore), 33-36 £ .
43rd Street, New York, N.Y. 10017,
NOTICE i« hereby given th a t Liquor
License No. 1 HL 638 has been Issued tn
the undersigned to sell beer, liquor, or
wine at retail in a hotel, un der th e
Alcoholic Beverage Control Law a t 111
E. 4Sth Street, New York County, N.T .
fo r ou premises consumption. Realty
Hotels, Inc, (Hotel Barclay I J l l E.
4 8th Street, New York. N.Y. 10017.
E S T A T E
&
green
168-25 Hillside Ave.
JAMAICA,
.
'
I
I
JA 6 -6 3 0 0
N.Y.
iF A H N lN C i
F A C IL IT IE S
A V A H ^ B I.E )
Pag« Fourteen
CI VI L
SERVICE
Tuesday, March 12, 1953
LEADER
D O N 'T R E P E A T T H IS
(Continuea from Page 1)
•pending all his tim e on a bad
u n it and neglecting his more
auccessful divisions, the losing
division becomes a drain on his
time. T he war has been keeping
Johnson up nights and he h asn 't
even been running his own pol­
itics, where he’s supposed to be
ft real pro, such as accepting the
slate Mayor Daley of Chicago, put
forth, which is n ot the strongest
ticket to help Johnson In the
S tate of Illinois.
I f he wasn’t so busy he would
ba thinking of helping himself
fW rther or not he liked young
Adlal Stevenson.
But getting back to New York,
so far nobody very good Is ru n ­
ning for the Senate. R epresenta­
tive Joe Resnick h a sn ’t caught
on a t all, despite all his money.
His candidacy would not get a
single vote for LBJ w hether Rocky
Is the opponent or even if Nixon
runs.
Morris Abram m ight have made
flwi«spectable showing although he
would have lost to Javits.
Otis Pike m ight do well outside
th e City of New York. He would
come to the New York City lines
w ith more votes th a n any candi­
date ever did. But is th a t enough?
T here is a possibility of a respec­
table candidate in Pike but the
pros are asking Is he strong
enough? No one is saying yes, but
some Dems are Just hoping be­
cause they don’t see anybody else.
Some Democratic Insiders are
************************
l/60th Report
By LOUIS BUSSELL
Wa are now well Into March
and as yet little positive action
h as been taken to raise our subsWmdard pensions. Senator Lentol's and Assemblyman S traub ’s
bills are still In committee.
Comptroller Levitt has indicated
th a t he intends to sponsor leg­
islation addressed to the problem
of Improving the non-contributory
retirem ent benefits so as to make
th e l/6 0 th program retroactive
to 1960. May we suggest to the
Comptroller th a t his support of the
legislation introduced by Senator
Lentol (bill No. S 1677 in the
Senate Civil Service Committee)
and Assemblyman S traub (bill No.
A 2736 in the Assembly Ways and
M eans Committee) would accom­
plish this goal. Anything less
would compound the present in ­
justice to those civil servants who
entered S tate service prior to 1960.
T here is silence from the Gov­
ernor regarding any plans to up ­
grade our pensions. Perhaps the
Governor is awaiting his Moore
Committee report. Rumor has It
th a t this Committee’s report will
take our Pension System from the
G as Light Era, where it is now,
back to the Kerosene Lam p Era,
instead of a t least bringing it
forward to the present day Elec­
tric Light Era.
Continue your writing to Gov­
ernor Rockefeller and Comptroller
Levitt. Make them aware of the
S tate <"mployee’s discontent with
present Pension System. How
m uch longer our activities will be
confined solely to letter writing
Is problematical. We know that
unless our message is understood
and favorably acted upon, we will
of necessity be forced to take al­
ternative action.
trying to put together a group of
candidate* to appeal to both
S enator K ennedy and P resident
Johnson’s
representatives,
Ed
Weisl and A rthur Krim.
Kheel and Bassine
T hey agree on Ted Kheel, who
would be the strongest candidate,
w ithout question. He can create a
rapport with youth even though
he Is just over 50. He has firm
relationships with industry and
labor, more so th a n alm ost any
m an In the State. He is Just as
attractive as a candidate can be.
He is dynamic and has Just w hat
it takes to be a winner, Ted has
never run for office but is on page
one almost as m uch as anyone in
the State. U nfortunately, he is
not a seeker of public office. He
would have to be d rafted and
our feeling Is th a t he’d prefer to
be drafted for Govei'nor or Mayor.
He wouldn’t w ant his first try to
be as difficult as the one against
Javits. Also, he just h ad a hip
operation which may keep him off
his feet for a while. But h e Is the
best choice.
So the search continues. Look­
ing toward businessmen, the nam e
of Charles Bassine comes up from
time to time. He Is a friend and
financial supporter of bo th P resi­
dent Johnson and S enator K en ­
nedy. Very dynamic and attractive
Industrlallst-phllanthroplst, he is
one of the top givers in New York
today. He started out as a g radu­
ate of New York Law School, Is
now chairm an of the Board of
S partans Industries which in New
York takes In the K orvette retail
operation, a very top fellow who
gets along with everyone and
would be good on the hustings.
T hen of course there is A rthur
K rlm hlrtiself, a brilliant lawyer
turned industrialist who Is both
friend and financial backer to
President Johnson and presently
top m an on the Johnsop cam ­
paign staff, and still som ew hat
close to the K ennedy family.
A nother m an being th o u g h t of is
Louis Nizer, an old associate of
A rthur Krlm, one of th e best
thought of lawyers in New York.
A responsible m an and a square
shooter, a prober of th e soft spots
of an opponent. Presiding Justice
of the Appellate Division of the
Supreme Court B ernard Botein
would be acceptable if he would
make the race, which he probably
would not w ant to do. And so
would M an h attan District A ttor­
ney F rank Hogan, who once lost
for the Senate by Just a few votes.
