Civil Service Leader, 1966 August 16

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LEADER

Retirement Bill Explained
See Page 14

America’s Largest Weekly for Public Employees

Vol. XXV

io. 50 = Tuesday, August 16, 1966 Price Ton Cents

SEA WINS PAY BOOST FOR
PROFESSIONAL NURSES

1966 Legislative Report Some Titles Us $1,200
‘Or More; 4,600 Affected
-CSEA’s Success Sto ry eee wah

ALBANY — More than 30 bills negotiated by the Civil Service Employees Assn, for its; fessional nursing titles in State service — as requested some
140,000 State and local government members were passed by the Legislature and signed} time ago by the Civil Service Employees Assn. — have been
into law this year, a final tally shows, eres by the Division of Classification and Compensation

The impressive list was headed by the eight percent salary increase for all State em-| and the State Budget Director.

ployees, which was effective last April 1, and the new “1/60th" retirement plan, which guar-

future members of the
retirement system half-pay pen-
sions after 30 years of sery-
foo and gives important new ben-
efita to present members of the
Byatem
Following

antesa all

is a complete listing
of the bills won by the Em-
ployea’s Assn. A more detailed re-
port on these bills will be given
io “Counsel's Report,” in future
issues of The Leader

L-t SALARY — Amends Section
190 of Ciwil Service Law to fix
new salary grades and minimum
aod maximum salaries reflecting
an elght per cent salary increase

L-IA MAKE TEMPORARY RE-
TIREMENT SYSTEM BENEFITS
PERMANENT AND PROVIDE
NON-CONTRIBUTORY RETIRE-

Wenwatinnase

Car Pools, Bicycles, Thumbs
Used By Buffalo Employees

MENT OF 1/60TH OF FINAL
AVERAGE SALARY FOR EACH
YEAR OF SERVICE — Provides
the temporary Suspension of re-
tirement contributions In excess of
elght percentage points leglsiation,
the two year Death Benefit and the
Death Gamble statutes be made
permanent, established a non-
contributory retirement plan with
guaranteed benefits, for each
member of the State Retirement
System, equal to 1/60th of final
average salary for each year of
service with no diminution of
present benefits for any members

PROVIDE A SURVIVORS
BENEFIT OF $2,000 FOR RE-
TIRED STATE EMPLOYEES —
Provides a survivor's benefit to the
beneficlaries of State employees

enna

3

| As Bus Strike Cripples City

(From Leader Correspondent)
BUFFALO — A bus strike crippled transit service for

190,000 commuters

in the Buffalo metropolitan area

last

week but civil service employees made it to work

‘Don't always,”
@ the 2,000-member Buffalo
@rapler of the State Civil Service
Employees Assn
ft'a an old adage," Miss Can-
nel sald, “that public employees
are loyal workers but they proved
ty again this week in Buffalo.”
Getting to the Gen, Donovan
Biale Oilice Building and other
State offices in downtown Buffalo
no plenic,”” Miss Cannel sald,
ut thore was very little absen-
van,
Cur poe
eral atti

they

were orgamzed, sev-
ic workers used bicycles
ui some employees oven relied

@n vhoir Uumb and hitch-hiked
Miss Cannel, who drives, said
io got to work early “to make

"euro ate obtained @ parking spot”

said Mary Cannel,

president

and stayed later to avold down-
town traffic jams

The bus strike put thousands
more cars on Buffalo streets

Neil V, Cummings, president of
Erie chapter, COSBA, which rapre-
vents Erie County employees, sabd
public employees at the County

level also coped adequately with |
tho loss of public transportation, |

Early heroes were Norman
Schroeder and Edna Siagtt

Sehroeder walked for an hour
and 36 minutes from hia home in
suburban Sloan to reach his office
in Erie County Hall and Miss
Slaght hiked to the hali more than
5 miles from her home in the
Riverside seovloa of Bullalo

