Cwil Sewier
LEADER
America’s Largest Weekly for Public Employees
Vol. XXIII, No. 48 Tuesday, August 7, 1962
4~- |Feily Hits ‘Press
ae ,| Trial’ of Rent
. |Repeat This!| Aides’ Reputation
Dems & McKeon ALBANY, Aug. 3—Unsupported charges of bribery and
Have Problem corruption by rent control employees during their service
|with the State Rent Commission were termed an unfair
After Problem |slander against a whole body of personnel whose loyalty
UCCESSFUL polit tical)
and honesty in office has been proven year in and year out.
strategists usually must | 107,000-member Civi! Service Em-
Joseph F. Feily, president of the
combine the qualities of ployees Association, said last week
See Page 10
Price Ten Cents
ra
Keogh Pension Denial
May Be Constitutional
Violation, (SEA Warns
ALBANY, Aug. 6—Attempts to deny a pension to J.
Vincent Keogh, Supreme Court Justice who was recently
sentenced to a two-year prison term for attempted bribery,
may be a violation of the State Constitution, the Civil Ser-
vice Employees Assn, warned last week.
CSEA viewpoints on the Keogh pension case were trans-
statesman, fleld general, dip-
lomat and mass psychologist
—with a dash of the gambler
seasoning all, Every one of
these “talents” is now being
called into play by scrappy
Bill McKeon In his role as
chairman of the State Demo-
cratic Committee,
With “boomlets” for par-
tleular candidates coming to
nothing; with most avowed
candidates falling to catch on
with either the party regulars
or the public at large, the
direction of the party toward
finding a gubernatorial choice
with the stature of Governor)
Rockefeller has become al-
® most completely McKeon’s|
problem,
Mayor Wagner, who will
(Continued on Page 2)
Manhattan State Pla
Jaunt to Freedomland
The Manhattan State Chap-
ter of the Civil Service Em-
ployees Association Is spon-
soring a picnic for Saturday,
September 1, at Freedomland
in the Bronx. General admis-
sion tickets are available from
the plenic committee for $2
per person. Supply is on a
first-come, first-serve basis,
The committee consists of: D.
Roberts, chairman, Kirby Base-
J. Allen Shields, Dunlap
T. Jones, Dunlap 1-101; P.
Rozeboom, Tel. 284; J. Benjamin,
Tel, 412; C. Loucks, Tel. 452; 6.
Sluts, Tel. 229; C. Ransom, 4-12
shift; and 8, Burnett, 12-8 shift
that these employees, now work-
ing for New York City, were sut-
fering unnecessary humiliation
because of irresponsible actions on
the part of Louls Kaplan, New
an
York City Investigations Commis-
sioner,
Stand on Charges Changed
Kaplan had charged that
estimated 20 employees in
rent control agency had been
guilty of fixing rents, but later
declared that he had “no evidence
jany crime has been committed.”
| Deploring the whole manner in
|which the issue developed, Feily
| declared:
| “I have read with great concern
charges eminating from the of-
|fice of the Mayor of New York
|City against approximately 100
| public servants administering the
jrent control law of the State of
|New York in the New York City
laren. ‘These charges have been |
| made in the public press, evidently
Jas the result of anonymous letters
dropped into the Mayor's s0-
called ‘squawk-box’. The public
employees involved have never re-
celved any formal charges to
which they are entitled, both
under the law and as a matter
lot moral right, The first news of
these alligations was learned by
all of these employees by a state-
ment in the public press,
Says Integrity Disregarded
“As president of the Civil Serv-
(Continued on Page 3)
Rochester Chapter
Picnic August 16
Rochester Chapter of the Civil
Service Employees Assn, will hold
\its annual picnic on Aug. 16,
at Logan's on Scottsville Rd., Ro-
|ehester, Samuel Grossfield, chap-
ter president, announced.
Chairman of the event is Merely
| mitted by its president, Joseph F. Feily, to Attorney General
Louls Lefkowitz, who last week held a hearing on the issue.
| The New York City Board of Estimate earlier voted to deny
the |
JOSEPH F. FEILY
| Keogh the City portion of hi
Feily said that he was aware of
“the indignation aroused by the
revelations that certain public of-
ficers have dishonored their trust
” He said, however, that he
felt the Employees Association |
must support the conclusions of}
Comptroller Arthur Levitt that)
the “Constitution and the statutes |
of the State of New York require
that the pension be paid.” Levitt
declared that he had no power to
alter the law.
Constitution States Requirements
In agreeing with the Comptrol-
(Continued on Page 3)
Kaplan Tells
have found no basis for pu
Mcan-controlied Suffolk Boar
ination practices. |
Kaplan made his remarks in |
a letter directed to Supervisor
Robert J. Flynn of the Town of
Huntington. Flynn, a Democrat,
had written to Kaplan recently
asking him to probe the charges
which, he said, masked a GOP at-
tempt to sabotage the Democratic.
controlled County Civil Service
Commission,
Three Suffolk Supervisors, Re-
publicans Charles R. Dominy and
Blumenstein Schwarts.
Lester Albertson and Democrat
‘No Basis For Critism
Of Suffolk Ci
ivil Service,
Supervisors
(From Leader Correspondent) |
HUNTINGTON, Aug. 6—H. Eliot Kaplan, president of the| “iM hours, vacations and
State Civil Service Commission, declared this week that “we |
blic criticism of the Suffolk
County Civil Service Commission's activities.”
The Kaplan statement came at a time when the Repub- |
d of Supervisors has opened
an nvestigation of Suffolk Civil Service Commission exam-
William Leonard, were appointed
by Cromarty to investigate com-
plaints, originating in the County
Center unit of the Suffolk Chapt-
er Civil Service Employees Asso-
ciation, that exams were too diffi-
cult, poor questions were asked
and the time allowed for the tests
was too brief,
The Suffolk Chapter and the
State CSEA later repuidated the
complaints being unfounded.
(Continued on Page 16)
is pension,
‘Single Personnel
‘Practices Code For
‘Syracuse, Onondaga
(From Leader Correspondent)
SYRACUSE, Aug. 3—A new,
single personnel practices
code for city and county em-
ployees was slated to be an-
nounced last weekend.
The code was the result of
numerous meetings between
individual committees ap-
pointed by Syracuse Mayor
William F. Walsh and Onon-
daga County Executive John
H. Mulroy.
It spells out, for the first time
jin the history of the city and
jcounty, a single code regulating
|
| other working conditions for both
city and county employees,
Salaries Similar
The two municipal executives
have expressed “the hope” that
the personnel practices code will
eventually lead to a single salary
schedule for both city and county
employees.
At present working hours, vaca-
tions, sick leaves and time off
periods vary widely between city
and county and even between de-
partments in the two munictpali~
ties.
The salaries of county and city
employees also are different for
the same comparable positions,
Pass your copy of the Leader
To a Non-Member
cs Commission Acts On Title Appeals
Correction Officers Win; Turn Down Nurses
ALBANY, Aug. 3—State Cor-
rection officers have been re-al-
located to Grade 12 in a Sta
Civil Service Commission review
of an appeal that was earlier re-
Jeoted by the State Director of
Compensation and Classfication,
the Civil Service Employees Assn.,
announced last week
At the same time, the Commis-
sion upheld J, Earl Kelly, Com-
pensation and Classification direc-
‘tor, on"his refusal to upgrade state
institution nurses.
& epecial Correction Committes
of the CSEA had filed the appeal,
seeking reallocation to Grade 13.
The Nurses Committee had sought
® reallocation to Grade 11 from
Grade 8.
‘The upgrading of correction of-
ficers, male and female, was
termed a “step forward for oor-
rection pérsonnel," by Joseph F.
Felly, CSEA president, “However,
he continued, “we are extremely
disappointed that the Commis-
sion failed to understand that the
nurses have an equal and urgent
The Association victory in the
correction officer reallocation
climaxed an extended drive by
the CSEA to upgrade these em-~-
ployees. The reallocation, however,
must be approved by the Director
of the Budget before it becomes
final. Felly sald he was contact-
ing T, Norman Hurd, Budget Di-
rector, and urging him to give
approval immediately.
Four titles were covered in the
upgrading. They were correction
officer male and female,
need of reallocaion.”
eorrection hospital atiendant and
correction youth camp officer
Pelly pointed out that the Com-
mission gave no new status for
supervisory personnel such as
sergeant, Meutenant and captain,
among others, and declared tt was
the intention of the Employees
to press for reallocation in these
titles but also to restudy and
continue the fight for the institu-
fon nurses.
Serving on the special Correc-
tion Committee were Charles E.
Lamb, Sing Sing; Edwin O'Leary,
Association not only to continue |
Elmira; James Adams, Sing
Sing; Al Foster, Dannemora; FP,
)Henry Galpin, CSEA assistant ex-
ecutive director; William Blom,
director, and Thomas Coyle, ase
sistant director, of the CSEA sal-
jary research staff, and Harry W,
Albright, Jr, CSEA counsel.
The Employees Association ex-
pressed its thanks for the coopera~
ton extended by Paul McGinnis,
Correction Department commis-
sioner, and members of his staff
in supporting the CSEA stand on
the appeal.
Page Two
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
Tuesday, August 7, 1962
DON'
(Continued from Page 1)
have a great deal to say about
the nomination, continues, at
this writing, to say nothing
regarding any particular can-
didate. County leaders
throughout the state have
their favorites, but no one is
the overall favorite—yet. It
is McKeon who will have to
gather all these forces to-
gether behind one, strong
candidate who will put up a
good race against so formid-
able an opponent as Rocke-
feller.
Those around McKeon in
party headquarters at the
Commodore Hotel report that
he works intensely through
the day and into the night
sounding out opinions of local
leaders, keeping an eye on the
performances of announced
candidates, watching for pub-
le reaction and always keep-
ing in mind the fact that
whoever wins the nomination
in September does not neces-
sarily have the votes in
November—when it counts,
To date, nobody is really
coming through, it is report-
ed. The result 1s that the
Democrats of stature who
have made no announcement
of seeking office and some of
the dark horse candidates
are said to becoming more
attractive in the eyes of those
who must make the final
choice,
The avowed candidates are
certainly not giving up at this
point, however, and one who
is plugging away, working
hard to make the good im-
pression (and reported mak-
ing it in some important
counties) 1s Queens County
District Attorney Frank D.
O'Connor,
O'Connor has many things
going for him besides his
known record as a hard-
hitting but judicious district
attorney, it is being pointed
out. He has his own county
behind him, a county that is
powerful and lively in terms)
of votes, It is reported that
leaders in some other impor- |
tant counties look favorably |
upon O'Connor, with Peter |
Crotty of Buffalo (Erie
County) rumored behind him,
Whispers that astute Bill
Luddy of Westchester likes
O'Connor have been making
the rounds, also. Congressman
Charles Buckley, the political
sage of Queens and one of
the last of the early Kennedy
supporters, is said to be for
him,
Other assets being circu-
lated by O'Connor supporters
point up his Catholic back-
ground, his favorable press
treatment, his good image as
@ public servant,
One thing Is certain: O'Con-
‘SERVICE LEADER
‘e Leading Newsmagasine
for Publie Employees
Oieianee sky hen York fy 28
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Bri ¥
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Member of Adit Surean of Chrealations
uber:
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for dob Qpportunitien
nor believes in his candidacy,
believes he would serve the
state well as its governor—
and believes in fighting to the
end, Many feel he Is still very
much in the picture.
Another prominent Demo-
crat who has made no at-
tempt to get “into the pic-
ture” but who has been
looked at with considerable
interest is the City’s veteran
fiscal expert Abe Beame, for-
mer budget director and now
City Controller.
Beame has a way of getting
along with people that has
not gone unnoticed, He
invariably gets a good-
natured reception before civil
service employee groups, al-
though he is the City fiscal
watchdog and this area in-
cludes employee salaries, He
drew headlines in the press
last week when he called for
@ reduction in Federal income
taxes as a means of aiding
the financial woes of local
governments. His arguments,
which reportedly had a pleas-
ant sound to more conserva-
tive voters, were that a tax
reduction would stimulate
local tax revenues through an
upsurge in business and sub-
sequent new employment;
that this in turn would re-
duce expenditures in such
areas as welfare and, to him
most important, would help
local communities escape the
T REPEAT THIS |
need to increase local taxes
while still maintaining essen-
tial services (schools, health,
ete.) at a high level.
Some feel that his Jewish
origins lend a good deal to
possible vote-getting strength
and his support in Brooklyn
is a highly-valued asset, An-
other important factor is that
Mayor Wagner could be ex-
pected to look favorably on
his candidacy. He was on
Wagner's announced list of
desirable candidates to head
the State ticket.
At this writing of course, no
single candidate, avowed or
not, has the nomination. Trial
balloons will continue to be
sent up; “boomlets” will
continue, dark horses will
loom and fade.
It must always be remem-
bered that New York State
Democrats are not only trying
to elect a governor but also,
at the very least, trying to
remove Rockefeller as an
opponent to President Ken-
nedy In 1964 by cutting down
the GOP gubernatorial vote.
This dual, heavy responsi-
bility lies a great deal on the
shoulders of Bill McKeon, who
is young and new. But his
political “savvy” is being
heavily relied on by Wash-
ington. He knows this—and
1s confident he will come up
with “a winner.” His suppor-
ters believe he will, too.
| “We YoU AND
THE ARMED SERVICES
Coast Guard
Taking Applications
For the first time In many
months, all qualified men between
the ages of 17 and 26 may oe
offered immediate enlistment in
the U.S, Coast Guard and a choice
lof date of enlistment and depar-
|ture for basic training, according
\to Rear Admiral Richard M. Ross,
|Commander, Third Coast District.
|Admiral Ross announced that the |
Coast Guard now has openings
for enlistment in the regular ser-
vice.
Newly-enlisted recruits receive
12 weeks basic training at the
Coast Guard Training Center,
Cape May, N.J. During that time
they are given the opportunity to
qualify for specialized training in
such fields as electronics, radio,
mechanics, aerology, photography,
clerical, radar and sonar, Recruit
training includes small boat hand-
ling, deck seamanship, small arms
and ordnance Indoctrination,
communications, fire-fighting and
military etiquette,
Active duty assignments avail-
able include major Coast Guard
cutters, small search and rescue
craft, aids to navigation vessels,
patrol boats, lifeboat stations,
and other shore stations, Service
in the Coast Guard, one of the
five Armed Porces, fulfills the ob-
Ugation for military service in all
respects,
Veterans may be enlisted in
ratings compatible to thelr for-
mer grade, training and the needs
of the service,
A Coast Guard representative is
available to give further informa-
tion and to initiate the processing
of applicants at the U.S. Coast
Guard Recruiting Station, Room
611, 45 Broadway, New York.
|Signal Corps Needs
|550 Technical Officers
Approximately 550 officers of
arades between captain and lHeu-
[erent colonel are needed in the
Signal Corps, Officers in lower
lgrades are now filling in the
| duties. Communications and elec-
tronics experience is necessary,
The openings are for electronic
Warfare officers, automatic data
processing systems and operations
officers, signal equipment main-
tenance and repair officers, elec~
tronie engineers and radio en-
gineers,
Screening Process
Purifies Reserve
Record System
“Malassignments” in the reserve
will be lessened in the future by
process of purification first pro-
posed last year by Gen. Paul L,
Freeman,
The essence of the program is
& program of screening and of
keeping data up-to-date on re-
serve personne), This would mint~
mize the “sacrifices of some of
those called up and subsequent
complaints of heads of families
whose records did not indicate
thelr responsibilities,
FREE BOOKLET by U, 8, Gov-
ernment on Soclal Security, Mail
only, Leader, 97 Duane Street,
New York 7, N, ¥,
Your Public
Relations IQ
By LEO J. MARGOLIN
(Mr, Margolin Is Adjunct Professor of Public Relations in the
New York University School of Public Administration and Is Vice
President, Public Relations, of A. J. Armstrong Co., Inc.