And don’t count out U.S. A ttor­
ney Robert M orgenthau, who after
a late s ta rt lost to Governor
Rockefeller (but it’s no disgrace to
lose to a champ, a person consid­
ered to be the best vote getter in
N-'w York Stat« today.)
Ambassador Goldberg
T he person Lyndon Johnson
would like to see on the ticket
and, if the President had time to
do his homework In politics, one
he would use his so-called p er­
suasive ability on, is Ambassador
A rthur Goldberg. Brooklyn "County
leader Stanley S telngut tried to
bring this about some time ago,
and Goldberg would be a can d i­
date who could win. Or Johnson
could try to get all factions to
okay ex-Mayor Robert P. W ag­
ner, who would like to go, but
only if drafted.
O ttinger and O thers
O ther names mentioned, all of
whom wouM m ak» resp<Mislble
candidates
are U ndersecretary
of Commerce Howard J. Samuel*;
U pstate
Congressman
Sam uel
S tra tto n ; Nas'sau County Execu­
tive Eugene Nickerson; Bronx
Borough President H erm an B a­
dillo; form er Acting Mayor Paul
Screvane; newly elected Brooklyn
Congressman B ert Podell; Deputy
Attorney G eneral Ed Weisl, Jr.;
K ennedy-friend W illiam van den
Heuvel; Jack Bronston, the articu ­
late and persuasive S tate S enator
from Queens; Congressman Rich­
ard Ottinger, who could finance a
strong campaign; and Sol Llnowltz, UJ3. Representative, O r­
ganization of American States.
T hey’re even thinking about a
m an like W alter Cronklte, a m an
i with a nam e and fam e as a new s­
paperm an - com m entator w ith a
reputation for full integrity.
T he dilemma faced by the
D emocrats in this S tate is th a t
of two positions: th e Resnick posi­
tion, with the alleged backhig of
President Johnson, c o m p l e t e
hawk; the other is the Lowenstein,
O’Dwyer, Dow position, th e Mc­
Carthy position. This creates
tough problems and enm ities for
all of the Democratic local c a n ­
didates throughout the S tate.
There is a p o ssib le m o d e r a t e
p o s itio n , c o n c e iv a b ly th e K ennedy-Podell p o sitio n , and m ost of
the p o t e n t i a l C8.n d id a te s m e n t i o n ­
e d w o u ld fit, except Resnick a n d
p o ssib ly Pike.
Westchester Chapter
Sets Annual Dinner
The
W e s tc h e s t e r
C o u n ty
c h a p t e r , O lvll S e rv ic e E m ­
p lo y e es A ssn., w ill h o ld it s
a n n u a l d in n e r-d a n c e o n S a t­
urday, AprU 27, at 7 p.m. a t the
Seven Pines R estaurant, Boston
Post Road, Miamaroneck.
Tickets are not lim ited to m em ­
bers; friends an d relatives are
welcome. The price of tickets is
$9 each. This am ount Includes a
prim e ribs of beef dinner, all
gratuities, dancing from 9 p.m. to
2 a.m., an d a bottle of rye and a
bottle of scotch on each table
for' ten.
Reservations close April 22. No
tickets will be sold at the door.
If you wish to reserve a table for
ten, please so state when order­
ing tickets, Edward Carfa, dinner
chairm an, ha« requested.
Tickets for this affair m ay be
obtained from any one of the
following conlmittee m embers;
Edward P. Carafa, New R o­
chelle T ieatm ent P lan t; Irene
Amaral,
W elfare—Accounttag—
C.O.B.; Chris Boswell, Facilities'
an d Services, G rasslands; Molly
H art, Welfare—120 G rand Street,
White Plains; Em m a Mazzeo, P u r­
chase & Supply, G rasslands; C ar­
mine Lamagni, Playland. Rye;
Raymond Maybine, Facilities &
Services.
G rasslands;
George
Jackson, Road M aintenance G a r­
age; Duncan MacPhail, New R o­
chelle T ie atm en t P lant; P at M ascioli. Room 532, County Off.
Bldg.; Marilyn M atthews, Room
401, County Courthouse; or by
writing to: dinner committee, P.O.
Box 827, White Plains.
M e d ic a l Exam
The City D epartm ent of P er­
sonnel will give a medical and
physical exam this week to 370
candidates for construction in ­
spector positiona.
NEW CERTIFICATIONS’
T ItIa
D»tfl Certlfled
L a a l N«. O ertiflti
A ocou nt clerk, 4 S cartifled, M a r c h 1 ..........................................................................................
A d m in .
M s i s t a n t, vrotn . ( T O ) ,
2 certifi ed , M a r c h 4 ..............
^
A d m in .
aM («ta at, p r o m . ( W B ) ,
8 certified, M arch 1
..............
y
A d m in .
oMiiitaat, p ro m . ( H D ) , 31 certified , M a rc h 1 ....................................................
A d m in , amiiiitant, p ro m . ( H D ) , 1 0 certified, F e b r u a r y 2 8
..........................
A d m in ,
anni/itant, p ro m . ( H W ) , 1 0 certified , F e b . 2 8 ..................................................
155
A d m in ,
aiwistant, p ro m , ( D E ) , 8 ce rtified. F e b . 2 8
.......................
4 1
A d m in ,
annlstan t, p ro m . ( B E ) ,
.3 ce rtified, F e b . 2 8 ..............
4
............................
0
A d m in .
aM intanf , p r o m . ( B T ) , 7 ce rtified, F e b . 3 8
A d m in ,
aa^iiiitant, pr o m . ( S P ) ,
1 ce rtified, F e b .
28
i
A>wei<«or, p r o m . ( T D ) , 14 certified, F e b . 2 8 ....................................................................
80
A m I. d e p u t y m ip erin ten d en t o f w o m e n ’* prls ong, p ro m . (D C ), 2 certified. M a r c h 4
A w f . d e p u t y w ard en , pro m . (D C), 4 certified. M a r c h R .........................................
l!i
AMt. electrical ennrineer, gren. p r o m . 1 certified, M a r c h 1 ..........................................