*| The first

‘The reallocations, which effect
| almost all of the State's 4,600 pro-
who die following retirement, if| fessional nurses, employed in
employees have rendered ten years | various departments, were made
of full-time State service within | effective retroactively to August
the last 16 yeara prior to retire-| 4

Tees ie See ee to retired | Tate in June of this year, CSEA
State employees who are NOt) sailed on ‘T. Norman Hurd, Direo-
members of the Retirement Sys-
tem j aah AON ee

1-79 CASH ADVANCES FOR
TRAVEL EXPENS! Measure | Ne Nurse

sponsored by Comptroller Levitt) Qualifications
and endorsed by Governor Rocke-
feller provides the authority to
the Comptroller to authorize cash
advances for travel expenses to
officers and employees of the
Stale whose duties require travel
on official business.

ae | See Page 3 ¥ .

tor of the Budget; J. Barl Keily
director of the Division of Classi-
fication and Compensation, and
Mary Goode Krone, president of

SATIN the Civil Service Commission.
| 2 EOE = MB « to immediately implement
(Continued on: Page 16) | salary reallocations of at least

—— | three grades for all professional
| nursing titles in State service.”
CSEA had said that “ in
view of the nationwide shortage of
professional nurses, and tm view

First Christmas
\And New Year's |
\Cruise Now Open)

Resolutions Comm.
Sets Meeting For
August 23 & 24

ALBANY — The Statewide
resolutions committee of the
| Civil Service Employees Assn.
will hold a two-day meeting
here August 23 and 24, Grace
Nulty, acting chairman, has
nounced.

The committee wilt review re-
solutions submitted by OSEA
members, chapters and other
groups for presentation to dele
gates at the Association's annual
meeting, October 12-16 at But-
falo.

‘The committee has urged that
anyone intending to submit

Christmas and New
Year's cruise to be offered mem-
bers of the Civil Service Em-
ployees Assn, their families and
friends, is now open for bookings.
The 12-day Caribbean vacation
will be on board the luxurious
flagship of the Greek Line, the
Queen Anna Maria |
| Sailing from New York City on

December 22, the ship will cruise

to the porta of San Juan, Puerto

Rico, St, Thomas in the Virgin
| Islands, Curacao and Kingston,
| Jamaica. ‘Those booking under
CSEA auapices will receive @ free
}land excursion in St, Thomas,
Shipboard activities will include
dances, movies, sports, midnight
suppers, cocktail party and a host
of other pastimes.

The orulse t being sponsored
by Civil Service Travel Club and
Nassau County chapter, OSEA.
Arrangements are by Knickerboo- | resolutions w do 90 before Aug
ker Travel Service, Ino, | 20, the deadline under the OSiA

A reservation folder may be had | Constitution and By-laws for re-
by contacting Irving Plaumen-| view by the committee, Resolu-
baum, Box 91, Hempstead, L.1,| ona should be sent to the com-
telephone (516) Ploneer 2-3169 or | mitwwe i oare of OSBA Hoead-
Carmelo Grillo, Knickerbocker | quarters, 8 Blk St,, Albany, 12224
‘Travel Bervice, 1212 Sixth Ave,| All revolutions considered by
| New York, N.Y, 10086, telephone the committee will be sent to
| Pham 1-b400. lghapters prioe to September 18,

an-

of the increasing awareness on the
part of nurses of the value of the
services they penform, we feel i
ts now appropriate for the State
to pursue « program which would
result in the prompt upward re-
allocation of registered nursing
titles in State service.”

The reallocations and the new
and former grades are;

Staff nurse, grade 10-12.

Staf€ nurse (TBS), grade
I

Head nurse, grade 12-14

Head nurse (rehabilitation),

(Continued on Page 3)

u-

Fort Stanwix Chapter
Committee Selected

ROME — Raymond Pritehard,
president of the Fort Stanwlac
chapter, Civil Service Employeas
Aasn., recently seleoted a commit-
tee to study possible revisions of
the chapter's constitution and by-
laws

The committee consists of
Donald Gtll, chatrman, Kay G4u,
Orlando IM and Pritchard.