“The First Public War”
PUBLIC RELATIONS, crude
though it was at that time, made
the Civil War—or the War Be-
tween the States—"The First Pub-
lie War."
THIS IS THE conclusion as well
as the title of the lecture by Dr,
Prank Vandiver, professor of his-
tory at Rice University, Houston,
Texas, under the auspices of The
Foundation for Public Relations
Research and Education.
NOW, ONE HUNDRED years
later, Prof, Vandiver's research re-
veals the role of public relations
in that bloody war. He reports
it was the first time in history
that public opinion played as im-
portant @ role in the outcome of
& war as did the military effort,
HISTORICALLY, it was not
strictly a “first” for public rela-
tions as an important and decisive
factor in a war. As far back as
Atilla, the Hun, a brand of public
relations we now know as psycho-
logical warfare, was an effective
Weapon of warfare,
HERE ARE some of the public
relations aspects of the war of
by propaganda, by crude at-
tempts in the field of public
relations,”
© The Civil War ‘became
largely @ war of opinion, a
war to win peorte’s approval.”
© Jefferson Dayis, president
of the Confederacy, was the
first to try to win public sup-
Port.
© Both sides used many stan=
dard PR techniques—speech-
es, leaflets and pamphlets,
sermons, newspaper stories,
‘and textbooks. Even arithme-
tic problems were put in
propaganda terms; “If one
Confederate soldier can whip
seven Yankees, how many
soldiers can whip 49 Yan-
kees?”
© The Confederacy estab-
lished # newspaper in London
to win European support.
® Lincoln had a terrific ad-
vantage over Davis in public
relations because he had long
been a stump-speaking office
seeker, had for years wheedled
county voters and coaxed
Government vs. government,| canny politicos, while Davis’
brother vs. brother, North vs.) honors came by appointment
South, highlighted by Prof, Van-| or unopposed election. Experi-
diver: ence taught the North's lader
® Morale on both sides
came from a certain unde!
standing of American ideals,
“an understanding provided
how to talk to people, how to
engage thelr help, win their
confidence, use their talents,
accept their opposition.”
dll
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Tuesday, August 7, 1962
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
Floral Park
CSEAAdopts
9-Point Plan
(From Leader Correspondent)
FLORAL PARK, Aug, 6-—
The Civil Service Employees
Association Unit in the Vil-
lage of Floral Park has adop-
ted the following program
of employee-benefit requests
and submitted it to the vil-
lage trustees for action.
‘The Program
1) A five per cent pay increase,
2) grievance procedures, 3) five
days personal leave, 4) payroll
deduction of CSEA dues and group
life insurance, 5) accurate job
classification, 6) unemployment
insurance 7) a doctors certificate
to be required from an employee
after seven consecutive days of
fllness 8) compensation for em-
ployees in cash for a sixth day |
worked in any week and 9) a
vacation plan consisting of one
week after six months work; two
weeks after one year; three weeks
after five years; and four weeks
after 10 years
‘The program was submitted by
the unit's executive committee,
Henry Bardenhagen, Warren
Hance, John McConnell and Jo-
seph Demers.
glene Employees Association
Albany.
|
Representatives elected for the
ensuing year were: Angelo Praini-
| to, Willard Brooks, Raymond Sa
|sone, A. Maye Bull, Ellery Mac-
Dougall, ‘Thomas Reilly, Doris
Beyer, John VanDuzer, Marie
Donaldson, Mildred Pleasant, Ellen
Stillhard, Jan Piotrowski, Clarence
M, Laufer, Jr, Carl Sabo, Irene
| Hills, and Duncan MacPherson.
Others will be announced later
Hoch, Hungerford Speak
Principle speakers at the lun-
cheon were Doctor Paul H. Hoch,
| Commissioner of the Department
|of Mental Hygiene and Isaac
Hungerford, Administrative Direc-
tor of the Employees Retirement
| System, Other invited guests in-
cluded Joseph Felly, president of
|CSEA; Joseph Lochner, executive
director; Theodore Wenzl, trea-
surer;
| Emil Bollman, Mental Hygiene re-
| meeting and luncheon held recently in the Hotel Wellington,
Other officers elected were:
| Colony, first vice president; Arnold Moses of Brooklyn State |
Hospital, second vice president! Babette Slazenger of Rock-
land State Hospital, third vice president.
n-|
MHEA Re-elects O’Brien;
Delegates Hear Hoch And
Hungerford At Meeting
John D. O'Brien was reelected president of Mental Hy-|
at the organization's icine |
|
Irving Fisher of Craig
1
presentative:
and Granvill Hills, director of per
sonnel of the Department of Men-
tal Hygiene.
Program Outlined
The officers will be formally in-|
stalled at the association's annual |
banquet to be held on October 8,
1962 at the Statler Hilton Hotel in
Buffalo, N-Y. The general meeting |
| will take place on October 9,
| The program adopted calls for |
payment of accrued sick time;
non-contributory pension plan;
|lowering of the eligibility age for
vesting benefits from 60 to 55
years; non-contributory health in-
surance; 25 year pension plan for
Mental Hygiene Dept, employees;
change of titles and office pattern
graphic employees.
CSEA Upholds Pension Laws
(Continued from Page 1)
Ter, Feily said that “we feel it
absurd to violate the letter of the
law in order to punish a public
officer who stands convicted of
having committed a crime. I think
it is clear that the good in such
& proposal (punishing Keogh
through a pension denial) is far
outweighed by
sound and enlightened policy.”
The CSEA president pointed out
that pensions are guaranteed un-
der the State Constitution and
that three major requirements
were needed for retirement. They
are:
1. The applicant must have at-
tained retirement age.
2. He must have attained this
age while in service as a member.
3. He must file with the Comp-
troller an application for retire-
ment, which must specify the
effective date of his retirement,
which shall not be less than 30
considerations of |
or more than 60 days due subse-
quent to such filing.
These are the sole requirements
and for “good reasons,” said Fetly.
Protection for Majority
He declared that “This section
was written into the Constitution
and accepted by the people to pro-
tect the requirement rights of the
Resigned
ALBANY, Aug. 6—Rodney 0.
Winans, district superintendent of
schools for the Third Supervisory
District of Saratoga County, has
resigned, The number of districts
was reduced recently from three
to two.
Promoted
ALBANY, Aug. 6—Dr. Kent D.
Miller is the new assistant direc-
tor in charge of the Laboratories
for Biochemistry and Immuno-
logy in the State Health Depart-
Department. He has been with
the department since 1954,
vast majority of dedicated, trust-
worthy and loyal public employees
from any person or persons willing
| to use the threat of loss of pension
| rights in order to subject an em-|
| ployee to their biding."
| Felly went on to say that “to
add a special penalty for a public
officer or employee over and above
that prescribed in private employ-
ment would deprive him, and pos-
| sibly his widow or other survivors
of rights to a pension established
by law and for which he met
all the requirements.”
In conclusion, Feily stated
that "I believe any attempt to
nullify or tamper with the present
laws which safeguard the pension
rights of the members of the New
| York State Retirement System in
| order to correet this one lamen-
table incident could expose every
loyal, honest and long-serving em-
ployee member of the system to a|
retirement peril that is not Justi- |
tied.”
Page Thre:
Our Changing Times
Dems, GOP In Nassau
Vie For Credit On
Employees’
(From Leader
Gains
Correspondent)
MINEOLA, Aug. 6—The old-time CSEA member, passing
by the corridor in the county government building, was
Hits Charges
Against Rent
Agency Aides
(Continued from Page 1)
ice Employees Association I am
compelled to speak out as vig-
orously as I know how against
this cavalier disregard of the repu-
tation and integrity of many de-
voted public servants, If any of
these men or women are guilty
of malfaesance of office I would
be the first to urge that they be
brought up on formal disciplinary
Mrs. Ann Bessette and | for Institution clerical and steno-| charges immediately and If these
are acts evidence a crime, that
the matter be brought to the at-
tention of the Manhattan district
attorney, In the absence of these
legal vehicles, these employees are
entitled to more protection from
their employer than the release
of @ public statement eminating
as it does from such a question-
able source.
Unfair Cloud
What is most regretable, how-
ever, is the statement by the
Cit7 Investigator first on the one
hand that 20 employees guilty
of bribe, graft and payoffs and,
on the other hand, that he has
‘no evidence that any crime has
been committed’. If there is no
evidence that any crime has been
committed then all these em-
ployees have been unfairly cast
under a cloud of suspicion.
Named Trustee
ALBANY, Aug. 6—Morman Me-
Leod of Rome is the newest mem-
ber of the Board of Trustee of
the Mohawk Valley Technical In-
|stitute for a term ending June 30,
1968. He is industrial relations
director for the Revere Copper
and Brass Co. of Rome.
STUDIES END — vie state insur
has completed conducting a second course in
Supervision,” Certificates of Achie
joe Fund training staf
“Fundamentals of
vement were awarded by MH, Lasky,
deputy executive direetor to those employees who participated, The
roup leaders for the two classes were M. Vulpis and Dr. Finkel
under the supervision of H, Podeswa, supervisor of Training, In addi-
ton Lasky awarded certificates to 1. Shillingford, V, Konopka and
L, Gartea tor pleting a course
in Case Studies in Supervision, and
|
ia] Ne
4 :
ae
vision; the latter two courses were
ducted by the Civil Service Depa
seated: 8, Chertoff,
pert, Dr, Pinks
&. Siegel, D. Berkowits
nblith, M,
EERO TI
is3
to John White and D, Gould for a course in Administrative Super: |
under the training program o
iment, Shown left to right are,
|. Biitiner, B, Slutsky, I, Shillingford, P, Fleckner,
J, White, aud V, Konopka, Standing: C, Stambler, M. Heller, A, Boding- Harro has begun work
, A. Weiner, M, Brown, M, Vulpis, L. Turetsky, J. Gannon, J, Lem- of
Rosenblith, MH, ky, M. Birne,
&. Perla, F, Mymowits, and H, MeKnight,
Mrs, Paul H. Hoch,! heard to chuckle lightly and say, “My, my how times have
changed.”
Under his arm, the old-timer
was carrying a newspaper story,
one which might hardly be belleved
by any of Nassau's early veter-
ans of the battle for CSEA rec-
ognition and respect
Headline Tells Story
“Nick and GOP Dispute Credit
for New Plan,” That was the head-
line and the story which followed
was simple enough. County Ex-
ecutive Eugene Nickerson, a Demo-
crat, and the Republican-control-
|led Board of Supervisors, headed
joy vice-chairman John Burns of
Oyster Bay, were arguing over
which side should get the credit
for installing a new unified vaca-
tion policy for county workers,
Jan. 1.
The dispute began when the
Republicans announced they plan-
ned to review personnel policies
|and employee relations in the
towns and in the county, with a
Special eye on the vacation prob-
lem. Nickerson said he had asked
the Nassau Civil Service Com-
|mission In May to draw up such
broposals on the county level and
that he had just received a plan
which called for the following;
One week's vacation after six
jmonths service; two weeks after
one year; three weeks after five
years; four weeks after 10 years,
The commission also suggested
that county workers get one sick
day a month, with a maximum
of 120 days, as well as five days
each year for personal leave.
|
Hard to Keep Score
As to which side will get credit
for {ts interest in the employee
benefits, no one ever may be
able to tell. Standarized work
rules were first proposed during
the 1961 campaign for county ex-
ecutive by the Republicans (at
the prodding of the Nassau CSEA
chapter), the study by the Civil
, Service Commission was called
for by Democratic winner Nick-
|erson at the request of the CSEA);
jand when @ plan is adopted by
the GOP-controlied board, it'll
|probabiy be with the thanks of
the CSEA.
The moral of the story, the old-
timers would guess, is: Mix @
little political competition with
a little of CSEA determination
jand, “My, times do change.”
Gen. McLaughlin
Retires After 37 Years
ALBANY, Aug 6 — Brig, Gen,
Frank McLaughlin of Delmar has
retired as chief of staff of the
New York Army National Guard
and executive officer for the State
Division of Military and Naval
Affairs.
The General's retirement was
Jeffective July 15. He is a veteran
|of 37 years of Pederal and State
service
| New Director
ALBANY, Aug, 6—Dr. Dale EB.
director
the Bureau of Maternal and
Child Health in the State Health
D. Gould, J. Denker, L, Garten, M. Podeswa, Department, He is a former Balti+
\more public health official,
Page Four
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
Tuesday, August 7, 1962
Where fo Apply
For Public Jobs
The following directions tell
where to apply for public jobs
and how to reach destinations tn
New York City on the transit
system.
NEW YORK CITY—The Appl+
cations Section of the New York
City Department of Personnel is
located at 96 Duane St., New York
4, N.Y. (Manhattan). It ts two
blocks north of City Hall, just
wes of Broadway, across from
‘The Leader office.
Hours are 9 AM. to 4 P.M,
Closed Saturdays except to answer
inquiries from 9 to 12 a.m, Tele-
phone COrtland 71-8886
Mailed requests for application
blanks must include a stamped,
self-addressed business-size en-
velope and must be recelved by
the Personnel Department at least
five days before the closing date
for the filing of applications.
Completed application forms
which are filed by mail must be
sent to the Personnel Department
With the specified filing fee in the
form of a check or money order,
and must be postmarked no later
than twelve o'clock midnight on
the day following the last day of
fecelpt of applications.
‘The Applications Section of
the Personnel Department \s near
the Chambers Street stop of the
main subway lines that go through
the area. These are the IRT 7th
Avenue Line and the IND 8th
Avenue Line, The IRT Lexington
Avenue Line stop to use is the
Brooklyn Bridge stop and the BMT
Brighton Local’s stop is City Hall,
All these are but a few blocks from
the Personnel Department.
STATE — First floor at 270
Broadway, New York 7, N. ¥.
corner of Chambers St., telephone
BArclay 17-1616; Governor Alfred
E. Smith State Office Building and
The State Campus, Albany; State
Office Bullding, Buffalo; State
Office Building, Syracuse; and
Room 100 at 155 West Main
Street, Rochester (Wednesdays
only).
Any of these addresses may be
used for jobs with the State, The
Btate’s New York City Office is
two blocks south on Brosdway
from the City Personne] Depart-
ment’s Broadway entrance, so the
same transportation Instructions
apply. Mailed applications need
not include return envelopes.
Candidates may obtain applica-
tions for State jobs from local
offices of the New York State
Employment Service,
FEDERA!. — Second U.S. Civil
Service Region Office, News Bulld-
Ang, 220 East 42nd Street (at 2nd
Ave), New York 17, N, ¥., Just
weet of the United Nations build-
ing, Take the IRT Lexington Ave.
Line to Grend Central and walk
two blocks east, or take the shuttle
from Times Square to Grand
Central or the IRT Queens-Flush-
ing train from any po.nt on the
line to the Grand Central stop.
Hours are 8:30 a.m, to 5 pm.,
Monday through Friday. Tele-
phone number is YU 6-2626.
Applications are also obtain-
able at main post offices, except
the New York, N.¥., Post Office.
Boards of examiners at the par-
Ucular installations offering the
tests also may be applied to for
further information and applica-
tion forms. No return envelapes
fre required with mailed requests
for application forms,
FREE BOOKLET by U. 8. Gov-
Federal Service
Advantages Are
Explained By Macy
The Chairman of the U.S. Civil
Service Commission, John W.