4(5
..............................................................
A i^t. eleotr ica’j en?ine*»r. 13 rertifle d. M a r c h 1
A sst
fo r e m a n , p r o m . (D S ) . 1!)2 certified, F e b . 2 9 ........................................................
*37
Aflflt. m iperinten dent, p r o m .
( B T ) , 4 certified, F e b , 2 9
A tte n d a n t, 42 cerliflpd. M a r r h 4 ................................................................................................
A tto r n e y , p ro m . ( F N ) , (> ccrtiflpd. F eb . 28 ...................................................................
Bridnre 4 tu n n e l lie u te n a n t, p r o m . ( T A ) . 3 cerliHed, F e b . 29 ...........................................
4
B u y e r ( p r in t im r ) , 18 ee rlin c d . M a r c h B ...............................................................................
C a p ta in ( m e n ) , p ro m . (D C), 2 oertified. M a r c h 5 ............................................................
■'*»
C a r m a ln ta in e r , irr. B.
12 ce rtine d . M a r c h 1 ...................................................................
311
Caflpworker,
17, .351 certiflpd. F eb . 20 ................................................................................
Civil envinper. p ro m . ( B T ) , 1 certified. M a r c h 4 .............................................................
t
Clyii enffineer, 15 cortlfled. M a r c h 4
.................................................................................
Claim ex a m in e r. 36 certiflpd, F eb . 28 .....................................................................................
Cierk, 16 certified, F e b . 28
..............................................................................................................
Comp(om.“it“r o p e r a to r , 15 certified. M a r c h 6
..............................................................
_
C o m p u t e r o p e r a to r , 107 certifled. F e b . 17 ...........................................................................
C o m p u t e r prosrramminR: tr ain ee. 141 rertifie d, F e b . 27 .......................................................
C o rrectio n officer ( m a l e ) , 96 certified, F e b . 2 9 .................................................................
C u s to d ia l f o r e m a n , 13 certified, M a r c h 6 ...........................................................................
D eckiia nd, 8 certified,
M.iroh I ..............................................................................................
19
E lectrician , 6 certified. F eb . 28 ................................................................................................
E lectrician , 8 certified. F eb, 2 8 ................................................................................................
E l e c t r ic i a n 's h e lp r, 4 certified, M a rc h 1 .................................... .............. ...........................
E 'c te rm in a to r, 8 certified. F eb . 2 7
...........................................................................................
HoualniC m a n a s e r , p r o m . ( H A ) , 11 ce rtified, F eb . 2 7 ..................................................
J r . a rc h ite c t, 1 ceriified. M a r c h 5 ...............................................................................................
J r . ch e m is t, 1 certified. Fob. 27 .....................................................................................................
L a u n d r y fo rem an , p r o m . ( H D ) . 3 certifi ed , M a r c h 4
...............................................
H
Messenarer 10 0 certified, M arch 6 , , . , T .............................................................................. ^5,5
O p e r a t io n a s n U ta n t (civ ii def e n e e ) , 4 certified, F eb . 29 ............................................
4
P a t r o l m a n , 3 4 1 certified, M a r c h 6 ...............................................................................................
P e r s o n n e l aaaintant, p r o m . ( W D ) , 3 certifi ed , F e b . 2 8 ......................................................
P h a r m a c i s t , 4 4 c?rtfled, M a r c h S ...............................................................................................
5?
P l u m b e r , 8 certified, M a r c h 1
77
P i u m b e r 'a helper, 4 certified, F eb , 2 7 .....................................................................................
P r in c i p a l ca siiier, p ro m . ( B T ) , 8 ce rtified, F e b . 28 .......................................................
17
P r o c e * se^^re^, 7 certified, M a rc h 1
20
P u r c h a s e In spector, ( s h o p s t e e l ) , 9 certified, M a r c h 5
..............................................
10
P u r c h a s e In s p ecto r ( f u e l
su p p lio a ), .3 ce rtified, F e b . 36 ..........................................
11
R a i lr o a d p o r te r , 2 0 0 certifi ed , F eb . 27 ................................................................................ 2B,‘t l
Sr, clerk , p ro m . ( D T ) , 8 certified, M a rc h 5
38
Sr.
steno K raph er, p r o m . ( H A ) , 13 certified, M a r c h 6 .........................................................
K'O
Sr.
s te n o g r a p h e r , p r o m . ( D H ) , 8
ce rtified, M a r c h 6 .........................................................
4(J
S r. a t e n o s r a p h e r , p ro m . ( D H ) , 1 certified, M a r c h 4 ......................................................
Sr.
stenog:rapher, p ro m , ( W D ) , 1 certified, M arch 4 .........................................................
316
Sr.
stenogrrapher, gen. pro m ., 38 certified. Keb, 29 ........................................................
3117
S r. s te n o g r a p h e r , p r o m . ( H R ) , 3 certified, Feb. 28 .........................................................
S r. s e n o g r a p h e r, p ro m . ( D T ) , 1 ce rtified, F eb . 28 .........................................................
Sr.
s te n o g ra p h e r, pro m . ( W D ) , 3 4 certified, Feb,
36 .................................................
S r.
a t e n o g r a p h e r , pro m . ( H D ) , 18 certified, F eb, 28
................................................
ly "
S r.
s te n o g r a p h e r, p r o m .
(D S ), 6 certified. F eb.
26 ..................................................
S r. s te n o g r a p h e r , p r o m . (O R A ), 2 ce rtified. F eb . 27 .....................................................
S r. s tr e e t c l u b w o rk er, 1 ce rtified, M a r c h 4 .....................................................................
Sr. a u p e r y is o r o f p a r k o p era tio n s , p r o m ( D P ) , 8 ce rtified, F eb , 28 ..................
S u p e r v is o r I, p r o m . ( W D ) , 12 certified, M a r c h 1 ........................................................... ^ '
S u p e r v is o r 8 , p r o m . (W D ) , 1 certified. M a r c h 6 ...................................................................