Proposals will be presented t
the entire membership by mail
and voted upon at the September

meeting.
ont

—

Repeat This!

Will Civil Service
Seek A Separate Line
On ’66 State Ballot?

HE “sleeping giant” be-

ging to stir — without
spending a nickel for adver-
tising, promotion, printing of
campaign material and the
like, & group of civil service om
ployees under the banner of The
Civil Service Pusion Party, Inc,
neatly complied approximately

(Continues oa Page 8)
Page Two

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Tuesday, August 16, 1966

Your Public
Relations IQ

By LEO J. MARGOLIN

 —_—,

Mr. Margolin 1s Professor of Business Administration at
the Borough of Manhattan Community College and Adjunct
Professor of Public Administration in New York University’s
Graduate School of Public Administration,

Study For Better PR

ONE OF the better ways for civil service people to en-
hance their public relations is after-hours study at one of
the scores of colleges within New York State,

AND NOW is the best time to decide firmly that you
will study, come the opening of
the Pall semester approximately
month hence,

CIVIL. SERVANTS comprise «
part of the huge army learning to

colleagues will look at them with
different eyes—eyes reflecting in-
creased respect.

FOR THE oivil servants per-
sonal publio relations there are «

do better jobs, But olvil servants beak eb advablades: tae u v4
| Vv , no small par

@re not yet a large enough part

of that army of which is an enriched personnel

file.

WE OAN personally testify to
the magio of @ record in a person-
nel file reporting that an em-
ployee successfully completed one
or more coursea which advanced a
specific skill

IN NEW York City, there are
scores of civil servants who took
one or more steps up the ladder
by studies completed under the
Municipal Training Program of
the Department of Personnel, or
|at N.Y.Ua Graduate School of
| Public Administration, or at any
jof the 11 operating units of the
City University of New York.

THROUGHOUT the State are
5€ unite of the State University of
New York. One of the largest units
of this great educational complex
is at Albang, the civil service cap-
ital of the State.

OPPORTUNITIES for advanced
study ace practically at the front
doors of tena of thousanda of olvil
servanta, All one has to do ls make
| the effort.
| FOR PAINLESS public rela-
ions, which will pay off in thous-
‘ands of extra dollars for civil ser-
vants, advanced classroom studies
are at the top of the Met.

TO PARAPHRASE « current
advertisement to promote reader-
ship of The N.Y. Times: “If you
don't study, you're not with it.”

THE FACT s that all jobs, civil
service included, call for more and
more skills, Modern life is com-
plex enough, but it ts becoming
more complex. There are new
techniques, new methodology, new
machines, and, of course, new
problems.

ON-THE-JOB training is great
Experience {s equally veluable, but
there is no substitute for elass-
room learning, particularly by in-
telligent civil servants who already
have @ basic skill which can blos-
som into expertise,

THERE ARE very few areas of
New York State which do not
have an educational inatitution
within a comparatively short driv-
ing distance of most civil servants
in the State, Where « college ts
not handy, there are some excel-
Jent courses available as part of
en adult education program of a
nearby high school. Many are
@ponsored and financed by the
State's Department of Education.
particularly hands-on vocational
courses,

ASIDE FROM the satisfaction

‘one derives from the learning pro- buy
eess, civil servanie who take, U.S.
courses to improve their Job skilis | BONDS

will find that their friends and

Sok!
TANTALIZING
SUSPENSE!” | |

— Won He, ely News }

-“AHITCHCOCKIAN
EXERCISE!”

| ST. CHARLES GRADS CAN EARN

$ 150 WEEK
“*LEGAL

“Bel

newas
‘AIR-CONDITIONED wa. 118 MEADE TaCARES

oven,
meron’