Macy, Jr. recently addressed
delegates of Boys Nation who were
attending a civil service commis-
sion presentation at the General
Accounting Office Auditorium in
Washington.
Macy urged these future citizens
to consider thoughtfully a career
in civil service. He emphasized the
excellent training program, fringe
benefits, rewards, and opportunt-
tles offered to Federal Employees.
The CSC Chairman went on to
say “.., I want to talk about what
is one of the most important ele-
lines, but the people of the career
civil service who carry out the
programs and policies of the
nation's leaders.”
Army Music & Art
Enthusiast Awarded
For Long Service
Salvatore Cassataro, a Civil
Service employee at the Fort
Hamilton U.S. Army Reserve Cen-
ter, Brooklyn, New York, was
awarded the Civil Service length
of service pin and a Department
of the Army Certificate of Service
for having completed twenty years
of Federal service, as of November
1961.
The awards were presented to
Cassataro at ceremonies held at
the Fort Hamilton Reserve Cen-
ter recently.
Cassataro resides in Oceanside,
LI. He was appointed to his first
civil service position at Brooklyn
Army Terminal Signal Corps on
February 22, 1941.
Mr, Cassataro js interested in
music and arts. He composed “A
Million Stars in Heaven,” a song
which was published by the Naval
Journal while he was employed
in the Naval Clothing Dept, at the
Brooklyn Navy Yard. Born in Ar-
gentina, he graduated from the
Ttallan Public School and attended
Brooklyn College.
White House Nearer
The independent National Fed-
eration of Federal Employees has
moved into its new National Head~-
quarters building located at 1737
H Street Northwest, Washington
6, D.C. The new mortgage-free
headquarters is located just two
blocks from the White House.
$385 Awarded To
Army Employees
Checks totaling $385 and let-
ters of appreciation were re-
cently presented to seven em-
ployees of the U.S, Army Trans-
portation Terminal Command,
Atlantic and the U.S. Army
Transportation Terminal Activity,
Brooklyn, at the Terminal,
Two employees of the Supply
and Services Division received
Sustained Superior Performance
Awards. These men were Salvatore
Alaimo, who received $200, and
Ralph Montuoro, who received
$100.
Elinor Ricker of the Finance
and Accounting Division won two
suggestion awards of $15 each,
Other suggestion awards winners
were Daniel M, Giordano, of Car-
#0 Operations Division, $25;
Rosan Trumbull, Comptroller's
Office, Letter of Appreciation;
Rose M. DeFilippoo of Civilian Per-
sonnel Division, $15; and Stanley
P. Patia, Security Division, $15,
US. Service News Items
By MARY ANN BANKS
NIPA Names Public
Servant McArdle As
Executive Director
The National Institute of Public
Affairs, a non-profit private cor-
poration which is best known for
its pioneering training programs
which attracted to the Federal
service outstanding young college
graduates, (many of whom now
hold positions of top-level respon-
sibility in Government) recently
announced appointment of Dr.
Richard McArdle as its executive
director,
McArdle’s professional and ad-
ministrative achievements in gov-
jernment earned him repeated rec-
jognition, including the Rockefeller
ments of Government—not the}
personalities who make the head-/| tinguished Federal Civilian Serv-
|work in forestry by the Republic
|half million dollar fund grant by
Public Service Award and the
resident's Gold Medal for Dis-
ice, He was also honored for his
of- Mexico and awarded honorary
degrees by the Universities of
Michigan, Maine, and Syracuse,
An executive director of NIPA,
Dr, McArdle will work with uni-
versities, the Civil Service Com-
mission, and other Federal agen-
cies in improving educational op-
portunities for Federal employees
and advancing learning in pub-
lic affairs, Prominent among his
duties will be the task of estab-
lishing and administering a s78-
tem of scholarships for graduate
education for Government em-
ployees, under a two and one-
the Ford Foundation.
TO BUY, RENT OR
SELL A HOME — PAGE 1!
Eight Public Housing
Employees Awarded
For Superior Service
‘The New York Regional Office
of the Public Housing Administra-
tion recently awarded a total of
$1,950 to eight employees for “out-
standing performance” and su-
perlor service.
PHA Regional Director Herman
Hillman was an award recipient
for the third time. Besides Hill-
man, award winners for outstand-
ing performance who received
$300 each and citations signed
by Commissioner Marie McGuire
were Arthur Blaine, chief of land
section, Bronx; Armistead Fitz-
hugh, site planning landscape
architect, Queens; William Ma-
Jone, Jand advisor, Jersey City;
George Puchall, supervising man-
agement officer, Forest Hills.
Superior service cash awards
were won by the following: Alma
Ballerine, general supply assist-
ant, New Milford; Leon Weinberg,
insurance-taxation officer, Brook-
lyn; Gertrude Abramson clerk-
stenographer, Queens Village.
Length of Service Certificates
and insignia were presented to
three management officers as fol~
lows: George Aldrige, Lakewood,
30 years; Wayne Cox, Woodbridge,
24 years; Mary Ross, Brooklyn,
20 years and Joseph Mitchell,
production control clerk, New
York, 15 years.
U.S. Recruiting
For Millile Experts;
Jobs In California
Jobs are being offered to in-
spectors, guided missile assembly
at $3.38 per hour and inspectors,
guided missile electronic systems,
$3.51 per hour. The majority of
these positions will be located at
the Bureau of Naval Weapons
Representative Activity at Sunny-
vale, California.
Interested persons may file ap-
plication Form 57 and Card Form
5001-ABC with the Twelfth Naval
District Board of U.S. Civil Ser-
vice Examiners, Federal Office
Building, San Francisco, Callfor-
nia and may obtain applications
Gradvetes!
°
and Students
meee
ol bon
.
No Classes
fo Attend!
Important Information
For People Who Did Not Finish
HIGH SCHOOL!
EARN A DIPLOMA OR
EQUIVALENCY CERTIFICATE
AT HOME IN SPARE TIME!
Stan
Hf you ore 17 or over and have left school.
Write for free High School bookiet—tells
at any post office.
‘d Text B
130 W, 42 St., New Yo
AMERICAN SCHOOL, Dept. 9AP-56
36, N.Y. Ph. BRyant 9-2604, Day or Night
free 55-page High School
IF YOU OWNED
tHE GOOSE tnar
LAID THE GOLDEN
you would—for
as large an amount
@s you could buy.
WOULD You
Have you ever stopped to think that in everyday life your earning power
is really the source that produces golden nuggets., These “‘golden eggs” in
terms of dollars and cents provide the food, clothing, shelter and the other
things you have, and do, to make your family comfortable and happy.
Are you protecting your earning power? Would you receive an
income if an accident or sickness kept you away from work?
The C.S.E.A. Plan of Accident and Sickness Insurance, which covers
over 38,000 members, will pay you an income each month if you are
totally disabled from covered sickness or injury. You receive your
check even though you are still getting sick leave pay or benefits
from other insurance.
Call or write for full information,
TER
MAIN OFFICE
148 Clinton Gt. Sehenarnty
Welbridee Bide,
LWT INC.
+ Fronkila 47781 © Allvony 62098
linen 0253
© Mecvay Hill 27009
Tuesday, August 7, 1962
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
Page Five
City Seeking Graduate
Recreation Leaders;
Pays $4,550 To Start
Hundreds Of Jobs For Girls:
Recruiting For
Clerical Help
Are you a girl? .. . Interested in a position overseas
or in Washington? ... Are you qualified as a secretary,
The Department of Parks and the Department of Hospitals are seeking recreation a typist or a communication clerk? ... Are you interested
leaders to fill immediate vacancies. These jobs begin at $4,550 and increase to $5,990
V.A. Sets Exams
For Construction
$6,435
An examination for career-conditional appointments to
the position of construction analyst, paying $6,435 to start,
has been announced by the Board of U.S, Civil Service |
examiners at the Veteran’s Administration Hospital in the
Bronx. The hospital is located at Kingsbridge Road and
per year after five years,
Requirements
Candidates for this test must be
college graduates. The candidate's
college studies should have in-
cluded 18 credits in recreation,
physical education, or group work.
Six months of paid leadership ex-
perience in organized recreational
Programs may be substituted for
the specific credit requirement,
‘The written test will be of the
multiple choice type and may tn-
elude questions covering such
areas as general intelligence,
reading comprehension and arith-
metic reasoning.
Candidates will be required to
Dass a qualifying test before ap-
pointment,
Applications will be issued at
the Application Section of the
Department of Personnel, 96 Du-
ane St., New York 7, New York.
Applications will be accepted on
any Tuesday between 8:30 and
8:30 a.m., at 241 Church St., sec-
‘ond floor.
Army Wants
Engineers &
Office Help
Six engineer titles and
three clerical titles are va-
cant at the U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers’ office in New
York City.
‘The vacancies are: civil engin-
eer, paying $6,435 (two posi-
tions); electrical engineer, $6,-
435; hydraulic engineer, $6,435;
elvil engineer, $7,095; electrical
engineer, $7,095; and architectur-
al engineer (specs), $8,340.
All of the above require a de-
gree in engineering or a engin-
eering leense, plus one year of
experience for the $6,435-a-year
Jobs, two years for the $7,095 and
three years for the $8,349,
Also needed are bookkeeping
machine operators, at $3,760,
(three to six months experience
required); electric accounting ma-
chine operators, $3,760 (nine
months to a year of experience);
and clerk-stenographers, $3,760
(high school graduation and abill-
ty to take dictation at 80 words a
minute required).
Applicants for the engineering
positions should apply to Mr. J.
Pagliaro, Personnel Branch, U.S.
Army Engineer District, New York,
SPring 17-4200, Extension 351,
Applicants interested in clerk-
stenographer and machine opera
tor vacancies should apply to Miss
M. Parisi, SPring 71-4200, Exten-
sion 343,
Johs;
Webb Ave.
A minimum of five years total
experience is required. All appll-
cants must show three years pro-
gressively responsible experience
in sales or management of real
estate, building maintenance,
| morgage lending, or planning or
contracting of residential or com-
mercial building construction, al-
teration and repairs, or in other
position which provide:
®@ An extensive knowledge of
valuation or appraisal principles,
practices, and policies as applied
to valuation estimated or real or
personal property;
© Familiarity with plans and
specifications for varied types of
homes, buildings, and other struc-
tures; or
® Knowledge of approved build-
ing construction requirements,
standards; or construction cost
data.
In addition, applicants must
have had two years progressively
responsible specialized experience
in one or more of the following:
Experience in bultlding, atruc-
tural designing, construction sup-
ervision or engineering; or in
building inspection which involved
the estimating and analyzing of
costs of construction, alterations,
or improvements, or of real pro-
perty and mechanical equipment.
This experience must include the
|
| school level may be substituted for
allowances?
For girls who prefer to work
in the United States, Miss Lee
has positions available for sec-
retaries, teletypists, and clerk
typista in the home office in
Washintgon, D.C,
In regard to applicants for any
jof the positions Miss Lee stated,
| "We want the best, We want
1 biased enthusiastic and friend-
ly people for our Foreign Service
because they will represent the
United States twenty-four hours
a day, both on and off duty.”
All Foreign Service staff secre-
taries, communications clerks and
performance of field Inspections |t7pists must pass typing tests and |
to assure builders’ conformity |the secretaries must be skilled in
with contract plans and specifi-|shorthand.
cations in actual construction; or) In order to qualify for overseas
calculating the extent of neces-|service, applicants must have of-
sary repairs and alterations, esti-|fice work experience, be a high
mating their cost and reviewing |school graduate, at least 21 years-
recomendations and estimates |of~ age, single with no dependents,
prepared for others; or any com-|able to pass a physical examin-
bination of these functions,
in receiving a salary of over $4,000 to start with a liberal
If you answer yes to any of these questions then con-
tact Adele Lee, a State Department recruiting specialist at
the U.S. Civil Service Commission in the Daily News
building on 42 St. She has a job for you.
These positions offer travel and career opportunities as a
member of the U.S. Foreign Service in overseas countries,
| ation and be willing to go any-
where in the world.
American citizenship is another
requirement for thesé positions
which have a salary range of from
|$4.010 to $4,495 annually, plus
allowances.
Applicants for the Washington,
D.C. posts must be at least 18
years-of-age and be able to pass
|Civil Service tests. Salaries for
these positions range from $3,-
‘760 to $4,040 per annum.
Interested applicants who meet
jthese qualifications should call,
jwrite, or visit the Information
Section, New York Region, United
States Civil Service Commission,
220 East 42 St. The office hours
are from 8:30 am. to 5 pm,
Monday through Friday.
SELL A HOME — PAGE lL
TO BUY, RENT OR
Study successfully completed in
® resident school above high-)
the required general experience at
STUDY IN AIR-CONDITIONED COMFORT!
the rate of one year of education
for nine months of experience, up
to a maximum of three year of ex-
Exams to Be Hold This Fall Offer Many Splendid Opportunities.
NOW IS THE TIME TO PREPARE! Ch
Session of Any Delehanty Course — Mise Is No Obi
Be Our Guest at
ligation
perience, provided such study has
included an average of six semes-
Applications for FIREMAN &
PATROLMAN Are Now Open
ter hours, or its equivalent, a year
in one or more of the following sub-
Ject matter fields: finance, or real
estate operation, engineering,
architecture, forestry, economics,
or business administration
Copies of announcement, No,
FIREMAN s.r»
ms Experts
MANHATTAN: WED.,
Thorough Traini:
te OU
DEPT, $7,615 After 3 Yrs,
EXCELLENT PROMOTIONAL OPPORTUNITIES
or JAMAICA: FRIDAY, AU’
for Written & Physical Exoms
NY-66-3 (1962) and application
forms may be obtained from; The |
Director, New York Region, U.S,
Civil Service Commission, News
Building, 220 42 St., New York 17,
Now York; or from the Executive
Secretary, Board of U.S, Civil Ser-
vice Examiners, Veterans Admin- |
Full Civil Service B
NO AGE, EDUCA’
Those Appointed Will B
Hundreds of Permanent Jobs for Men & Women!
APPLICATIONS NOW OPENI—N.Y. CITY EXAM SOON FOR
ELEVATOR OPERATOR - $72 to $93 a Wk.
mare eaes: Social Sec., Hospitalization
THOROUGH PREPARATION FOR OFFICIAL WRITTEN EXAM
Be Our Guest ot a Class—~-MON.,, AUG, 13 ot 6:30 P.M,
ENCE REQUIREMENTS
While Learning Their Duties
istration Hospital, 130 Kingsbridge
Rd,, Bronx 68, N.Y.
Medical Jobs Open
In Three Fields
At B'klyn Hoospital
Dietitians, occupational thera-
pists and 10 chemists are needed
to fill vacancies at the Brooklyn
Veterans’ Administration Hos-
pital.
The biochemist positions pay
from $5,490 to $5,820 a year; the
dietitian jobs, from $5,355 to
6,345, All Jobs may pay @ higher
ate for more experience.
For further information, con-
tact Mrs. Baron at TE 6-6600,
| ext. 389.
NOW AVAILABLE—LATEST VOLUME IN
Government Career Examination Series (GCES)
PATROLMAN, POLICE DEPT.—$3.95
576 pp. @ 9 previous a
Spectal Traini
Availal
Make Your
CIVIL SERVICE PUBLISHING CORP,
Solutions to all Arithmetic Probloms.