.•
S u p e r i n t e n d e n t o f c o n s tr u c tio n , p r o m . ( D E ) , 3 certified, M arch 8 ........................
S u p e r in t e n d e n t o f c o n s tr u c tio n , 3 7 certified. M a rc h 7
_
S u p e r v is in g licenae in s p ec to r, p r o m . ( D L ) . 1 certified, M a r c h 6
................
T y p ist, gr. 2, 10 certified, M a r c h 1 .....................................................................................
T y p ia t, g r . 8 , 10 certified, M a r c h 1 ..........................................................................................
"9
T yp iat, g r. 4. 4 3 cortlfled, M a rc h 1 .............................................................................................
6(>7
n V p pis t, gr. 5, 3 certified, M a rc h 1 .....................................................................................
T y p ist, gr. 6 , 8 6 certified, M a r c h 1 ...........................................................................................
T y p ist, gr, 7, 77 certified, M arch 1 ......................................................................................
Kr.
&
OLD CER'TIFICATIGNS
Area aerv'ices c o o r d i n a to r , 17 certified,' F e b . 16 ...............................................................
Asa t. a c c o u n ta n t , g r. 2 1 certified. F o b. 2 0 ......................................................................
A s s t civil engineer, gen. pro m ., fi certified, F eb. 16 ............................................
Asat, r en t ex a m in e r, p ro m . ( O R A ) , 4 ce rtified, F e b . 15 .......................................
A sst, r en t ex a m in e r , 22 certified. F a b . 15
...................................................................
A ss t, rea id en t b u ild in g fcupf-rintendent.
p r o m . ( H A ) , 21 certified, F eb. 23 ............... i-®
A ss t, s u p e r v is o r ( t e l e p h o n e ), p r o m ,
( B T ) , 2 certified,
F e b . 2 0 , ........................
"
A t t e n d a n t ( m e n ) , 3il certified, F eb. 10 ........................................................................... ..
A t t e n d a n t ( w o m e n ) , p r o m . ( D P ) , 2 ce rtified,
F e b . 15
........................................
“i
A u to m o t iv e ferv icem a n , 2 5 certified, F e b . 21 .....................................................................
C able splicer. 6 sertified, F eb . 23 ................................................................................................
C a p t a in , p r o m . ( F D ) , 6 certified, F e b . 16 ................................................................................
Casa w orker, gr. , 16, 3 3 8 certified,
F e b . 19
..............................................................
Case woricer 1, gr. 11, 27
certified. Feb. 16 ............................................................
Caae w o r k e r I, g r, 15 3 <-ertified. F e b . 16 .......................................................................
" ‘i
.r.
Civil e n g in eer ( s t r u c t u r a l . ,
p r o m , (D D ) , 1 certified , F e b . 19 ........................
j
Civil oiiffineer ( s t r u c t u r a l ) ,
15 certified, F e b . 19 ......................................................
Civil engluereinsf d r a f t s m a n , p ro m . ( P W ) , 1 certified, F eb , 16 ..................................
Coliectinii agent, 6
ce rtified, F eb . 20
........................................................... .................
C orrection officer ( w o m e n ) . 15 certified, F e b . 16 ...........................................................
C u s to d ia l as st., ( m e n ) . 27 certified, F e b . 19 .....................................................................
C u s to d ia l f orem an , 14 certified, Feb. 19
^
D irec tor o f te ch nic al servic es ( a i r p o ll u tio n c o n t ro J ) , 1 certified, F e b . 19 . . . .
E le c tr ic a l eng ineer, 3 certified, F eb. 2 ................................................................................
E l e v a t o r o p e r a to r . 2 0 0 certified.
Feb. 21
g.-i
‘g
F ir e m a n , p r o m . ( F D ) , 130 certified, F eb . 2 0 ...........................................................................
F o r e m a n ( t e l e p l i o n t s ) , p to n i. ( B T ) , 5 certified, F eb. 20
jfj
F o r e m a n o f m e ch an ics ( m o t o r vehicles, p ro m . ( D S ) , 5 certified, F e b . 21 .............
F u r n l t u r a m a i n t a i n e r ’s ,|ielper, 23 ce rtified, F eb, 3
...............................................
y;;
H o u sin g a s s is ta n t , I certified, F eb . 23
,(,5
J r . m e th o d s an a ly s t, 1 0 certified, F eb, 2fe ......................................................................
57
M ech a nical en gineer, 23 certifi ed
Fob. 15 ...........................................................................
7
Me<lical record s li b r a r ia n , 3 certifi"d, F eb , 26 ................................................
^75
M o r tu a r y c a r e ta k e r , 64 certified.
F eb . 31
Qj) 7
M o to r vehicle o p e r a to r , 441 certified, Feb. 2 .....................................................................
P ers o n n el aa«is ta nt, gen. p ro m , 19 ce rtified, Feb, 3 ...........................................................
45
P ip e c a u lk er, 6 ce rtified, F t b . 2 0
* ...............
18
P ip e la yin g in specto r, 18 certified. F eb . 2 .......................................................................... 3 «n(».
P olic e tra in e.e I certified, F eb. 19 ..........................................................................................
P u b lic h e a lth asHistant, 6 certified, Feb, 20
.....................................................................
r>0
R ad io r e p a ir m e ch anic, 5 ce rtified,
Feb, 23 ...........................................................................
Sr, b u d s e t ex a m in e r. 89 certified
F eb . 14 ..........................................................................
Sr.
c!«rk. pro m ( D W ) . 6
certified. Fel>. 2 0 .......................................................................
9:1
1
S r . clerk , p r o m ( C R A ) , 22 certified, Feb. 15 ................................................................
Sr
c i t r k , p rom . ( D H ) , 26 certified. Feb. 2 ........................................................................
50
Sr
cl erk, pr o m . ( H A ) , 17
rert ifie d, Feb, 2 .....................
lit
Sr
cl erk, prom ( B E - I ) , 3
certified, Feb, 2 ..........................................................................