4108 AT ee 8D

caren abe

Tes ERE

wecund visen
LOAG ot the post offi

por!
Comm, under ibe Act of Maxeh 3. 1070
Memler of Audit Bureau ef Olreula-
Hee,
Pubeeripilen Price $8.00 Fer Tour
Hodividual Copier, 106

SERVICE LEADER
PY

Leading Weekly

(Continued from Page 1)
100,000 votes in the New York City
election Inst year. If you can re-
member back, that was the elec-
tion which was won by nelther the
Democrats nor old-ine Republi-
cans—but John V. Lindsay,

Although civil service is only
about 65 years old, its develop-
ment and history show it to be
among the most well-organized
and highly influential groups in
the State, Public employees, en-
compassing ail levels of govern-
ment—federal, state and munict-

‘ers, policemen, firemen, sanite-
tlonmen, clerks, etc. Those to be
|ineluded also are people working
in transportation, public works,
courts, health departments, They
|are home-owners, neighbors end
taxpayers,

Employed in some branch of
Public service in the State of New
York are over 1,005,600 workers.
| They and their families comprise
| approximately twenty per cent of
the electorate in the Btate

‘The Civil Service Fusion Party,
|Inc., recently re-named The Civil
Service-Independenta Party, Inc.,
headed by Dr. Herman P. Mentell,
advocates as one plank in its plat-
form, adequate salaries in line
with comparable positions in pri-
jvate industry and adjusted to the
index of rising living costs. Al-
though Dr, Mantel has some in-
fluence in one segment of the
civil service community, the real
numerical power in civil service is
represented by the large employee
sroups—the Patrolmen’s Benevo-
lent Association, the Uniformed
Piremen’s Association, the Uni-
formed Sanitationmen’s Associa-
\tion—and by far the largest and
|Most potent—the 140,000 mem-

Randolph Society Joins
Negro C.S. Federation

Vietor Collymore, president of
the Federation of Negro Civil Ser-
viee Organiagtions, hes announced
that the application for affiiiation
from the A. Philip Randolph

| Booiety, has been socepted

The society fs a newly formed
| Organization of civil service em-
ployees of the City Departments
of Relocation and Real Estate and
the Housing and Redevelopment
Board, These employees have
pledged themesives to the highest
principles of patriotism, service
and loyalty and organized them-
selves to promote better under-
standing and cooperation through
affiliation and joins activities with
various groups of similar cultural
and educational interests, accord-
ing to Collymore.

The newly elected officers of
the society were installed at a
recent meeting by Civil Court
Judge, Herbert B, Evans. Bleoted
to office were:

A. Russell Teasdale, president;
Emma Musgr vice-president;
Beth Bradshaw, corresponding

seoretary; Judith Rubain, finan-
cial secretary, and George John:
won, treasurer.

Harold Basden, Oscar Griffin
and Sylvia Lewis were named to
the exeoutive committee.

Joining in the ceremonies were
Collymore, Commissioner Royal 6.
Radin and Deputy Conuniesioner
Simeon Golar of the Department
Of Relocation and Norman Seun~

pal—numbers in its ranks, teach- |

DONT REPEAT THIS

ber Civil Service Employees Asso- | public employment—State, Feder

ciation of New York.

Barly this year,
yeara of fighting,
Workers Union won

this weil-

ciple.

On April ist,
|Rockefeller's eight per cent in-
|crense in Stale employees’ salaries
|became effective

‘The vote of civil service em-
ployees is sizable. Any candida’
running for election this Nov-
ember will have an excellent
record and program for Civil
| Service, or he will not count that
twenty per cent vote in his column

Governor Rockefeller has com-
piled quite « favorable record with
regard to civil service. He has
|gained the confidence and respect
of the State's various branches of

and Muntoipal, By his deslinge with

and after many | State employees, he has indicuied
the Transport |his interest in their goals.