& Related Materials,
upp!
at book ae everywhere, or order directs
Career with
132 Livi gston Street Brooklyn 1, N.Y. Ulster 3.2400
Mail Ord
Please include 3% Sales Tex’ 25¢ postage for each book.
$7,016 To Court
Stenographer
Stort Closses WED., Al
HIGH SCHOOL EQUIVALENCY DIPLOMA
Needed by Won-Gradnates of Mirh School for Many Civil Service Exams
S-Week Course. Prepare for EXAMS conducted by N.Y. State Dept, of Bd.
ENROLL NOW —~ SPECIAL SUMMER COURSE IN MANHATTAN
}. B—Meet Mon. & Wed., 5:30 or 7:30 P.M.
An open-competitive examina~-
tion for the position of court
stenographer has been announced
by the Monroe County Civil Ser- |
vice Commission. The position
No residence rea
ia N.Y, City, Nae folk,
New Course Starting for
MANHATTAN: TUES,, AUG.
PATROLMAN « $7,615 Atter ony 3 vears
F applicants. ‘Thi
Weatchaster 0
JAMAICA: MONDAY, AUG. 13 at 7 P.M.
—
9 appointed must live
Rockland Counties
Written & Physical Exams
7 at 1:15, 5:30 oF 7:30
has a salary range of $7,016 to
$8,518 per annum,
Applicants must have five years
of stenographic experience of
which three years shall have in-
volved taking and transcribing
will be hoon, You may
be paid in tnstalments
Attention! Men Who Filed Applicati
HOUSING INSPECTOR—N.Y. City BLDG. DEPT.
Start preparation without delay! Competition for these attractive positions
‘valuable material for sludy al howe, Moderate feo may
Classes in Manhattan on TUESDAYS at 7:30 P.M.
for
verbatim records, and comple-
tion of a standard high school
course or any equivalent combin-
ation of experience and train- |] !# 5 days if not satisfied. Send
POST OFFICE CLERK-CARRIER BOOK
On sale at our offices or by mall, No C.0.D.'s, Refund
$4.15
ck or money order,
ing sufficient to indicate ability
to do the work.
Information and applications
may be obtained in the office of
the Monroe County Civil Ser-
vice Commission, 39 Exchange
St., 3rd floor, Rochester and the
Personne! Department, 110 Court
House, Rochester. y
ORAPTING
Manhattan &
MANHATTAN: 115 bid Nd
JAMAICA MERRIC!
OVEN
VOCATIONAL COURSES
auto ie eraNes 8 TV SERVICE & REPAIR
The DELEHANTY IN INSTITUTE
STREET
altos bet, Jomelca’'h Micke “Aves,
Ih TO FAD AM. © PM CLONED ON SATUBDATS
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
Tuesday, August 7, 1962
@ LEADER
America’s Largest Weekly lor Pablic Employees
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations
Published every Twesday by
LEADER PUBLICATIONS, INC.
97 Duane Street, New York 7, N.Y.
Jerry Finkelstein, Publisher
Joe Deary, Jr, City Editor
No H, Mager, Husiness Manager
Poul Kyer, Editor
Mary Ano Banks, Ase ant Fditor
Advertising Representativ
» Bellew — 303 So, Mar e Blvd, IV 4
239 Wall Street, FEderal 8-9350
ALBANY — Sous
KINGSTON, Charles Andrews
1G¢ per copy, Subscription Price $2.22 to members of the Civil
Service Employees Association, $4.00 to non-members,
<_—> 3
TUESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1962
An Unnecessary Hurt
ITY Investigations Commissioner Louis Kaplan per-
4 formed a misservice to public employees last week
when he charged that certain rent control personnel, while |
employed by the State, had accepted bribes and granted |
illegal rent raises, If he had substantiated these charges, no}
one would deny that he should press the matter.
What happened however, was that Kaplan named no
names and, when pressed, had no particulars to present,
In the meantime, the reputations of the rent agency em-
ployees has been put in disrepute by Kaplan's charges in
the public press,
Public relations are a constant source of concern in|
the public |
the civil service. When the good image of
employee is damaged by one of his own kind, the average
civil servant certainly has cause for dismay,
Without specific charges and names, Commissioner
Kaplan should have spared his fellow workers this unneces- |
sary blemish on their reputation,
Upholding The Law
HEN asked for an opinion on whether or not Supreme
Court Justice J. Vincent Keogh, sentenced on bribery
charges last week, would receive the State portion of his
pension, Comptroller Arthur Levitt replied; “He is entitled
to it under the law. I cannot re-write the law.”
Comptroller Levitt is right and the 107,000-member Civil
Service Employees Association supported his interpretation
of his duties last week. The Employees Association pointed
out that pensions were guaranteed by the State's Consti-|
tution and its statutes,
“It Is regrettable that a person has done wrong,” sald.
CSEA President Joseph F. Feily. “But pensions are guar-
anteed to keep them from being used as threats to employees,
It would be absurb to remove protection from the majority
to punish the minority.”
A ruling is now awaited from the office of the Attorney
General. We trust the arguments of law and constitutionality
are more impressive arguments than the additional punish-
ment of an individual,
Writer Gives His
Views on Ratings
By George Spelvin
ALBANY, July 30—Here's a handy guide for supervisors
in public service, who might like some rules to follow while
rating civil service personnel.
With tongue in cheek and type~
Writer in hand, we offer the fol-
lowingt
If the employee speaks out on
@ subject pertaining to the office,
conclusion: “He's trying to run
things,”
doesn't know his job,
If the employees has been on
| the job # short time, conclusion:
"He lacks experience."’
If he's been on the job a long
time, conclusion: “He lacks new
Books
In
Review
| VEECK—AS IN WRECK, by Bill
Veeck with Sid Linn, Putnam Inc.,
$4.95.
“It sounds like something which
If the employee ts silent, con-
clusion: “He's either dumb or has
Jost Interest in his Job."
To Agree—Or Not
If the employes agrees with
you, conclusion: “He lacks orig-
dnality.”
If he doesn't agree with you,
conclusion: “He ts ignorant.”
Mf the employee can give you
en immediate answer, conclusion:
“That's what he's being paid for.”
U he can’t, conclusion: “He
ideas.”
If the employee is well dressed,
conclusion; “He thinks he's a big
shot,”
If he Ssn't well dressed, conclu-
tion: “He's not a proper repre-
tentative of the office.”
And if the employee takes a
vacation, conclusion: “He's been
on one all year."
How's thet for a starter, dear
reader? Now you take it from
here,
| might have been the joint creation
of Puck, Phineas T, Barnum, and
Mack the Knife," commented one
reviewer
“He ts perhaps a slightly dis-
guised character from the immor-
| tal pages of Mark Twain," wrote
another, “He is Ring Lardn.r’
Damon Runyon, yes, he is classic
and belongs among the classics,
Said a third: “Tt is probably the
BILL VEECK
best baseball autiobiography ever
written.”
The he is Bill Veeck. The it is
his autioblography, VEECK—AS
IN WRECK, just published by
Putnam and already catapulating
onto national bestseller lists.
‘The fun starts on the first page
when Veeck launches into the
story of the immortal midget,
Eddie Gaedel, whom he sent up
to pinch hit for the St, Louis
Browns and goes on to last when,
ruminating over the illness which
last year forced him out of base-
ball. Veeck says: “Look for me
under the are-lighte, boys, I'll be
| back.” “VEECK—AS IN WRECK
is literally non-stop entertain-
ment
Here, in full, is the story of the
brash, funloving Chicago boy who
arrived in Milwaukee in 1941 to
take over his new “purchase,” the
bankrupt Milwaukee Brewers, with
nothing but an outlandish sense
of humor and $11 in his pocket
($10 of which he immediately
blew on a celebration of the event)
and parlayed these beginnings into
fabulous successes with the Cleve-
land Indians and Chicago White
Sox and an equally fabulous
failure with the St. Louls Browns.
Here is Veeck, th. arch promoter,
good for an unpredictable laugh
a day (“To give one can of beer
}to 1000 people is not near!
much fun as giving 1000 cans to
one guy, You give 1000 people a
can of beer and each of them will
drink it, smack his lips and go
| back to watching the game. You
give 1000 cans to one guy, and
there is always the outside possi-
bility that 50,000 people will talk
about \t.") Here is Veeck, the con-
firmed Yankee-hater . . . and
baiter (“Hating the Yankees isn't
part of my act, It t# one of those
exquisite times when life and art
are in perfect conjunction,")
On Satchel Paige, Veeck says,
“It could even be sald that he
dished out his age the way he
dished out his pitches, mixing his
figures up nicely and always keep~
ing his interviewers off balance;
(Continued om Page 7)
Civil Service
LAW & YOU
By HAROLD L, HERZSTEIN:
was, crorastein is a member of the New York bar
(The views expressed in this column are those of the writer and
not necessarily constitute the views of this newSpaper or ef any
Throw It Out
THE SUPREME COURT of the State of New York Is
divided into judicial districts, Section 140 of the Judiciary
Law provides that there shall be ten judicial districts in
the State, and effective September 1, 1962, the County of
Queens will be taken from the tenth judicial district, con-
sisting of Queens, Nassau and Suffoolk, and will be con-
stituted the eleventh judicial district. Now, what has that
| to do with the civil service? Far more than jt should. Let
| me show you,
SUBDIVISION 1 of Regulation 2 of the Regulations of
the State Civil Service Commission, entitled “Certification
| of eligible lists”, provides that “Appointments to positions
|in the State Service", confined to localities outside of
Albany County, “shall be made, so far as practicable, from
residents of the judicial district or districts including such
locality”, except in the Borough of Manhattan of New York
City, where they “shall be made from among the residents
of the first, second and tenth judicial districts.”
DID YOU EVER see that before? Personally, I think
that sort of breakdown for State jobs is bad, and I dis-
| like it. A man from Saratoga County should get a State
| job in Manhattan if he is higher on the list than his com-
| petitors in the first, second and tenth judicial districts.
Vise-versa, a man from the first, second or tenth judicial
districts should get a State job in Saratoga if he is higher
than any of the Saratoga residents, The men in each case
took an examination for a State job, and it is nobody's
business where they live.
THIS OLD FASHIONED nonsense has been on the State
books for many years. It Is a relic of the old days, revised
and readopted in 1954, It really should be wiped out of
the books. If I pass a test for a State job in the first
position, I want it or at least I want the right to get it,
wherever it is,
COURT MODIFIES REGULATION
RECENTLY, THE Court in New York City, helped ma-
terially by ruling that the Regulation did not apply to
promotions, but only to original appointments. There evid-
ently had been no prior cases on this subjects.
IN MATTER OF DAUB y. Couper 9 A. D. 2d 260, the
| Appellate Division of the First Department, in New York
| City, decided about a year ago, that a man seeking a pro-
motion could make no headway under Subdivision 1 of
Regulation 2. Judge Stevens wrote the opinion for the
Court, which was unanimous, He wrote, as follows:
Subd@rvision 1 of regulation 2 speaks of “appointments”
to positions in State service. I do not equate the term
“appointment” with that of “promotion”. To appoint is
to designate or assign to a position. To promote is to
advance or progress to a higher grade, position or degree,
Promotion cannot occur until there exists a position
or status from which there can be advancement or
progress, Appointment creates or establishes the condi-
tion which later can be acted upon,
The restriction in the language of subdivision 1
of regulation 2 of the Regulations of the State Civil
Service Commission, that the appointment “shall be
made from among the residents of the first, second
and tenth judicial districts’ does not apply to the
promotion of barber from the position of food inspector
to that of senior surplus food inspector, for such lan-
guage refers to original appointments not to promotions,
JUDGE STEVEN'S opinion threw half of Subdivision 1 of
Regulation 2 out, Now, when is the Civil Service Commis-
sion going to throw the rest of it out? It would have to
be amended before September Ist of this year because the
new tenth judicial district will no longer be part of New
York City and the new eleventh will be, When that change
is considered, it would be a good idea to get rid of the
entire paragraph,
Tuesday, August 7, 1962
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
Page Seven
One Week Left
N. Rochelle
Policeman
Johs Open
One week remains in which
to file for positions as police-
men with the New Rochelle
Police Department. This po-
sition is open to residents of
Westchester, Nassau, Putnam,
Rockland, New York, Queens
and Bronx County. New York
City residents in Kings
(Brooklyn), and Richmond
(Staten Island) Counties are
excluded.
The position has a salary range
of $5,240 to $6,300 annually and
® uniform allowance of $125.
Candidates must be graduates
of a standard senior high school |
or must possess a high school
equivalency diploma issued by the
University of the State of New
York,
There is a height requirement
of 5° 8" and a minimum weight
of 150 pounds. Applicants must be
not less than 21 nor more than
32 years of age and must be
physically strong and active.
Application forms and other In-
formation may be obtained at the |
office of the Municipal Civil Ser-
vice Commission, 52 Wildeliff
Road, New Rochelle from 9 am.
to 4 p.m. daily until August 15.
Book Tells
Veeck Story
(Continued from Page 6)
on Leo Durocher (“the world's
greatest manager when the wind
is rising and the smell of the win-
ner's circle is in his nostrils"); and
on dozens of others of famous and
not-so-famous baseball figures
he's comes to know well down
through the years.
Here, in short, is an uncommon
book. Written with the skillful
collaboration of Ed Linn, “VEECK
—AS IN WRECK {5 must reading
for anyone who has ever thrilled
to the crack of the bat, slide of a
Tunner, a sharp-breaking curve.
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Page Eight
The Job
In Private
AL
Jobs for Women
Women with experience as
clerk-typists in the manufactur-
ing and apparel industries are
wanted in midtown, Will get $75-
90 a week with many benefits... |
Women are also wanted as typists |
and clerk-typists with experience
in the textile and garment in-
dustries preferred. Will get $65-
80 a week—higher with knowledge
of stenography . . . Apply at the
Manhattan Commercia) Office, 1
East 19th Street.
Faculty Positions
Professional nurses are wanted
for faculty positions in diploma
schools of nursing and basic col-
Jegiate nursing programs, Quall-
fied instructors are needed for
pediatrics maternal and child
health, and in clinical and class-
room teaching. There are imme-
diate and September openings at
$4,400-$6.000 a year . . , Profes-
sional nurses are also wanted for
staff positions in hospitals, pub-
He health agencies and nursing
homes in Greater New York. Be-
ginning salaries are $4,300-$5,700
«+ There are also openings for
prepared public health nurses at
$5,000-6,000 . » Apply at the
Professional Placement Office, 444
Madison Avenue.
Skilled Workers
The new Technical Section of
the Brooklyn Industrial Office has
many openings for skilled machine
shop workers. If you are an ex-
perienced machinist, tool, and die |
maker, maintenance mechanic or
machine tool operator who can set |
up to close tolerance, call MA |
§-5775 for an immediate interview,
‘or apply at the Technical Section |
of the Brooklyn Industrial Office,
590 Fulton Street.
Mechanics and Machinists
Auto Mechanics are needed In
Yonkers nt $80-$100 a week, Must
be fully experienced in all phases
of motor work and should have
some of their own tools and own
transportation, Also needed are
machinists of all degrees of skill
For those with some experience
and schooling there are openings
‘at $2 an hour. Those with several
years experience can get $3... .|
Inexperienced welders will get |
$1.40 an hour and fully experi-
enced will get $2.50 . Apply
at the Yonkers State Employment
Office, 78 Main Street.
Brooklyn Jobs
‘There are immediate openings
in Brooklyn for experienced ship-
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Box 1625, Albany, N.Y.
A |
CIVIL SERVICE BOOKS
and all tests
PLAZA BOOK SHOP
380 Broadway
Albany, N. Y.