I'.’S
S r . h o u s in g telle r, p ro m . ( H A ) , 12 cerilfled, Feb, 2 3 .........................................
»
Sr. m edic al r ec o rd s li b r a r ia n , prom . (H D ». 2 certified. F eb . 23 ...................... |
S r s u p e r v is o r o f p a r k o p cra tion e . p ro m . ( D P ) , 6 ce rtified, F eb . 21 .............................4 0 I
S ew age t r e a t m e n t w o rker, 25 certified. Feb. 21
..........................................
Ste el co n s tru c tio n in specto r. 6 ce rtifi ed , Feb. 20 .................................................................4 8 0
T e le p h o n e o p e ra to r , 4 7 0 certified.
Feb. 21 ..........................
6”
T i tle e x a jr in e r, 18 certified, Feb. 3
10-^
W a t e r f r o n t co n s tru c tio n in specto r. 7 ce itified, F eb. 15
.......................* * ’ * * * , , *
W a t e r p l a u t o p e r a t o r , 1 9 cortifle d, F e b . 1 9
..............................................................
.J:
.
8
March 12, 1968
CIVIL
SERVICE
LEADER
R etired Bmployeea A a m . Is an orfan lzatlo n of retired City em ­ C i t y
P ro m o te s
(C o n tin u e d
f r o m
P a fe 4)
ployees whose offices axe a t 325
jor tJie p ast 40 years, and he and Broadway. New York, N.Y. 10007
T h re e P e rso n n e l
wife S arah have five children and m ay be reached a t 233-7541.
fjjd five grandchildren. S arah 1b Dues are $3 per year.
D e p t. E m p lo y e e s
p Jormer member of th e S ta te
PdTiOcratic Committee and a
T h e C ity D e p a r t m e n t o f
Remember—Mall M o rel The
ic j m e r co-leader of the N inth
P e r s o n n e l— t h e C i ty ’s c e n t r a l
Code
Moves
Country—but—Zip
/ D., Kings County.
re c ru itin g ,
e x a m in i n g a n d
The New York City Civil Service T he Mail I t t
p la c e m e n t a g e n cy — h a s a n ­
nounced th e designation of three
new units heads.
H erbert Edelstein, a career civil
serv an t since 1929, has been de­
signated chief of the d ep artm en t’s
tra n sit exam ining division, th e dislon responsible for preparing and
adm inistering
competitive civil
service
exam inations
through
which th e 37,000-man City T ran s­
it Authority fill its positions. Edel­
stein, who is a principal person­
nel exam iner (railroad) replaces
the recently retired P ied H. Hedin.
Charles R. Foy, Jr., a senior a d ­
m inistrative assistant, was desig­
n ated chief of the departnxent’s
' ' V
new ly-created au dit and voucher
section within the employee health
services division. He will be re ­
sponsible for vouchering paym ents
to health insurance carriers to ta l­
ing over $57,000,000 which the City
f ^
pays to provide health insurance
coverage for over 320,00 active and
1
1
retired City employees.
Joseph Castellanta, an adm in­
istrative associate, was designated
chief of th e departm ent’s service
MotffI Tino —AntiqiMWhite
rating division, the im lt which
oversees operation of th e recentlyAt this price, you can put one in any roon)
decentralized City-wide Service
R ating Program . C astellaneta re ­
where you want to listen to radio. Made
places Foy in this assignm ent.
by G.E. Baclted by G.E.
(M cD o n ald N a m e d
9 Promotion Tests
Offered By State;
File Before April 1
rad io
• Automatic Volume Control for steady
volume level
• Acoustically-designed cabinet. Ruggedi
easy-to-clean polystyrene
W H IT E
E L E C T R IC
A P P L IA N C E
C o .,
In c,
1694 ■ 2n<i AVENUE, N. Y. 28
lETWEEN 87th & 88th ST.
SA 2-0771
ON
A U .
C O L U M B IA
near
NO.
PEAB3
H 03-0946
Luncheons
Meetings
Receptions
justhandy
and dandy for any
group occasion.
Banquet and meeting
details are so easy
when you come to
SILO. Just leave the
details to us
SILO, the Capital
District’s Most
Talked-About
Restaurant, is the
area’s No. 1 host
>for those special
occasions.
Accommodations 2 to
275 persons.
CIV IL SERVICE BOO K S
• n t f o il f e s H
PLA ZA BOOK S H O P
380 B ro o d w ay
A lb a n y . N . Y.
M oll & P h o n o O r d e r s P lllod
Telephone-489-4491
for Bruce Meli
or Ray Mitchel!
Resiaum i
1228 Western Ave.
Albany, N. Y. 12203
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BOOKS
o i nil pu blis he rs
I I I w a n te d
S e r v ic e w ith iVo
S T ..
Banquets
ARCO
ALBANY—Governor Rockefel­
ler ha« se n t to the S enate for
confirm ation the reappointm ent of
Mrs. SammiB L. Kirby of P earl
River as a member of th e B oard
of Visitors to Rockland S ta te
H ospital for a term ending Dec.
31, 1974. T he post is unsalarled.
IN S T R U M E N T S
ALBANY
SOCIAL SERVICES
Associate
welfare
consultant
(adult institutions), 33-072, G 25.
TRANSPORTATION
Assistant civil engineer (design),
33-068, G-23.
STATE THRUWAY AUTHORITY
Toll division supervisor, 33-071,
$10,330 to $12,430.
M rs. K irb y N a m e d
M U S IC A L
H IL T O N M U SIC CENTER
8*
INTERDEPARTMENTAL
Assistant architect, 33-065, G-19.
EXECUTIVE—O.G.S.
Senior facilities planner, 33-070,
G-23.
LABOR
Senior boiler inspector, 33-066,
G-16.
Supervising boiler Ipspector, 33067, G-20.
MOTOR VEHICLE
M otor vehicle license clerk, 33053, G-5.