The Democrats certainly will

earned increase on just this prin-|have to select @ candidate who

not only matehes the Governor's

1966, Governor enviable record and ecceptance

but, perhaps, even someone with
the promise of delivering more in
the future,

Dr, Mantel, although reputedly
Democratic-orlented, is reported
to have to produce for the Civil
Service - Independents Party — if
they decide to seek a line on the
State ballot, as they did in the
last City campaign—e candidate of
equal or better record and promise
than the Governor, Otherwise, he
is said to lean toward Governor
Rockefeller—or forget the whole
thing.

* U.S. Service News +:

Forsees Increases For

Retired Federal Workers

Rep. Dominick Daniels of New) agreement that posts) supervisers

| Jersey, speaking before the re- and others in the higher pay

cent Boston convention of Postal
| Supervisors, forsaw major changes
im the Civil Service retirement
system. Daniels, the chairman of
the House subcommittee on re-
| tirement and insurance, revealed
Plans for future changes which
would have the effect of provid-
|ing substential increases in the
annuities paid retirees and sur-
| revere

‘The present system of annuities
| computation, under which a 114
per cent factor is wed for the
| first five years in service, 1% for
| the next five years and two per

__ | cent for any succeeding years, was

characterized by Daniels as @
| “hodgepodge " He suggested tn-
| stead that annuities be computed
lon a flat two per cent factor

As things stand now, annuities
are besed on the average of the
highest-paid five years of con-
ecoutive service. Daniels wants
| them besed on the highest two, or
wt least three years of service, He
| also stated that he would sup-
port legislation to pay widows 75
| per cent of earned annuities, The
maximum is now 55 per cent,

The New Jersey legisiator also
spoke out for realigation of the
concept of pay comparability for
Federal workers. Daniela voiced

police officers and tire
| president of the Police

brackets Ingged furthest behind
in pay scales,

Only 8800 of the nearly 76,006
applicants who took the neiéom-
wide general clerical exum given
last June 4, passed it. Many of
the highest-ranking compeitios
siready have Federal job offers.

‘The increasing military call-up
caused by the wer in Vietnam f
beginning to dig deeply into the
ranks of some of the Pedersl ser~
vice’s most promising young @-
gineers, technicians id other
professional workers, slresdy in
short supply. Many of these
young men heve just recently
completed training and ave only
now skillful enough to be of mm-
portance in understaffed Pederel
agencies.

Appointment

Governor Rockefeller has an-
nounced the appoiniment of Aug-
ust J. Galassa of Cobleskill and
Lancaster, ss a member of the
Council of State Universtiy Agri~
cultural and Technical College af
Cobleskill for a term ending July
1, 1978,

PRESENTATION — siaic senator Thomas J. Machel, right
presente the erigimal copy of his bill improving pension benefite fer
mm throughout the Stale to Al Seagtione,
ference of New York Siaie, center, and

dere, president emeritus of the | te Pat Denseliy, vice-president of the conference. The bill war om

Federation.

ected into law last week,
Tussday, August 16, 1966

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Page Three

THE PUBLIC
EMPLOYEE

By JOSEPH F. FEILY

President,
Civil Service Employees Association

| nie Aiaealalieee
ELSEWHERE IN today’s edition of The Leader Ia the final

tally of successful bills sponsored in the 1966 Legislature for
its 140,000 members by the Civil Service Employees Assn, It
is an impressive list. If represents millions of dollars in new

monies for State and local government employees In New

York, and substantial other benefits for both groups, But,
more impressively, {t represents the gratifying results of the
collective efforts of all segments of our Association, from
the Individual member working in a rural county In the most

distant outpost of the State, to the most sophisticated chap-
ters In our largest cities.

IT REPRESENTS, too, the cohesiveness an organization
aa large as ours must possess If it is to continue to grow and
prosper as our has,

IT 18 ALWAYS difficult, of course, to single out indl-
viduals and particular groups for special praise in a column
such as this, mainly because of the risk of omiting someone

who made an important contribution, Regardless of the risks}
involved, however, I do feel that many of our members and)

committees deserve a figurative pat on the back for the
part they played in the legislative successes we enjoyed this
year.