Mail & Phone Orders Filled {|
i cinpnannineeiscasmmmmmmmmancaenid
Market
A Survey of Opportunities
Industry
PETERS
|yard workers, Needed are acetylene accepted
burners, carpenters, joiners, crane
operators, chippers & caulkers,
ivon workers, electricians, copper-
smiths, pipefitters, riggers, sheet
metal workers, shipfitters and
electric are welders. These jobs
pay $3 an hour plus 7% for the
night shift. Coppersmiths get $3.20
an hour, Must pass physical exam~-
jination .. , Apply at the Brooklyn
|Shipyard Office, 60 Bond Street,
Experienced Workers
Men with at least 6 years ex-
perience are wanted as operators
of Ludlow machines to make up
forms, Will get $80-100 per week
. . . Pully experienced proof press-
man will get $60 or more a week
|to pull proof and do final repro-
duction in type setting firms...
|Paper cutters with at least 4 years
recent pamphlet bindery cutting
experience will get $80-100 a week
to set up and operate a Seybold
|Paper Cutter . . , Experienced pol-
lishers will get $1.50-2.50 an hour
to color and cut down brass, cop-
|per and aluminum items . . . Ap-
ply at the Manhattan Industrial
| Office, 225 West 54th Street.
New Chairman
ALBANY, Aug. 6—Dr, James
\E. Allen Jr., state education com-
| missioner, will serve as chairman
of the New York State Interde-
|partmental Health and Hospital
Couneil for 1962-63,
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
Tuesday, August 7, 1962
|Air Force Seeking
‘Radio & Radar
| H .
Repairmen; $2.41
Applications are now being
for positions as
radar repairers at Griffiss Air
| Force Base in Rome, New
| York, These positions pay
from $2.41 to $2.66 an hour,
acording to the Board of U.S.
Civil Service Examiners at
the installation,
No special length of service is
required for these positions but
applicants must have had ex-
perience, training, or education of
sufficient scope and quality to
perform the duties of the position
at the level for which they are
applying.
Radar repairers overhaul, modi-
fy, and repair a large variety of
the components of search, height
finding and related radar sets,
such as receivers, transmitters,
amplifiers, power supplies, modu-
Jators, and indicators,
Radio repairers check, clean,
disassemble, modify, replace de-
fective parts and reassemble com-
ponents of ground radio equip-
ment such as indicators, antennae
assemblies, switch boxes, jack
boxes, receivers, transmitters,
control panels and power units.
Information and applications
for these positions may be ob-
| tained by contacting the Execu-
tive Secretary, Board of U.S. Civil
Service Examiners, Griffiss Air
| Force Base, Rome, New York.
Offer C
Paying
Postal Jobs
areers
$2.63
Men and women can now qualify for jobs as postal
clerks and post office carriers as a result of a recent ruling
by the Post Office Departmen
Post offices in the New York City area are accepting |
applications to fill substitute jobs In these titles which will |
nt,
eventually lead to a permanent appointment,
There is no residence require-
ment for this position but certi-
fication to fill vacancies will be
made first of the highest avail-
able eligibles on the register who
actually reside in the above-
named postal areas or who are |
bona fide patrons of these post
offices. Non-local eligibles will be
certified in the absence of suffi-
cent local eligibles,
This position has no experience
ate requirement, The appointments
3 stad ™ will be made on the basis of a
NO ORE BATTERY WORRIES |written examination, which has
$A95 The |been shortened, Some of the test |
PERMANENT || subjects are general abilities, fol-
FLASH LIGHT |! lowing instructions, and address
checking.
Job Benefits
The nature of this appointment |
is that career appointments are
made to substitute positions and
advancement is made to regular
positions according to seniority of
Appointment, Substitutes are re-
quired to be available for duty on
short notice and, generally they
Will be working regularly.
These posts have a salary range
of $2.16 to $2.63 per hour. Sub-
stitute employees are paid on an
hourly basis but regular employees
are paid on an annual basis,
Some of the benefits of these
Clerk-carrler positions are ad-
vancement, life insurance, health
benefits, incentive awards, unl-
form allowance, liberal retirement,
sick leave with pay, and vacations
of 13 to 26 days.
Other requirements for the job
are that applicants be at least
seventeen years old, be citizens
of or our permanent allegiance to
the United States, and be physic-
jally able to perform the duties of
| the Job, Male applicants must
welgh at least 125 pounds.
Duties
The duties of clerks are to
handle sacks of letter, paper mail,
and parcel post welghing 80
pounds or more; and sort and
distribute mall to post offices and
to carrier routes in accordance
jwith established schemes, Clerks
may also perform various duties
at public windows of post offices,
Carriers are responsible for the
prompt and efficient delivery and
collection of mail on foot or by
vehicle,
Applications for these positions
are available at the main post
offices in New York City, Staten
Island, Flushing, Jamaica, Long
Island City and at Idlewild Airport,
Im addition, form 500-AB may al-
80 be obtained from the U.S, Civil
Service Commission, 220 East 42
\St.. N.C,
U.S. Seeking
Customs Por
Investigators
The Custom Agency Service of the U.S. Treasury Depart-
ment is seeking over 400 applicants to fill for positions as
customs port investigator trainee positions. There are a
large number of vacancies in this title and a higher quota
is being requested. |
In view of the appalling contin-|Mment at age 50 after 20 years
juance of the smuggling of nar- | Of service. Because of the exacting
cotics into the United States, with |Physical demands of these jobs,
its death-dealing trail of addic- | the customs agency prefers young,
tion and resultant increase in | Vigorous applicants who are alert,
crimes of all types, the Customs jobservant, and have an interest
Agency Service is attempting to in enforcement and investigative
more effectively comba’ this , Work,
menace. To be considered for the posi+
‘These GS-5 positions paying $4, |t0n Of custom port investigator,
345 per year to start, are located GS-5, a person must acquire eli-
in New York City, \eibility in an appropriate exam-
At the end of one year of train- ination, prove satisfactory on
ing and satisfactory service, train- |Character Investigation, and pass
ces appointed will be promoted |* medical examination,
to GS-7, paying from $5,355 per Three years experience is re«
annum, with yearly increments up Ses © pias a tee
to $6,345. years in criminal investigative
work. College credits may be sub-
Persons desiring to be consid- ig J
ered for these positions should | tuted for experience.
write to the Customs Agency Ser-
vice, Post Office Box 195, Village
Station, New York 14, New: York.
Customs port investigators
search vessels, vehicles and per-
sons (such as passengers, seamen,
and Jongshoremen) in an effort
SPECIAL RATES
for Civil Service Employ
«&
to uncover contraband, These =
searches are based upon intelli- - Vd
gent evaluation of — situations * :
which indicate a likelihood that - py
HoTeL *
criminal Jaws are being violated.
If contraband {s discovered, the
officers are empowered to seize
it and arrest the offenders,
In the performance of these du-
ties they are armed for self-pro-
tection. They are frequently re-
quired to testify in court as to
the conduct and facts surrounding
actions in which they participat-
td. In recognition of the danger-
Wellington
DRIVE-IN GARAGE
AIR CONDITIONING - TV
tool
Cocktail lounge,
ous and demanding nature of 136 STATE ao a
these duties, the customs port in- ITATE CAPITOL,
‘See your friendly travel egent.
vestigator is qualified for retire-
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SATURDAYS AT 5:00 P.M,
UNTIL SEPTEMBER 18th
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Phone IV 2-7864 or IV 2.9681
Howke — Gitte —
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Tuesday, August 7, 1962 CIVIL SERVICE LEADER Page Nine
City’s expanding programs of con- bed public relations, Duties will in- to Samuel B. Pinklestein, City Thompson Appointed
Newark Seeking servation and rehabilitation, Start-|clude independent research and |Personne) Officer, City Hall, ALBANY, Aw M Baird
ing salary i* $6,600, All applicants | public relations work on neighbor- |Newark 2, New Jersey, Applicants Y 1) eae ee
h Anal st 4 i" i ‘ re Thompson, New York City fire
Researc Y' must have s master's degree or /hood aspects of Newark’s renewal | will be contacted for appointment | ommissioner, is serving on the
The City of Newark, N. J. has |tWo years of graduate work and | efforts. on August 20th, State Pire Advisory Board, He
& key opening for a social science | one year of professional experience Intergated applicants should| There is no residency require- | was appointed by Governor Rock-
research analyst to work on the lin social sciences, urban renewal, ‘submit full resume immediately | ment prior to appointment, efeller,
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An unheard-of low price for a General
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2-Cycle Automatic Washer, offering many
of the features of the very finest washers
made! Kitchen-counter deep (only 25
inches) it fits like @ built-in! Hurry! Quan-
tities are limited! 5 Year Protection Plan
—See G. E.’s Written Warranty.
NO MONEY DOWN
‘x 2-in-t
i SEEN GE's NeW a, Easy Terms!
\ fe YoU SEEN Oo? Eli
HAV hh Mini-Was 10' ‘ By any measure...
Washer, Wit r} Ask tor Coot
g foreve
hand washin | ‘There is nothing “just as good as" General Electric
As_a Franchised General Electric Dealer we are Authorized to Offer GENERAL unten arte
ELECTRIC'S Famous PERSONAL WARRANTY SERVICE. Ask us for your Written Guarantee. we
AMERICAN HOME CENTER, INC.
616 THIRD AVENUE AT 40TH STREET, NEW YORK CITY
' CALL MU. 3-3616
Page Ten CIV
IL SERVICE LEADER
Tuesday, August 7, 1962"
State Eligible Lists
107 Fotey, J, So Mend tnd ,
J 1
PURLIC HEALTR NURSI ee
orn, ©, Boulet CO sseeoe- 1000] 108 Witmer,
B Polacen, 1) Williston 1900 | 100 Stuart,’ Ry’ Phoenix Ma
3 i 2006 | 110 MeDonnell, B.. Eimburst
‘ 05 | 111 Rodeers, i, Asbury Pk
6 6 | 112 Be Hh, New Clty
6 Ir pb, tanandaiew a ¥, NYC 10
7 #, Yonkers 4 R. Redwood
aP 6 Dowling, M., Rochester
9 6 Rooney, M., Toleto Ohio
7 Barber. H..’ Cleveland Oblo”,. 1.010
Osborn, J Ua. 0.
Hempatend P., Manbatiset
Andover mC
i, Flushing |:
K.. Bktyn
Fairport eee
Lackawania sss...
Patchogue
Wetmter
Dewitt
Chappagia
Croton
Biilyn
x
Cheektowag
Hartsdale
Syracuse
Norwoot
Rhinebeck
Baftalo
Vig
neon
3
TSeaae
veksicili *
dale
cosnonerneposnkeasase ee:
| CANAL ELECTRICAL SUPRRYIIOK—
PUBLIC WORKS
Froneh, W., Utlew
¥
2 Stiop, C. Martville
p, C,
Electronic Machine
Filing continues for post- or more of the types of office
tions with various federal|machines mentioned above. A
agencies in the New York|bish school diploma may be sub-
three months of the
Metropolitan area for opera. | tuted for Tee ak sake
tors of electronic office ma- dies aad grads: & atone pel
chines. is required for all grades,
The positions which are vacant! Further particulars are given
are in the operation of accounting
Operators
fn announcement NY-1-(1962)
| whten ean be obtained from the
N. Y. region, U, 8. Civil Service
Commission, News Building, 220
Fast 42nd St, New York City
Applicants may phone, write, or
apply in person at the above ad-
dress for further information.
machines, calculating, bookkeep-
ing, and card punch machines as City Has Job For
well as teletype machines, These
Jobs begin at $67 a week ana | Hae ineer;
reach a maximum of $83 a week.| 7°" 2
To qualify, from three months| The City of New York has a
to three years of experience is| Vacancy in its Federal-State
required in the operation of one | Arterial Highway Program for an
assistant clvil
$7,100-$8,900.
Information on the vacancy
may be obtained from David Cap-
lan, director of planning. TRa-
falgar 6-9700.
engineer, salary
Just
published and
Ist big printing sold out
2nd big printing sold out
‘rd big printing on press
4th big printing
ordered
Mack the Knife.” —ROBERT CROMIE
forever bury the myth that the men who
fans alike,
tells the inside stories of:
The first time a midget was sent
i) to pinch-hit * i)
@ The firework-and-musie enhanced
scoreboard at Comiskey Park (which
off in ecstasy ever one of
the Go-Go Sox hit one out of the
Park)
The full-scale burial, with military
honors, of the pennant flag, one
grey season
The first and only circus clown ever
sent to the minors for seasoning
A thousand cupcakes delivered as
door prize to one fortunate lady fan
In Milwavkee
=)
=)
c=)
At all bookstores + $4.95
aa
Continues
98 Binder ger id on Page 12)
steppes during a hard «
100 cleaning women, plus Veeck
himself, scrubbing down beautiful
Comiskey Park with soap and water
In the small hours following a g:
to the amusement of a crowd of
photographers and spectators
‘Whatever you read about Bill Veeck is only
a pop fly compared to his complete book.
EEO
Front page Chicago Tribune —
“One of the frankest, most enthralling, amusing and pro-
vocative books of its kind I've ever had the good fortune
to read. It sounds, in fact, like something which might have
been the joint creation of Puck, Phineas T, Barnum, and
Front page New York Herald Tribune —
“A ferociously honest, wonderfully comic book, which should
run baseball are
sportsmen, rather than capital-gainsmen,”—ROGER KAHN
The “Barnum of Baseball,” champion of the underdog, professional iconoclast,
born promotor, Veeck tells his story with a wealth of off-beat anecdote and a
total absence of inhibition which will delight baseball fans and non-baseball
Staid old club owners never recovered from the unique features of Veeck’a
career as president of the Indians, the. Browns, and the White Sox, and Bill
An artistic planting of full-grown
trees in the bleachei
of Wrigley
d bare by
Russian
winter")
nso Tet
completely washed out In the third
Inning
Tuesday, August % 1962
REAL
HOMES ,.:*;,
ESTA
LONG ISLAND
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
TE VALUES
LONG ISLAND
THE ADVERTISERS IN THIS SECTION H AVE ALL PLEDGED TO THE SHARKEY-BROWN LAW ON HOUSING
OFFICES READY TO
SERVE YOU!
Call For Appointment
Gi NO CASH
ial te & VIC.
.)
set up, inmaculate con-
Must be told at onc
|Samptasehy
| shaded plot with 1 cor gorege.
Low toxes, just $69.50 pays all.
ERING DEPOSIT
Gu. NEEDS NO CASH
EXCLUSIVE WITH US
135-19 age 2 a 17 South Franklin St.
50. OZONE PAR HEMPSTEAD
JA 9-4400 IV 9-5800
NO CASH DOWN TO ALL
WEST HEMPSTEAD
$11,990
GRACIOUS 2 story he
d
HOLLIS
82 ROOMS DETACHED
FANTASTIC severti
it
needed by civilian. Gi no cosh,
EXCLUSIVE
JA 3-3377
159-12 HILLSIDE AVE.
BETTER REALTY
ALL 4 OFFICES OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
FROM 9:30 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M.
277 NASSAU ROAD
ROOSEVELT
wv INTEGRATED wwwT
ESSEX SOLVE YOUR
NO CASH GI
ie club basement
143-01 HILLSIDE AVE.
B-S-S-E-X ‘uta
Vax A Ae tn ey AX 7-7900 dm dim Mim. Mie. Lams
RIVERSIDE DRIVE, 1% & &% private 2 GOOD BUYS
Moariments. Interracial Furnished The
ST. ALBANS
falger T4118
One family, 6 rooms and en-
colsed porch of lasting stucco
and shingle, modern kitchen
and bath, finished basement
with many extras, including re-
frigerater, storms, Venetians &
soreens, Asking. . .