G-E q u a lity ta b le
• Four quality G-E tubes plus rectifier
2 0 % OFF TO STATE WORKIRS
T h e S ta te D e p a rtm e n t of
C iv il S e rv ic e w ill re c e iv e a p ­
p li c a t io n s u n t i l Ai5rll 1 f o r
M a y 11 p r o m o tio n e x a m i n a ­
tions for nine positions in vari­
ous departm ents. T he exam are
open only to employees of the
D epartm ent concerned.
The departm ent, job title, exam
num ber, pay grade of each te st
are as follows:
W h ile th e y la s t!
• Powerful A** Dynapower speaker with
Alnico V nrtagnet
Paw Rfieer
JO E’S BOOK SHOP
\ n StfjbrPi arl
S e r v ic e C h a rg es" -
ALBANY
F d c o n ta c t • • •
ALBANY
T he K e e sev llle N « tlo o a l B a n k
K eeseviU e. N .T . '
834-7331
NEW YORK
CIVIL SEKVICE BOOKS
B R A N C H O F F IC E
r O R INE'O RAIATIO N n ^ r a r d ln t EdverU*
P le u e
w rit*
or
JOSEPH
Member rj>.1.0..
803
A X JB A N T
80.
e all
T
BBLLBW
U A M M IN O
N .f.
B LTS.
PhodD*
IT
f-B
MAYFLOWER • ROYAL COU
APARTIWENTS - Furnished, 1
furnished, and Roonui. Phone F:
t-1994. (Albany).
L L B A N '^
SHOP
SPECIA L RATES
for Civil Scrvice Einploytes
W e llin g to n
D R IV K .IN Q A R A O I
AIR CONDITIONINQ • TV
No parklna
problam i «r
Albciny't larOMi
. . . witk
T h e s to re th a t
W
c a re s a b o u t y o u !
e
F o llo w
B r in g
Y o u
T h e
T h e
S u n
W
T o
o r l d ’s
Albany'! only drlv»^s
fo rag*. Yov'H IBi* th« toi»>
fort «nd convcnIanM, te«l
fvmlly rat«i. Cocktail foungt.
t m e STATB S T R B ^
• P r O IIT I IT A T I CAPITOl
f i o y o or
F in e s t
P a m p e re d
P ro d u c e
kmnl mgnt.
S P E C IA L W E E K L Y R A T t »
F O R E X IH N D E D STMYM
CIVIL
Stxtrea
CIVIL SERVICE TRAVEL CLUB
a n n o u n c es its
1968
S u m m e r P ro g ra m
O f C a r e fr e e
V a c a tio n s
E s p e c ia lly p r e p a r e d f o r m e m b e r s o f C ivil S e rv ic e
E m p lo y e e s A ssn. o f t h e S t a t e o f N ew Y o rk .
FREEPORT,
GRAND
BAHAMA
IS L A N D ,
at
th e
lu x u rio u s S H E R A T O N O C E A N U S H O T E L
F e a t u r i n g : R o u n d t r i p j e t a i r t r a n s p o r t a t i o n . T w in b e d d e d r o o m s w ith p r iv a te , b a t h a n d p r i v a t e te r r a c e .
G o u r m e t b r e a k f a s t a n d d i n n e r d a lly . T r a n s f e r a n d
baggag,e h a n d l in g . C o c k ta il p a r t y a n d m a n y e x tr a s .
F ir s t D e p a r t u r e — 5 D a y D e c o r a tio n D a y H o lid a y
P r ic e : $169
L e a v e K e n n e d y A ir p o r t o n W e d n e s d a y , M a y 29 a t
7:30 PM . R e t u r n S u n d a y , J u n e 2.
T o u r C h a ir m a n : M r. S a m E m m e tt
1060 E a s t 28 S t r e e t
B ro o k ly n , N ew Y o rk 11210
S ec o n d D e p a r t u r e — 8 D a y S u m m e r V a c a tio n P ric e : $220
L e a v e B u ffa lo A ir p o r t o n S a tu r d a y , J u l y 13 a t
6:30 PM , R e t u r n S a tu r d a y , J u l y 20.
T o u r C h a irm a n :
C o - C h a ir m a n :
M rs. M a ry G o rm le y
M iss G r a c e H llle ry
1883 S e n e c a A v e n u e
6 N a v a jo P a r k w a y
B u ffa lo , N ew Y o rk
B u ffa lo , N.Y. 14210
T h i r d D e p a r t u r e — 8 D a y S u m m e r V a c a ti o n P r ic e : $189
L e a v e K e n n e d y A lrp w rt o n S a t u r d a y , J u l y 20 a t
6:30 PM . R e t u r n S a t u r d a y , J u l y 27.
T o u r C h a i r m a n : M r. S a m E m m e t t
F o u r t h D e p a r t u r e — 8 D a y S u m m e r V a c a tio n a t 6:30 P M
P ric e : $200
L e a v e A lb a n y A ir p o r t o n S a t u r d a y , A u g u s t 3. R e t u r n
S a tu r d a y , A u g u s t 10.
T o u r C h a i r m a n : M r. F o s t e r P o t t e r
S t a t e D e p t, o f A g r ic u ltu r e & M a r k e t
C h a p te r , CSEA
A lb a n y , N ew Y o rk 12226
H A W A II — 1 6 D a y s I n H o n o l u l u
S p e n d 16 d a y s in H o n o lu lu a t t h e R e e f o r
R e e f T o w e r H o te l
F e a t u r i n g : R o u n d t r i p j e t a i r t r a n s p o r t a t i o n . T w ln b e d d e d
ro o m s w ith b a t h . T r a n s f e r s a n d b a g g a g e h a n d l in g .
S ig h ts e e in g a n d m a n y e x tr a s .
F i r s t D e p a r t u r e — L e a v e K e n n e d y A ir p o r t o n S a t u r d a y ,
J u ly 6, m o r n in g . R e t u r n S u n d a y , J u ly 21.