OF PARTICULAR importance were the contributions of

our State-wide salary committee, headed by Sol Bendet,
which not only negotiated the elght per cent salary in-
crease with administration and legislative leaders but guid-
ed it through the early stages of the session to successful
passage and Implementation early last April,

IT WAS NOT only this committee's work on the salary
increase for which they should be commended, but for the

They are:

Minimum
Qualifications

minimum qualifications for ap-
pointment as Staff and Head
Nurse will bs as follows:

STAFF NURSE —Registered pro-
fessional nurse's license and
either (a) graduation from a
three-year nurse training pro-
gram, or (b) graduation from a
two-year nurse training program
and one year of satisfactory post-
graduate clinical nursing experi-
ence,

HEAD NURSE—Registered pro-
fessional nurse's license and
either (a) graduation from a
three-year nurse training pro-
gram and one year of satisfactory
Post-graduate clinical nursing ex-
perience, or (b) graduation from
® two-year nurse training pro-
|sram and two years of satisfac-

Effective September 1, 1966, the

New Qualifications Set
For State Nurse Titles

ALBANY — Along with the salary reallocations, for professional nursing titles in
State service, the office of J. Earl Kelly, director of the Division of Classification and Come
pensation, has also announced several changes concerning the future employment of nurses,

tory post-graduate clinical nurs-
ing experience,

In view of these changes, one
year of undergraduate psychiatric
nursing experience will no longer
be acceptable for appointment as
head nurse (psychiatric). In the
near future, we will issue revised
class specifications containing
these changes.

Graduates of Two-
Year Nursing

Programs

Graduates of these programs
Who are licensed but who have not
had nursing experience, as de-
[scribed above, will be employed
| under the title of registered nurse
jAgainst staff nurse vacancies, In
accordance with procedures used
for various trainee programas, it

Forms PR-50 for such appoint-
ments.

Appointments will be made at

(Continued from Page 1)
grade 12-14.

12-14
Head nurse
(TBS), grade 13-16.
Head nurse (TB), grade 19-15.

Head nurse (psychiatric), grade

(psychiatric),

4,600 Nurses Upgraded

Chief of nursing services and
training, grade 21-22.

The new accelerated increment
program, won by CSEA in the
Just-concluded session of the
Legislature, will be effective in
the present reallocation and will

will not be necessary to prepare |

other portions of their program, which included the new
1/60th retirement plans and the $2,000 déath benefit for

Supervising nurse, grade 14-17.|mean a considerable increase in

in employee benefits,

Tetired employees, both of which represent tremendous strides

Supervising nurse (pediatrics),
@tade 14-17.

Supervising nurse (psychiatric),
grade 14-17,

salaries over what the affected
nurses would have recelved under
the earlier reallocation procedure.
‘The new legislation provides that

I WOULD BE remiss, also, if I did not single out our
County Division, which responded in Impressive numbers
whenever they were called upon to contact the governor and
legislative leaders or to visit their own local legislators on
behalf of a particular piece of CSEA legislation, whether or
not !t benefitted them personally.

IT GOES WITHOUT saying, that the work of the com-
mittees most directly involved in the formulation and guid-
ance of our ambitious program, such as the Resolutions Com-
mittee, headed by Henry Shemin, and the Legislative Com-
mittee, headed by Grace Nulty, was instrumental in our ac-|
complishments this year.

OUR BOARD OF Directors, of course, must be recogn-
fzed for their unselfish efforts in overseeing this year's pro-
gram. Whenever called upon to consider new developments
affecting the program, even with only a few hour's noticg
the Board — to a member — responded in a spirit of unity
and purposefulness that I have seldom encountered else-
where.

I HAVE NOTED before and am happy to do so again, the
tireless efforts of our counsel, Harry Albright, and assistant |
counsel, John Rice, throughout the duration of this unusually |
long and tiring Legislative session. Without their work, E be-
leve, our efforts would have been for nothing.