$16,000
HOLLIS
2 FAMILY
| DETACHED on 40x100 plot of
stucco and shingle, 4 and 3
room ith modern kitch-
ens and oil heat and 2
car xara ay extras includ-
ed, Bring deposit, Only . .
$19,400
Other 1 & 2 Family Homes
HAZEL B. GRAY
2 LeT HOUSING Prontenei “4
Houses in E. Elmhurst, St, Albons, Hollis, Jomoice
> A THRIFTY NIFTY!! $70.76 PAYS BANK q
b NO CASH GI 4
roam, full aswment, gat esl. earae, AX condition, 910.100
NEED A HOME IN A HURRY? —- MOVE IN TODAY! 4
NO CASH GI
e. icons at Hy basement, new oll beat, garage, Av odition. 914.800. 4
>; A REALLY BIG ONE! BEDROOMS 4
Houses & Farms - N.Y. State
168-33 LIBERTY AVE.
JAMAICA
AX 1-5858 - 9
hh ®
et, Borough
ounty of New
SULLIVAN COUNTY —= How Tork Stale
UivvedsosVids, aaw Vouk,
WOLLIs
LUXURY & oaeepctl
drm
mncnge: Ise gris plot. $060 cxsh down,
LONG ISLAND HOMES
168-1% Hillside Ay, dam, RE 9-7300
THE BEST IN
QUEENS
JAMAL
(Ceder
wp.
sh. Owner takes mort-
$23,000
QUEENS VILLAGE
Four bedroom brick, @ baths,
Hnished basement and gurage,
Asking $17,900 $900 Cosh
LAKEVIEW
W. HEMPSTEAD
7 room, brick and
ed
ranch
shingle
hed
Homefinders, Ltd.
192-05 LINDEN BLYD,
ST. ALBANS
Fieldstone 1-1950
4 4 ty Ay
yy
INTEGRATED
Legal 2 Family
a
ways in Jameice.
from upstairs
carries ail expel
CALL NOW!
COTE
118-09 Sutphin Blvd.
Hempstead, LA.
HEMPSTEAD, L. I.
NEW SPLIT RANCHES!
LATEST DESIGNED HOMES
in ‘4
AH HOR:
EUR, DON
sHow
£95 al
ia the County
July 20, 1963,
aPH A. COX
(L8.) Surrogate, New York
4/ Puuip A, Dow
/
|
RENT or BUY
SOLID BRICK — HOLLIS
LEGAL, 2-FAMILY—HOLLIS—8
in. No closing fees, 6 modern,
and with private ea!
formal dining room, refrigerator, near schools and transport-
ction. Small cosh ever mortgage.
$500 DOWN TO ALL
RENT OR BUY
1-FAMILY — A-1 AREA
DETACHED, large plo
refrigeretor, storms an
LOW CASH OVER MORTGAGE
Oven 1 daze o weet
~~ GALL FOR APPT.
Jamaica, L. t. 10 Meare Roebuen,
‘attain te
170-03 Hillside Ave. Toon one
1 FREE PARKING »
AX 1-5262
dalaaiaiatala —- Salenigiayi
INTEGRATED
i
PRICES
HEMPSTEAD & VICINITY
G.I. NO CASH
BEAUTIFUL HOME LARGE
LARGE PLOT COLONIAL
BEAUTY
7 ROOMS with enc!
2 baths, 2-car garage,
full attic, 1072280 plot, newly
Extras, This heme
ed perch,
it heat,
SPECIAL FOR A HOME TO
Gl
BE DESIRED
one “A oy Bice colon’ tee cae
HEMPSTEAD | ROOSEVELT
LIST REALTY CORP.
OPEN 7 DAYS 4 WEEK
14 SOUTH FRANKLIN STREET, HEMPSTEAD, L. |.
IV 9-8814 - 8815
Directions; Take Bouthers Parkway Ext. 19, Penineola Boul
under the bridge to South Street,
135-30 ROCKAWAY BLYD,, SO, OZONE PARK
JA 9-5100
GELLAR AAA A AANA hhh hedhed he hdd Ad
160-13 HILLSIDE AVE., JAMAICA
OL 7-3038 OL 7-1034
FL hekudeheahicheuke head hehehehe eu ate he |
GARDEN ACRE
home, 214 bathe,
Jarier oped,
Exam Study Books
te help you get «higher srode
service tests
store,
York 7, WN,
Cell
KOPP OF KERHONKSON. ¥Y
Tel, Kerhookscn 7806
Houses For Sale - Ulster Co,
$4,995
Pretty landecaped | mods
furnished eotlage tor
Urement mr bus,
Kerbonkro,
Houses For Sale - Greene Co.
For list of
ee Poge 15,
KOPP OF MERRONKSON. 3.¥,
Kertoukeum Thee
Page Teale
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
Tuesday, August 7, 1962
STATE ELIG
(Continued from Page 12)
1 Mokeon, B., Greenlawn $
a 1, Brows 4
a Rochester +
‘4 2, Jackson 10
Ba W., Melrose it
H Rochoater 12 Anning, ital
7 ay Shore 18 Adameli, Joba.
& Benson, it, Jamestown 14 Gawronsies, Prant au
Pinto, dy Brookign 1g Weintoriner, J. J B. Ambersi
40 Sehilling,' 34 Broad 16 Farrell, Kenneth, Butislo ..«.,. 70"
pty Secaucus N FLEVATOR OPERATOR
18 Patchorue WEATCHESTER COUNTY
4 » NYC 8) 1 Moas, Lott, White Plaine
15 « xltoamny 212 Deleo, Nicholas, White Pial
18 Wentwood W'.., 9 Williams, Arthur, M4, Vernon
i
Hrooklyn
ANITARY INSPROTOR—DRPT,
HEALTH—ERIE 00,
‘t, Lackawanna
Buffalo,
& Bowker, 8 Kawortwrit
4 Portor, J.. Buffalo...
DISCOUNTS
To All
CITY, STATE & FEDERAL
EMPLOYEES ON :
1962. RAMBLERS
INVESTIGATE!
TRIAD RAMBLER
1266 39th Street
(Bet, 13th & Lath Aves.)
BROOKLYN UL 4-3100
IN EXCELLENT
CONDITION
1 961 DODGE
LANCER
PRACTICALLY NEW
Lovely blue, 4-door beauty
seals five confortably, seat belts, ete,
Write Box 541
¢/@ The Leader
St, NAY, 7, N.Y,
1 Koch, Mary, Kenmoro
ary
SPECIAL F
1 Waltnce
A Growhood, B.C
@ Carson,
7 Baloer, Frances,
\3
6
BLE LISTS
DIRTITIAN ASSISTANT
ERIE COUNTY
Stealirecht, N. Buffalo
Mastrangelo, B, M, Hutialo’ ¢
SENIOR ENGINERRING AIDE
KR COUNTY
wi
Benrdsiey, F. G., Mt. Vernon
Lewis, George, Lake Moher
Stallone, P. A. Yonkers
JUNIOR, ENGINEERING AIDE
WESTCHESTER COUNTY
1 O'Keefe, “Rawant, White Paine
Torhan, Edward, Yonkers
SEWAGE PLANT OPERATOR
TOWN OF GRAND ISLAND
ERIK COUNTY
Thornor, Donald, Grand Isla
820
DIRECTOR OF MARINE FISHERS
David, Annapolis 1000
William, ‘Bacenmento |) 2.1000
B. G., Lakewood +860
: Ripley
FHARMACEUTIOAL CLERK—ERIE 00.
Duttalo
Bawant
Jean, A
Amherst
ASSISTANT CIVED. NI
1 Parance, A
ovary
Plrasantyitis *
2 Hrundage, 'P,
CARTOGRAPHER
M., Albany
M, Athens Ga
1 Lawford
enn,
“Whew! And you think earning it is tough!"
(sad am Jara Ami
Shopping, ‘specially bargain hunting, can be
tough. Yet one of the biggest bargains in town is
w right there ready and waiting at home~electricity!
And, If you're like most folks,
you're putting
that electricity to good use, Chances are you're
using more electric appliances to make house»
Work easier, put more ple
hours,
{ft you're using more electricity
asure into your leisure
the average
family uses twice as much as 18 years ago » your
electric bill Is Tad higher Gut
femember, wi
down rates,
less it costs
Cm
Con Edison's ste}
the more you use, the
per kilowatt-hour,
REAM
POWER FOR PRocases
Experience
To qualify for these positions,
applicants must have had appro-
priate accounting and auditing
experience including professional
experience in making audits or
examinations of commercial con-
cerns or Government agencies, or
in auditing cost accounting sys-
tems which required knowledge of
the technical processes of pro-
duction and cost distribution
methods,
Pertinent college study and pos-
session of a CPA certificate may
>| be substituted for part of the re-
quired experience,
Written Test
Persons who have not completed
1 | 4 years of college study which in-
jSyene 24 semester hours in ac-
| Counting subjects, or those who do
not possess a CPA certificate ob-
tained through written examina-
tion, will be required to take a
B| written test.
Pull information concerning re-
; | quirements to be met and instruc-
tions on how to apply are given in
civil service Announcement No.
The three auditing and
ing auditors and accountants
for civilian jobs in the U.S,
‘Auditors & Accountants
‘Needed by Government
For $6,435 Positions
accounting agencies of the U.S, military services are seek«
and abroad.
275 B. Applications will be accep-
ted until further notice,
Announcements and application
forms may be obtained from the
Executive Secretary, Board of U.S,
Civil Service Examiners, General
Post Office, Room 413, 271 Wash-
ington St., Brooklyn 1, N.Y.; or
from the U.S, Civil Service Com-
mission, Washington 25, D.C,
+ Shoppers Service Guide «
DODGE FOR SALE
BUILT POR SAFETY, COMFORT AND
ECONOMY,
Lancer 2
A. low-milan
safety looks
Appliance Services
Sales & Service recond Retrigs, Stoves.
Wash Machines, combo sinks, Guaranteed
TRACY REFRIGERATION 00
240 Bio St & Be
TRACY
0; others
TK GHor8
FREE BOOKLET by U. 8, Gov-
ernment on Social Security. Mall
only, Leader, 97 Duane Street,
New York 7, N. ¥,
Limousine Service
RETIRED FIREMAN
OFFERS LIMOUSINE SERVICE FOR
ALL OCCASIONS.
CALL TA 2-8545
oe «|
Adding Machines
Typewriters
Ml hs
Guaranteed, Also Rentals, Repairs
ALL LANGUAGES
TYPEWRITER CO,
Citelven 8-8086
119 W, 23rd ST,, NEW YORK 1, ¥, ¥.
THE WESTPORT:
englnoering features you find {n more expensive consoles © All-wood cabinets solidly
enhance sound and decor, Available in three styles, finishes © AM/FM Tuner le adaptable
to FM Stereo Radio ¢ General Electric Ceramic Stereo cartridge with diamond stylus
* Two oval speakers with co-axial tweeter cones
10 or 12 inch stereo or monaural records, all speeds
© PLUG this free four album atereo Ubrary (comparable retall value: $19.92) that Includes
most of your favorite recording artists at thelr best, Start
AMERICAN HOME C
THIRD AVENUE At 40th St,, New York City
Call MU 3-3616
FREE! 4 ALBUM STEREO LIBRARY
WHEN YOU BUY
THIS GENERAL ELECTRIC
ALL-HARDWOOD
STEREO CONSOLE (hitunn
onl] 9985
Modal RC B11 Shown
General Electric quality stereo with
Beautiful styling! Beautiful sounds! Beautiful price! Here's
eaeand nee danan, Wie t,
Balance and Tone controle
stereo right now!
ENTER, Inc.
4 ALBUMS! 50 ARTISTS!
XAVIER CUGAT
DAVID CARROLL
DINAH WASHINGTON:
HAL MOONEY
RICHARD HAYMAN
FREDERICK FENNELA
BROOK BENTON
PETE FOUNTAIN
BURL IVES
JUDY GARLAND
ELLA FITZGERALD
MILLS BROTHERS
CARMEN CAVALLARO
SAMMY KAYE
ANORE PREVIN
DAVE BRUBECK
BUDDY GRECO
ROY HAMILTON
LEONARD BERNSTEIN
MITCH MILLER
COUNT BASIE AND
OUKE ELLINGTON
DIANA TRASK
MILES DAVIS.
40 STAFFORD
EUGENE ORMANOY
PLUS 25 Mone
all the design and
Tuesday, August 7, 1962 CIVIL SERVICE LEADER Page Thirteen
New! G-E’s THIN WALL INSULATION
is twice as efficient as ordinary in-
sulation, so requires only half the
thickness, This—plus gain in in-
terior capacity—plus other G-E im-
Provements—results in 88% more
storage space in same size cabinet,
NO DEFROST
in FREEZER or
REFRIGERATOR
@ Exclusive Roll-Out Freezer brings
everything out front. More usable
space than in any comparable
model,
ig = 3 Adjustable, Removable Swing-Out
¥ Shelves plus Swing Out Egg Tray &
Butter Conditioner,
™ Freeze-N-Store Ice Service,
Juice Can Rack at top of freezer.
™ Porcelain Vegetable Drawer & Meat
Pan.
@ Magnetic Safety Door.
= Decorator Panels available as ac-
cessories.
neral Electric Dial Defrost
= .
Esl! Full Width Freezer
SEE US FOR YOUR
LOW, LOW PRICE
s Dial Defrost Convenience m Full Width
reezor 1 Pasmue Safety Door m 4
fit fated, Snes Pe
ntrol im '*
and toe Trays m 2 Egg Shelves.
1962
REFRIGERATORS
AT . = | : uN
GREAT wo pow
SAVINGS PAYMENT
5-YEAR PROTECTION PLAN
l-year epee warranty against manufac: Medel TARLIW:
turing de! on entire refrigerator with
{the owcledsin vetrgwrion’ gyvome
scene ae There is nothing “just as good as” General Electric
‘Storage me
AMERICAN HOME CENTER, INC.
616 THIRD AVENUE AT 40TH STREET, NEW YORK CITY
CALL MU. 3-3616
Page Fourtees
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
TEST AND LIST PROGRESS —N.Y.C.
Below ts the complete progress of New York City examinations,
listed by title, latest progress on tests or list and other information of
interest to anyone taking City civil service open-competitive or
promotion examinations, and the last number certified from each
eligible list, Only the most recent step toward appointment is listed.
vil wnsinesr, prom. (Public Works): 1 certified June it
civil engineer, prom, (TA). 3 certified July & ..