S e c o n d D e p a r t u r e —L e a v e K e n n e d y A ir p o rt o n S a t u r d a y ,
J u l y 20, m o r n in g . R e t u r n S u n d a y , A u g u s t 4.
T o u r C h a ir m a n fo r b o t h H a w a iia n T r i p s :
M rs. J u l i a D u ffy
M r. J o h n J . H e n n e s s e y
P.O . B o x 43
276 M o o re A v e n u e
W e s t B r e n tw o o d , L. L
K e n m o r e , N ew Y o rk
N ew Y o rk
P ric e : $ 1 8 9
LA S VEGAS
4 D a y s a t t h e lu x u r io u s A la d d in H o te l
L e a v e K e n n e d y A ir p o r t o n T h u r s d a y , J u n e 20,
m o r n in g . R e t u r n S u n d a y , J u n e 23, e v e n in g .
F e a t u r i n g : R o u n d t r i p j e t c h a r t e r f lig h ts . T w ln b e d d e d
ro o m w ith p r iv a t e b a t h . M o st m e a ls . C o c k ta ils ,
e n t e r t a i n m e n t a n d m a n y e x tr a s .
T o u r C h a i r m a n : M r. S a m E m m e t t
EUROPE
P ric e : $ 8 7 5
22 D a y s to S c a n d i n a v ia a n d B r i t i s h Is le s
V is itin g D e n m a r k , S w e d e n , N o rw a y , S c o tl a n d & E n g la n d
L e a v e K e n n e d y A ir p o r t o n S u n d a y , J u l y 14, e v e n in g .
R e t u r n S u n d a y , A u g u s t 4.
F e a t u r i n g : R o u n d t r i p j e t a i r t r a n s p o r t a t i o n . F i r s t c la s s
h o te ls . B r e a k f a s t a n d d i n n e r d a lly . S ig h ts e e in g .
T r a n s f e r s a n d b a g g a g e h a n d l in g . F u lly e s c o rte d .
T o u r C h a i r m a n : M rs. G r a c e S m i t h
R. D . B o x 1195
W a te r f o r d , N. Y.
EUROPE
P ric e : $ 8 1 5
22 D a y s, G r a n d E u r o p e a n V a c a tio n
V is itin g P o r tu g a l, S p a in , F r e n c h R iv ie r a , I t a l i a n R iv ie r a ,
B e rlin a n d H o lla n d .
L e a v e K e n n e d y A ir p o r t o n T h u r s d a y , J u l y 11, eve.
R e t u r n T h u r s d a y , A u g u s t 1.
F e a t u r i n g : R o u n d t r i p j e t a i r t r a n s p o r t a t i o n . F i r s t c la s s
h o te ls . B r e a k f a s t a n d d i n n e r d a lly . S ig h ts e e in g .
T r a n s f e r s a n d b a g g a g e h a n d l in g . F u lly e s c o r te d .
T o u r C h a i r m a n : M iss D e lo r a s F u s s e ll
111 W l n th r o p Avenu®
A lb a n y , N ew Y o rk 12203
SERVICE
tEADER
T e n B tif f o lo A r e a
R e s i d i ^ s E lig ib le
F o r C iv il S e r v i c e
BUFFALO — T he S tate Civil
Service D epartm ent today a n ­
nounced the nam es of Buffaloarea residents who passed recent
civil service examinations. T he
Ust:
Chief account clerk, $5,640 to
$7,620, M arilyn Donohue, Buffalo:
K ath erin e Bradovlch, L ackaw an­
na and Estelle Miller, Buffalo.
Supervising admissions clerk,
$6,120 to $7,880, Angelica Phelps,
Buffalo.
A ssistant building
inspector,
salary to be announced, Glen
Vanschoonhoven, K enm ore; Jack
Saks, Buffalo; R ichard Delaney,
Eggertsvllle; Leonard B. Burch,
Cheektowaga; E dw ard VendettI,
Cheektowaga.
A ssistant toll equipm ent m a in ­
tenance supervisor, $8,826 to $10,670, W. C, Temkevich, Snyder.
Tue«|Jay, March 12,
Youngs Installed As President
Of Clinton School Unit, CSEA
Approved As Bargaining Agent
U T IC A — L o r e n Y o u n g s w a s I n s ta l le d a s p r e s i d e n t o f the
C l in to n C e n t r a l S c h o o l u n i t o f t h e O n e id a C o u n ty c h a p te r
C iv il S e rv ic e E m p lo y e e s A ssn ., a t a r e c e n t m e e ti n g in the
sc h o o l.
for th e unit, explained the new
R obert Guild, OSEA field rep­
T aylor Law. J o h n C. Scholl, New
resentative, wa» the Installing of­
H artfo rd attorney, was appointed
ficer. O th er new officers Include:
regional attorney for the Aasoci^t.
vice-president, William Christie;
tion.
treasurer, Ig natius Shepherd and
Following th e meeting, mem­
recording secretary, Dorothy Dorr.
bers
of the Board of Education,
Youngs appointed wage proposal
representative* from each of the th e teachers, and Robert Qrogia,
n o n -te a c h in g ' departm ents. Thgy superintendent of the Clinton
C entral School, Joined the grou^
are: W illiam Christie, bus drivers;
for a coffee hour.
Dorothy Dorr, clerical and office
Recognition of th e CSEA. a«
workers; Lillian Fleming, food
bargaining agent for the n 3 tiservice oafeterifi workers and
teaching personnel a t the sch>3 l
Youngs, custodians an d m ain ten­
followed th e selection by the em­
ance workers.
ployees a t a special election Iwb
C linton Vlllsige Justice of the
To Keep Inform ed,
m onth. At th a t time, the CSE\
Peace Ja m es A. Hughes, attorney
Follow T he Leader.
received 35 votes, th e Clinton Em­
ployees AssocIatioiT 16 and lw'»
employees asked no recognltl3n,
C A R IB B E A N C R U I S E
P r i c e : $ 1 7 5 m in im u m
giving
CSEA a m ajority of votai
7 D a y M e m o ria l D a y C r u is e to B e r m u d a
of th e 73 eligible voters.