1 certified June Lt
wiudien. prom,
Laat No,
* Latest Proseeve
Accountant, 10 certified J40e 1B ses eeeeevere ones
Acooiint clerk, EX certified Avie Ke sieetant
avn, prom, Community’ Coilegel,” YX “certitiea’ July” 87 10
AdMiniNCAli¥e amst., prom, (Health), 10 certified July Gy... .eeeee ES
Admivisirative awe, prom,” (Hospitals), 3 certified Inky By. ...tLLU t
Adminieirative weet, prom, (Law), 3 certified July 6 ..... 5
‘Admiovsirarive prom., (Marine & Aviation), 21 cert, Jane is 174
Adminisirntive avit', prom, (Presidents Office), 3 certified June 29 ‘
Administrative prom, (Public Works), 2 ‘certified July 6 10
Adiniisivaitve avet., prom, (Real Estate), 2 certified July 26 E
Aduvioistrative ssw, prom, (Sanitation). 10 certified July 6 ... ri
panch operator (IBM), 4 certified Jane 1 ir
‘Appraise, (real estate), 10 certified Tune Lovee s eves a 2
‘Arhali. worker, prom, (Brooklyn Pres. Omer), 7 certitied July’ 8F Bu
Aswan, prom... (Tax) 16 oertitiod June 18.’ oo
Amt. accountant, Group T, 3 eertiNed July 8 ., a)
Aant. sovountaat, Group Hy 4% certified July BS . a
. 14 certified June 21. reat f
F catisted July 3... oe
2 certified July 6 i ae
| certified June 19 Se
‘Asal. archiieot, prom, (Eduoation), i” certified “July ee
Asst. atiorney, & certified July 6 - 8b
Ax. buyer: vom. (Purchase) @ etviitied “dine “is a af
Aas. chemist, proin.. (Hoalth), 2 certified July 30 oe
Bceriied duty” 30 pe eiin ens care x Se
eer, prom, (Manhattan Pres. Office), 2’ certided July 19 LL.
civil engineer, peom., (Housing Authority), 1 certified Juae $2. 15
eivis angineer, prom. {Public Works), 1 cnriited Juve 18. ‘
i
‘CFeuiticy, 8 gue
deputy aupt. prisons, 12 certified June 8
Ans. deviiy warden, prom, (Correction). 10 certified July 3k ....4.
Assistant foreman, pram, (Sanitavon), 24 certified May prerers
Assiviant gardener, 109 certified May 2... ...... aetiaens + 260
fal administrator, 6 certified” June 807°... 7
, prom, (Education) 1 certified June 19 eA 1
tor of recreation, prom. (Parka), 17 certified’ June 20° |
‘slutoin #uperviaor, it Avid.), 8 certified Jane Li”
Asistant stockman, 8! certified Ju
Aest, aupt, of balldings and «rounds.
Assi. wapervisor, (rare & shops)
ie
4 certified July 94
prom, (PA). @ certified July 27
funeevisor (aignals), prom, (TA), 3 certified July 18
Amt supervisor, (welfare), prom, 23 certified July 29
Ami, train dispateher, prom., (TA). 8 certified June 20
Art. youth quidance technician, 1) certified July 90
Attendant (male), 6 certified June 27...
Atlentant (women), 25 certified May 2
Atiorsey, @ oartified August 1 a
f, prom, (Fire Dept),
+b eertified July 24... ...
B certified Jum
14 certified Jnne
in-charge, pr
20
ceriifled July
Bookbia er,
{Pubitie | Work
mont Lieutenant (Feiboro R&T vib), @ cert, Way 16's."
Sins wl Geet tee 4 nee ine See, “4
Brides & tunnel walntainer, % certitied May ai’
Bridge & ¢ {ieitor, bat
Bridge & (18 eta) 8 puna say 4
Buyer (inst a certified June 4 5
Capinin, (mated, prom. (Carrootie certified July 30
Dapivin, won, (Fire Dept), 1% duly 20 : ‘
ge boats). (Public Works}, 1 certified July 30 4
Car insvecior, prom (Prana ). 9 onvttiieg June 11 A o
Car tom Group A, Pref, 3 certified July 18
Cor inspector, prom, (TA), 9 ccrtifted July 18
Caxhior, 400 ‘certified Feb. '24 a
Chink pwvhotosiot, B certified “June |®
Civil enavover, prom. (City Planing Comm.j, 2” eertitied June
eer, prom, (Trafic) 2 certitiod June 19
Civil engineer, 1 certified May
CH eosionsring drattaman, pi (Public Werks); "6" ‘cert. “uty
1 cortified July ‘81 - :
om (Public Worksy.” Svcd July’ 9
Chick ecole iene, ro nie), 4 vernitied July 9L
Chiat payclatogia rd June
rf tw 18 ovetified July
certified Jane At (City Ma
100 certified Jue 15 nee
& TA), 90 certified ine
Clore:
er
‘TH
wit
moniter, B certified June
AIniNIAtFAtlve AaMt., feom,
Callers otivr
College oltice
46 certified Jane 6
1
(nrodtyin’ Cite net. cortified dais 6
9 “ceridtion
Colas office "A" group 2.17 May
Group 1, Ti certified July 23
certitied june 1.
riifed Juit Tt i
certified July
29. crrtifiel July
eae
4 certified June 26°
(City Court),
O certified
or, 14
wher (City Court
certified June &
verted. duly
a
© certified June 20
Cusiodi PEN
Dockhand, 31 certitied May 20 Pe
Dooly chiet, yrom, (Fire Dept), @ ceriit
Disieive tore (Hehy & Saver Maint.)
Dist, avo (bd. of ed.)
Dist. aupery certified Jo
Bieotvician 4 certified July. 2
Bloctsieian's helper, 3 certified Juan’ 4 3
Bievaior wechanic, prom. (Public Works), 4 June 13
Blov ator
bal
x Auth), @ certted June
May 8
Ki cine ide eth fe \e
Bxtormin 10 cectified June t
Fire alae watcher, 8 certified May 17
riified May 10,
he
prom,. (Patice Dopt.).
prom. (trans, auth), 3
(Rdacation), 5. certified July 27
power), prom. (TA), & certified June 2
from. (Sanitation) U8 certified Muy & ....
Foreman, (Sisnals), prom, (LA), & certified July 20 i
Foreman’ (airiciureegroup B), prom. CRA), & certified ‘May 18°22... 10
‘ watchman, prom, (TA), @ cortified July & ..,..sssceee 7
ea), prom, (TA), 9 certified June 20 tae a
fev prom, {(Manhaitaa Pre. OMire), @ certified July 16 “
Garton’ AL duty 87,
Gar » 16
"St “cometauction, prom, (tdu,), "@ cartiaed duis’ ®
@ certiNed Mar
(military), 1
10
a
Cimlaker’ Qroup 7 tt
vnmuinity activities —¢
15 certified duly
ne & redevelopanen
7 waa, T certified May 1a
if worough works T certified July $6
30 certified June 20 es
certified a)
m. (ep
a
pr building |
< prom, (Education), & eertibnd July
8 corded” Jana’
State Employees
Share $1,785
Award Money
ALBANY, July 16 — A $700 award, the largest made by the New York State Em-
ployee Suggestion Program in 1962, went jointly this month to Francis McLaughlin and Ed-
ward Fay, Capital District employees of the Department of Taxation and Finance. They
head the most recent list of 37 State employees who received Certificates of Merit and
a total of $1,785 in award money for their time-and-money-saving Ideas.
McLaughlin of Troy, chief of
income tax data processing, and
ter 2 cart 18
i po age bo * Socmnee ayn certied” July” ie 4 Pay, of Albany, income tax tabu-
yeast ye 3) lating supervisor, were rewarded
105 | for developing an improved system
1400 | of processing income tax exception
393 | eases. Their idea eliminates a
80! \ great deal of manual work and
ratory aide, 10 certified
110 weetified
July 18
lenant’ (Police). prom.
Liaeman, prom., (Pire Deot.), & evrtiNed June 28°. 7
Matntainer'e hetpereroup A, 2 certified June 12 ary | SAVOE MONS this §10,000 erirically,
helper-group B, 6 certified June 1% i47| Another joint award, $300, went
Mainteosnce man, at enrfied Joly Bc cerseee ir | to Frank A, McCullough of Averill
M 18 certified June 19. Park, and Lilllan Nichol of
cua crstteeausinllnets Abn | Schenectady, both of whom are
heloet, Grown D, 18 certified Juty 390 | income tax examiners in the De-
Mechvuieal wagiaecting deatusman, 7" ‘ceritNed “duty” g | SaRSenerie | es Eapeions Boe Es
Menagerie Merger, Be certified Only, 90 sssvcoteeear eye i4|nance. They designed a printed
de A ong I pF OIE a obs | assessment form which does away
Moaie’ Teiline bgnatien \oeoee “(Pedy eonitaen’ Jue’ it : "11 | with the need for = large volume
Molar welucle operator, Wt cerufed July rai aunt
Nutetionist, 1 certified July 30 .. 4 7 of dictation and permits junior
% toreniau, prow. (Parka). & certified June 1 20 | staff members to handle a greater
ri foams UT eoried May das ct Ok eee ek
Varking meter attendant 46 oertitind “June “18
Parking moter collector, 10 ceriified July 6
Parking meter collector, 10 certified May % as approy,
tunnel officer ,,,, ff
Parole oflcer, 13 certified Jo
Patrolman, 1 gertified June 1s :
el examiner, prom 1 certified June
trainee, ied June 18 ,.
1 certifiediune 19
Frank Vignola of Middletown,
an electrician in the Department
of Social Welfare's Otisville
| Training School for Boys, received
two separate awards of $125 each.
for’ bridge’ ana
v # evrtified July 23 o | He adapted sump pump float
Pilsierer, ft veeriaed Gulp 30 Asi tt | mechanisms to correct two serious
Wuvivties, § eeeritie Time *
Polleewomen, @ certified May %t problems in the operation of the
yo A ON el PES 5 0g [roars baw wares Hino eee
a } ehildren’e counselor, piom.,. (Welfare), 2 cert, July 91 ‘ Z| Francis Durocher of Cohoes,@ |
Th et uate A ered de Qe’, Cann) © Ss ty a8 ri | Principal account clerk and Cor-
Patlie health ture, 1 ctrtiGed June 20" \ ss. .cc, ceae a
Public pelation aust, 13 ovetitied July iy | Rellus MaCerthiy: OF: eneannet
1 certifed June . 4) head account clerk in the Depart-
Rallrond porter, 908 certified Ma tM 2.400
Rallfoet Gorler’ an pores. (or car tenner, i180" crvlded ‘April id Eas {ment of Mental Hygiene’s Albany
Malicond clerk, prom. (TA), 4 certified June 14 . 10 | office, shared a joint award of
nila ane
Teenl esi 4|$100. They developed a new
Rehabititation counselor, ® certified Jane 19°, i
mechanical procedure to provide
Soult Aust proms (depts sf purchase), 3 eoriiiad’ Suna’ 4 SRN WAR (BU ISOS Oe
Senior accontunt ae approp. from acconntant, 28 certified May “ai')/))) ag |eharges made to the individual
Seuar Seatac figs sune"S) T=". "%. ccc: *f|accounte of patient. Tastallation
civil engineer, prom, (TA), @ certified July 10 ..,..... of this procedure has sav an
claim “exami rom. (TE riited July 24 1
Ghehs premy iGke, taeizniog. Gourley 3 {estimated $1,500 a year. ‘
jor clerk,’ prom,’ (Health) 2 5 ‘
ee aha Pasig gre + Fifty dollar awards went to
Srelac. cusiedial sereian, $ eoritss 5 | William M, Kilmer of Hyde Park,
35. soniueee auseasor,, sin (Tax Rept), 4, eertlted dunn an industrial shop worker in the
Seoinr \llusteator, prom. (Planning Com certified May Ame:
Senior investigator, prom, (Howitae), 88 certited uty 10. + Department of Mental Hygiene's
Senior Investigator, prom. {Wellare). t cartihed July 30 ta teas 1 | Hudson River State Hospital; to
Senine parole offer. prot... (Parole). 4 vert ly |
Eemior public health Dhseia “pron, «tent. of Health), 9 certified bay 2 9 | Joseph F. Pickett of Averill Park,
ior slenogrADbEF, Gea. rem, list, @ ceriified April 3 r art.
Snwage treatment werker. 121” ceriifed “May @ "4. Sg | 8 ieee 1h Gis Baaaiive: ee
Special slicer, B enrtified) May 93 sz | ment's Civil Defense Commissior
ier eres, Ceca mat {and to Norton Vermilyen of Bel-
2 certified July
| kirk, a head clerk in the Depart-
Menographer, Group 141, 2 certified July’ 5 4s)
Simsorapber, 2 certified July & 2o| ment of Civil Service. Their Mag
Stevographer, 1 certitind July & 1 4
Siemamahee: Cnen SLA enlace tat 2 | estions pertained, respectively,
Sienoerapher, Group 110, 3 certified July 8 4) an improved machine for uth
Stenographer, Group 143, 1 certified July 6 m1
Slocknan, “oeom UTrame), 3 ertined fuly ‘St fia cores into mattress covers, new
Stoneerner. certified ref ; “7 4
Birnoiure Maintainer, prom. D teamed Auth.) 3° eotliied dune 6" Ra | forms and procedures for the pre
Strae nintalnergroap D, prom, (Trans, Auth), 4 ofetised June si #7| paration of progress reports, and
Structure maintainer-Group Eprom... TA), tified June BB ......02 1D
Siimerinteadeat) of conuttuction," cities Jung best *{ | simplified means of compiling
iperviaing clerk, gen, Prom list. 20 certified May 18... cc... 5
Supervining olerk, prom, (Parka), 24 certified duly id... | civil service examination mater- 1
Supore Clerk, prom, (Hospital), 23 certiled July 17 tals,
Supervising ire 'piom (Basing ith pare nt ane 26 tndividual awards of $25 were
Supervising elerle, ‘prom., (TA). certified July 20 Re f
Supervising public Bealih sanitarian. prom, "Healih); 20 seetifint’ July ia" spade toNosaph sneer GF At
Supervising Rienceranbar, rom, (Traflo). 15 certified July 17 bany, an assistant librarian in the
Supervising stenographer,” prom, (Cultural Affaire), 19. certified w F
Supervising alenokrapher, fram, (DR Court). 1% certified July Baueation Department; Anthony
Saserrilon als braver ee. THerottalel, 19 sartited duly Bottillo, of Troy, a tabulating
unervising elenographer, prom, (Parke), 17 eertified. Ju
Sunervising slenogragher, prom, (Record), 10 certitint “aly at a machine operator in the Depart
Suervising steoographer, prom, (Welfare), B certified July. 2a : e :
suectsing arent lat worker, prom. {Youth Board). @ certined fiir ais: tasdh ot Maciel Hivaiens Cleors
Buipery ibulator operator 1 ceriified July 20°, é
M. Foster of Norwich, a stenog-
vapher in the Department of
Conservation; and John W. Kess-
ler, Albany, head account clerk in
the Department of Mental Hy-
giene, Another $25 grant was
shared by Alfred DeBellas of
Brooklyn, senior tax collector,
and Bernice Robinson, also of
Brooklyn, a senior clerk in the
Supervisor of radio operation, 1 certified June 28
Surface line operator, as approp for conductor, 44° ceriiied May 18
Tahulator operator, 9 oertitied
‘Tabulator aperator trainer, 20 cert a x
‘Tebulntor operator trainee’ (UM) i” cere S's
operator, 3 certfied July
reraior: $6 ceriihed July at
irae
iy 30
an & 2 emied aeae'e
eertided 2
Seid. sreap v8 is Department of Taxation and
5 Serimed June ta Finance. '
Raymond J. McDermott,
(Continued on Page 15)
Ale
Water plant operator, 1 certified June
Fouts guidance praleet supervisor, prow,
(Vout BH), 8 ooriiled duly &
a August 7, 1962
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER Fees fee
Se City Rent Aides teres"
YOUR CIVIL SERVICE TEST
PASS HIGH
Are Classified;
Some Excluded
The New York City Board of Estimate has approved
the classification of 13 additional titles in the City Rent
the EASY
service In new salary grades. The titles classified were:
ARCO WAY
Apprentice 4th Class Mechanle ....ee. eevee -$3.00
Civil Service Arithmetic & Vocabulary . «4... $2.00
POP ted
Civil Enginee:
Civil Service Handbook
Cashier (New York City) seeeeney « $3.00
Claim Examiner Unemployment Insurance .....-.. .$4.00
Clerk G.S. 1 se veteceee SOOO
Clerk NLY.C. .... coe cees GRO
Clerk Senior & Supervising .......-. $4.00
Court Attendant .. -$4.00
Employment Interviewer .......- . $4.00
Federal Service Entrance Examinati -$4.00
Fireman (F.D.) $4.00
Foreman . -$4.00
High School Diploma Test . «$4.00
Home Study Course for Civil Service Jobs ...... $4.95
Insurance Agent & Broker ieeweiwjauiercare beeen ee
Janitor Custodian ore vee $3.00
Maint: ereveewsenes Saw
? Motor Vehicle Licence Examiner ....... soeccees 64,00
Notary Public oes eine wayeieenes err
Parole Officer .. aivisieielessce Seesieay enews $4.00
Patrolman .......-+ Chiao aes rag ouie de sevees $4.00
| Personnel Examiner .......--.+esreseeeee eens $5.00
‘ Postal Clerk Carrier ......-.+0sseeseeee8 eee $3.00
} Real Estate Broker ..........-s0eeeeeeee vee e $3.50
F School Crossing Guard ..... aaslenees oan ecee se S08
Senior File Clerk ...... seseibessien’ wee ewiee oe $4.00
Social Investigator ..........000005 oo erase once 1 $400
Social Worker s pikiecainiace einiasp aseins gists. conc Meee
] Senter Clerk W.Y.G. ...cccccccseeseees seve eee $4.00 i
State Trooper ........00eeseeees encececeremnsn'e's «0 OD
Stationary Engineer & Fireman .......-.++++++-$4,00
Stenotypist (N.Y.S.) oe veeeee orve SOOO
Stenotypist (G.S. 1-7) cevecsecccescaconveeeys Soe
Stengrapher G.S. 3-4 ..cceccceceseeeeee rere $400
Telephone Operator ++ $3.00
Vocabulary Spelling ++ +$1.50
Grammor ......