L e a v e N ew Y o rk o n F r id a y , M a y 24, e v e n in g . R e t u r n
According to th e resolution. tt\»
F r id a y , M a y 31.
board noted th a t th e CSEA hi-l
F e a t u r i n g : F o u r g lo rio u s d a y s i n B e r m u d a . A ll m e a ls ,
filed a notarized affidavit afflnnf r o m b r e a k f a s t to g a l a d in n e r s . F lo o r sh o w s w i t h
ing th a t *‘it does not assert to
B ro ad w a y e n te r ta in e r s a n d p o p u la r m a s te r of
strike, or to impose an obligation
c e r e m o n y . F i r s t r u n m o v ie s i n t h e a i r - c o n d l t l o n e d
to conduct, assist or participate
t h e a t r e . C o n c e r ts a n d c o c k ta il m u s ic . S u n a n d s p o r ts
in such a strik e” against tiis
o n s p a c io u s d e c k s — p o o ls id e lid o . F a r e w e ll g a l a
school system.
d in n e r . C r u is e to t h e S e a G a r d e n s I n g la s s - b o tto m
Board approval of the CSE.\’a
petition grants it the exclualv*
b o a t to se e w o n d e r s o f m a r i n e life b n B e r m u d a s
rig h t to represent all eligible ser­
c o r a l re e fs .
vice employees in negotlationi
F o r G o lf e r s — ^The B e lm o n t H o te l & G o lf C lu b e x t e n d s
w ith th e Board of Education.
it s I n v ita tio n to u s e t h e i r g o lf f a c ilitie s a t t h e i r
b e a u t i f u l 1 8 -h o le c h a m p i o n s h i p g o lf c o u r s e . G r e e n s
F e e s : 18 h o le s $6.00. M a n d a t o r y e le c tr ic g o lf c a r
$9.00 p e r rou A d.
A R O U N D S O U T H A M E R IC A T O U R
P ric e : $ 9 9 8
22 D a y s
V is itin g L im a , S a n ti a g o d e C h ile , M o n te v id e o , S a o P a u lo ,
R io D e J a n e ir o .
L e a v e K e n n e d y A ir p o r t o n S u n d a y , J u l y 7, e v e n in g .
R e t u r n S u n d a y , J u l y 21.
F e a t u r i n g : R o u n d t r i p j e t t r a n s p o r t a t i o n : T w ln b e d d e d
r o o m s to f ir s t c la s s h o te ls . B r e a k f a s t a n d d i n n e r
( e x c e p t b r e a k f a s t o n ly in B u e n o s A ir e s ) . T r a n s f e r s
a n d b a g g a g e h a n d l in g . S ig h ts e e in g . E s c o r te d .
T o u r C h a i r m a n : M iss C e le s te R o s e n k r a n z
55 S w e e n e y S t r e e t
B u ffa lo , N ew Y o rk
P U E R T O R IC O
P ric e : $ 2 0 9
M e m o ria l D a y W e e k e n d — M a y 2 9 > Ju n e 2
F la m b o y a n H o te l
T o u r C h a i r m a n : M r. I r v i n g F l a u m e n b a u m
P . O. B o x 91
H e m p s te a d , L .I., N.Y.
T e l.: (516) P i 2-7777
7 D A Y C A R IB B E A N C R U I S E
P ric e : $ 1 4 4
J u n e 14 -J u n e 21 — S a n J u a n - S t . T h o m a s
S.S.
C o n s titu tio n
T o u r C h a i r m a n : M rs. B l a n c h e R u e t h
c / o C iv il S e rv ic e T r a v e l C lu b
711 E i g h t h A v e n u e
N ew Y o rk , N.Y. 10036
T e l.: (212) 247-7780 o r
(516) F R 9-4529
,
2 2 D A Y M E D IT E R R A N E A N C R U IS E
P ric e : $ 9 3 5
S.S. R e g in a — M a y 4 - M a y 25
I t a l y — G re e c e — G r e e k I s le s — T u r k e y — ^Israel— Y u g o s la v ia
C iv il S e rv ic e T r a v e l C lu b
711 E i g h t h A v e n u e
N ew Y o rk , N .Y . 1003«
T e l.: (21 2) 247-7780
21
D A Y B R IT IS H IS L E S
P ric e ) $ 7 5 9
S c o tl a n d —L o n d o n — I r e l a n d —-W ale«
T o u r C h a i r m a n : C la u d e E . R o w e ll
64 L a n g s lo w S t r e e t
R o c h e s t e r , N .Y .
T e l.: (716 ) O R 8 -5637
Elect New President
Of Watertown Civil
Service Commission
W A T E R T O W N — Ja m e^ E.
R o b b i n s ,. t h e S t a t e ’s youngest
lo c a l civ il s e rv ic e com m is­
s io n p r e s i d e n t , h a s resigned
as the head of the Watertown
conunission and has left fof
Florida to en ter the advertlsin?
business.
Elected to replace him is OJttim issioner G len P . Palmer, local
druggist supply salesman.
Appointed to th e three-membsr
commission to succeed Bobbin*
was R ichard Terrell, local insur­
ance adjuster.
T h e W atertow n com m ission i*
in the throes o f re o rie n tin ? tha
civil service p r o g r a m - in C ity «<>'''*
ernm ent a n d In the Watertown
school district.
The commission, accwrdini
President Palm er, hopes to hava
local lists “in a c c e p ta b le shapa
by fall. The commission la work­
ing to correct criticism ^utne
u p in a recent State Civil Serve
D epartm ent study of local con­
ditions.
S n y d e r A p p o in te d
A M E N IA -Jllchard Jh as been nam ed to the
special M ental Hygiene
a n ts’ Committee of the Civ
ice Employees Assn.
m e n t of the appointment
m ade la st week In Albany
Theodore
C.
Wenzel,
president.
T h e appointm ent !•
year term .
,
^
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