‘ You Will Receive an Invaluable
New Arco “Outline Chart of
mw New York City Government.”
With Every N.Y.C. Arco Book—
!
ORDER DIRECT—MAIL COUPON
450 for 24 hour special delivery
C.0.D.'s 306 extra
LEADER BOOK STORE
97 Duane St, New York 7, N. Y.
Please send me
1 enclose chock or
AddrOss .insernereeee oman se eeerereeeerereenenneeens
e fo PNAC OE TT CTT
Bo sure to include 3% Sales Tex
In other action, the Board of
| Estimate has excluded seven other
| titles in the City Rent service from
| the Career and Salary Plan. The
ee. eveluded are; counsel (City
Rent), deputy counsel (City Rent),
rent control field representative,
maintenance man (City Rent),
supply helper (City Rent).
E. Tron Named
U.S. Delegate To
Teachers Parley
Emil Tron, president of the
City Teachers Association, has
been selected as a delegate to the
World Convention of Teachers be-
ing held in Stockholm this month,
The global
World Confederation of Organiza-
tions of the Teaching Profession,
will have representation from vir-
| heeeasad every nation outside of the
}Iron Curtain, The United States
member of WCOTP is the Na-
| tlonal Education Association.
NEA Executive Secretary Wil-
}liam G. Carr ts also secretary-
general of WCOTP, which ha:
headquarters offices in Washing-
ton and Paris,
Tron, a teacher of French at
| Brooklyn Technical High School
will help the U. & delegation in
its efforts to advance the cause of
democratic education throughout
the world.
Award Winners
(Continued from Page 14)
bany, @ clerk in the Department
of Taxation and Pinance, earned
‘® $20 award.
Cash grants of $15 were pre-
sented to Joseph Husselbeck of
Cohoes; Josephine Mackey of
West Haverstraw; Harry Rubin of
Albany and Marion Van Vranken
of Albany.
$10 Awards
Max Deutchman, Bronx; Morris
Selengut of Brooklyn; Dorothy
Weinman of New York City; Don-
ald Smith, Endicott; James J,
Madigan of Schenectady; Edward
T. Powers, Latham; Grace M.
Walsh of Floral Park; and Irving
O. Weiss, of Long Island City
Albany area employees recely~
ing Certificates of Merit without
cash grants are John Cavanaugh
of Rensselaer and John L, Sulli-
van, of Cohoes,
In the Buffalo area, Certificates
of Merit went to Eva M. Noles of
Buffalo and to Elias Cohen of
Tonawanda,
Certificates also went to Edward
Bricker, of Forest Hills, and to
Lawrence Kunin of Brooklyn, and
to Theodora Ostroff of Douglas-
en.
laborer (City Rent) and mail and}
organization the |@
Salary Salary
Title Grade Range
Assistant director of rent research 26 $10,300 — $12,700
Assistant district rent and
rehabilitation director 4 9,400 — 11,500
Assistant rent examiner 10 4550 — 5,990
Director of rent research 31 12,600 — 15,300
District rent and rehabilitation director 28 11,200 — 13,600
“Principal offset printing machine
operator (City Rent) 11 4850 — 6,290
Rent examiner 13 5,450 — 6,890
Rent inspector ll 4850 — 6,200
Rent research associate 18 7,100 — 8,900)
“Senior publicity agent (City Rent) ’ 7,100 — 8,900)
Senior rent examiner 16 6400 — 8,200
Senior rent inspector “4 5,750 — 7,190
Senior rent research associate 24 9,400 — 11,500
*For present incumbents only,
| Firm Elects Wenzl
To Exec. Committee
Theodore C. Wenz, treasurer
of the Civil Service Employees
Assn., recently was elected to the
executive committee of the board
of directors of the Magazine and
‘Periodical Printing Co., Inc., of
Brooklyn.
The election took place last
month at the annual meeting of
company stockholders held in the
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel.
| Do You Need A
High School Diploma?
tEquivaieney)
@ FoR son MOTION
© FOR ADDITIONAL
XDUCATION
START ANY TIME
TRY THE “Y” PLAN
$50 send tornoomercn $50 |
YMCA Evening School
15 W. Ord St, New York 23
‘TEL.: BNitleott 2.
ALBANY, August 6 — An ap-
pointing officer's application for
reallocation of forest ranger and
district ranger titles in the De-
partment of Conservation, sup-
ported by the Civil Service Em-
ployees Association has been sub=
mitted to the Division of Class-
ification and Compensation,
The request urges reallocation
from grade 8 to 11 for forest
rangers and from grade 14 to 16
for district rangers,
CSEA has sent @ supporting let-
ter to J, Earl Kelly, Director of
the Division of Classification and
Compensation urging him to
make a favorable determination
on the application.
CIVIL SERVICE COACHING
City, State, Federal & Prom exams
irk
Civil, Mech, Elect, Engr
Blect Ei
rr "
Civil, Mech, r. Drattana
High School Equiv. Diploma
Clases Mon, Wed 10-1 PM & 2-5 PM
Tues and Thurs 6:30-0:30 PM
49 hour Course Approved by State
Entrance Exams
Clames Mon, Wed. morning 10-1 PM
New Exam’ schedujed for-Oct 196%
Post Office Clerk-Carrier
Claseee mornings & Evenings
Electrical Inspector
New Claas will atart soon!
ahiniags iat Supt Const, Siat'ry Rogr
‘ENSE PREPARATION
ea te Personalized. Instr
_, MONDELL INSTITUTE
(Times Square) WI 7-2086
rn ¥ ]
High School
Equivalency
Diploma
for civil service
for personal satisfaction
Class Tues, & Thurs. at 6:30
Write or Phone for Information
721 Broadway N.¥. 3 (at 8 St.)
Please write me free about
School Equivalency class.
SCHOOL DIRECTORY.
BUSINESS SCHOOLS
East Tremont Ave Boston Road,
MONROE SCHOOL—IBM COURSES Kevronch, Tab Wiring, SPECIAL
VICE IBM TESTS. (Approved for Vets.) ‘ieanonrd, ‘oping. Day
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~
Page Sixteen
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER Tuesday, August 7, 196;
PINS AWARDED — Marcy state ttospi
ear service ping to 25 em
ployees at ceremonies at the hospital, Shown during
the ceremonies are, left to right, back row; William
Raymond Wickwire, Leonard Jackson,
tal recently awarded
Owens, Sr.;
Marvin Wengert, Humphrey Jones,
Howard Wilkes, Donald Sperry, Bernard Maloy, F
-. Suffolk CSC
Gets Kaplan
Bill of Health
(Continued from Page 1)
Cromarty, who is also Suffolk
GOP chairman, commented, “The
purpose of the investigatic to
Jook into extraordiy -
warranted d 5
time have not -
vestigated. Mr. Kaplan's appr
ot general workings of the
commission compliments Suffolk
al work
zation. We want to make e that
the entire commission and all
ita functions continue to operate
in the best Ip ts of the
Kaplan's Letter
Kaplan's letter to F'
lows; "I have had an op
‘to examine the record
in co ection with the exam: -
tions conducted by the 5:
unty Civil Service Comm!
i not en clear to me Just
what investi: of
nature and subject
examinations was for
mination b;
Commission.
Our own leads us to
believe that t s conducted
by the Suf Commis- |
sion were probably within their |
jurisdiction and dis At
least, we found no sound basis
for public cr sm of the com-
mission's activities. As you may
be aware, the local civil service
commis: ‘s have autom us
Jurisdiction wit the respective
local governm s The State
Commission has only supervision
4 functions over such loca! commis-
alons where th apy to be
violation of our failure to enforce
the Ciy e law
Dr. J. Katzive
New Bureau Head
ALBANY, Aug. 6—A former hos-
pital director is now director of
the State Health Department's
* Bureau of Hospital Review
omway
“He 1s Dr, Julius A. Katelve, who
served for several years as director
of the Health Services Division of
the United Auto Workers in De-
teolt
At one time, Dr, Katsive was
assistant director of Mount Sinal
Hospital in New York City and
director of Mount Zion Hospital
in San Francisco,
‘MENTAL HYGIENE MEMO
By WILLIAM ROSSITER
CSEA Mental Hygiene Representative
(The views expressed in this column are those of the writer and
not necessarily constitute the views of this newspaper or of any
organization).
More Duties Deserve More Reward
MORE AND more Is expected of more and more atten-
dants in our mental hygiene institutions, The work load is
| heavier and responsibilities are greater. There are many
reasons that can be submitted to prove these statements.
A SPECIAL mental hygiene attendants’ committee has
recently been appointed by Joseph F. Feily, president of the
Civil Service Employees Assn, The committee is as follows: q
| Mrs, Pauline Fitchpatrick, chairman, Newark State School; ’
Jack Cottle, Pilgrim State Hospital; John E, Graveline, St.
Lawrence State Hospital; Mrs. Mary A. Smith, Hudson River
State Hospital; Richard Viggers, Brooklyn State Hospital;
Anna M. Bessette, Hariem Valley State Hospital, consultant;
Emil M. R, Boliman, Rockland State Hospital, consultant;
and this writer.
THE PURPOSE of the committee ts to secure better
salaries and promotional opportunities for attendants in the
New York State Department of Mental Hygiene. The work
of the committee will get underway at an early date so that
the ne ary actions, by salary appeal or otherwise, can be
undertaken to adequate compensation for the ser-
vices rendered by attendants and to provide the career op-
portunities necessary to attract and retain well qualified
personnel,
PLANS TO BEGIN
Stark Mallroy, George Buller, Edward Knamm, Sr;
Arthur Cole, Vernon Moon, Joseph Golden, Ronald |
Cook, Leo Bits, and Dr, Newton Bigelow, hospital |
director, Front row, left to right: Margaret Pultz,
Marie Scheebl, trene Lawless, Laurena Butts, Mary
McGrail, Marie Jackson, Helen Bergen, and Mrs
Nelson DeLaMarter, who accepted a pin for her
husband who was unable to be present.
James Jennings,
Marcy State Hospital |
‘Honors 25 Employees
At Dinner & Dance
action relative to this matter have
| been In the making for some time now, Actually, we have
been waiting for the decision of the nurses salary appeal
The staff and employees of Marcy State Hospital spon-) 4. the Civil Service Commission before beginning the appeal
jored ual 25-year party recently at the hospital.| er the attendants. This has not, as yet, been
More than 400 members attended the cocktail party and|oached. However, CSEA decided to proceed with the at-
dinner-dance at which 25 employees were honored. Dr.
tendants appeal.
THERE ARE MANY reasons that can be given to support
this appeal. The help of mental hygiene attendants and
other employees is needed in gathering facts and data. This
special committee needs your assistance. Special committees
Newton Bigelow, hospital directo!
and presented service pins to tt
Helen Berg’
Leo J. Bi
was master of ceremonies,
following
Name Dr. Laverty
Laurena C. Butts, |
rthue B. Cole,| ALBANY, Aug. 6 — Dr. Ruth | at the chapter level could possibly be advantageous. «
sr. account clerk; Ronald Cook, | Laverty of Middle Village has b THE FIRST meeting of the committee will be in Albany
| attendant Nelson DeLaMarter, | ar 4 commu: on August 15th at Association Headquarters. Individual or
cook; Joseph Golden, plumber and | mental representative
| st t . ‘ era sbsprg group action Is most welcome
Steamfitter; Leonard D. Jackson,!the State Mental Health Dep:
Attendant; Marie Jackson,|mant, The post pays $13,890 & ATTENDANTS, the committee, CSEA, the Department
supervising nur James F. ey 7 rm of Mental Hygiene and many interested parties know and
ish peer ery se *Y |" she 1s a avaduate of New York | Understand that the mental hygiene attendant is deserving
Knamm. main- | Ualv y and Columbia Uni of a higher sala it ls up to all of us to convince the
or: I Law. {sity with « doctorate of Division of Classification and Compensation how serious is
1 Stark |tlon in human relations this need.
af a attend, Bernard | y mPe
A. Meaioy thatiealion 0 | Pass your copy of The Leader ANY COMMITTEE member will be glad to hear from
Mary A. McGral phone ya-| 00 to & non-member, | you, Why not get busy!
tor; Vernon E. Moon, chautteur; | ~ % =
William K. Ow station-
ary Ma t H. Pultz,
sta Marie K 1,
a Donald £ y
E s clerk; Marvin R
nstitution patrolman;
mond W. W ndant;
and Howard M. Wilkes, attendant
Musi dancing was furnished
y Don Cantwell’s orchestra. Dr
Graves was chairman |
ent, assisted by Edwin}
J. Roberts, co-chairman
N. Y. Students
Are Paying Tuition
Through Jobs
ALBANY, Aug. 6
young New Yorkers
helped toward a
through the sum
500
being
ze education
employment
ment
Almost
are
p am of t
of Publlo
0 1? State Depa
Works.
250
J, F Moi
perintendent of Public Works
says of the program: “We cone
alder providing p for thease
young people a y important
by-product of the department’
operation. m | NEW OFFICERS — Newly elected officers ano, treasurer; Verdi Kobel, recording secretary an@
All summer replacements are ly. From left to right: Thomas Puriell, president; Bertha Pearsoo, corresponding secretary. In the
college students of recent high | of Central Islip Chapter 305 were Installed at Rob- foreground, seated ts Assemblyman Prescott Huab
school graduates. Many work as | blus Mall during the Inaugural Dinner Dance receat-
clerks, secretaries, ete, ‘Heury Pearsall, second-vice president; Frank Catal-
fagton avd presiding is Dr, Joseph J, Sconse, asse-
elate director ef the hospital,