OUR HEADQUARTERS staff, too, deserves a hearty vote

of thanks for their work throughout the session. Each mem-
ber of the staff, from our executive director, Joe Lochner, |
to our newest clerk, gave unstintingly of themselves during
the long session,

SPECIAL PRAISE and a word of thanks also should be
extended to my fellow State-wide officers, without whose
encouragement and leadership our success in the 1966 leg:
lslative session would not have been nearly as great as lt was,

THERE ARE MANY others, of course, who should be)
cited, such as our Conference leaders, who, this year, par-
tctpated more than ever before in our most difficult decisions;
our individual chapter presidents, who rallied their local
membership whenever their help was asked; the Civil Service
Leader, for the week-by-week communications it provided
Our far-flung membership; for the elected leaders of our
State, such as Governor Rockefeller, Lt, Gov, Wilson, Comp-
troller Levitt, Attorney General Lefkowitz, Senate Majority
Leader Bridges, and Assembly Speaker Travia; The Chatr-
men of each House's Fiscal Committee, Harvey Lifsett
io the Assembly and Warren Anderson in the Senate, and

Supervising nurse (rehabilita-
tion), grade 14-17,

Supervising operating room
nurse, grade 14-17.

Nurse anesthetist, grade 14-17.

Instructor of nursing, grade 15-
17.

Supervising nurse (psychiatric)
(TBS), grade 15-18.

Supervising operating room
nurse (TBS), grade 15-18,

Assistant director of nursing,
grade 15-18.

Assistant director of nursing
(education), grade 15-18,

Assistant director of nursing
(surgery), grade 15-16.

Assistant director of nursing
(rehabilitation), grade 15-18, |

Assistant director of nursing
(psychiatric), grade 16-18.

Nurse anesthetist (TBS), grade

an employee whose salary is re-
| allocated goes into the same tnere-
ment step in the higher grade that
he was in in the lower grade, This
means Increases of as much as
$1,200 or more for some of the
reallocated nursing titles.

In notifying appointing officers

the nurses’ salaries as ‘the in-
tensification and expansion of the
| State's programs for the care and
treatment of the physically and
mentally ill; the existence of lange
numbers of vacant nurse positions
in State Institutions; the difficul-
ties which have been experienced
by appointing officers In efforts to
employ nurses; the loss to the
State service of so many gradu-

16-18. ates of our own nurse training
° schools; and the recent encourag-
Psychiatrie nursing coordinator,
Bees ete, . nator "tng trends toward the establish-
Tostr nursing (TBS), ment of salaries for nurses which
grade 1-18, - : are more equitably related to their

and thelr responsibil-

Assistant prineipal, school of | faning
nursing, grade 16-18, | ee
Assistant director of nursing Kelly also reclassified certain
(TB), grade 16-19, head nurse positions to health
Supervising nurse anesthetist, services nurse and reallocated the

grade 16-18, | latter title from grade 12 to grade
Chief supervising nurse, grade | 15, ,
19-21. | dn making ‘be chaces, he noted

Director of nursing (psychlat- thar “in certain departments,
rle), grade 19-21, there are 8 number of positions,
sohool of nursing. most of which are functioning

Chief supervising nurse (TBS), | program .. . and have duties and
@rade 20-22. | responsibilities which are within

Director of nursing (TB), grade the scope of the health services
20-22 ‘purse class.”

each {ndividual legislator who Introduced, sponsored or vot-
ed for CSEA legislation; and for all the others I might have
overlooked in this column but whose unselfish efforts and
contributions will never be forgotten by the membership of
the Civil Service Employees Assn,

of the change, Peily Meied the |
principal reasons for the study of |

in the employee health services

$5,787 in the five counties of New
York City and in Nassau, Suffolk,
and Rockland Counties and et
$5,541 elsewhere in the State, Up-
‘on completion of one year of sut-
isfactory service as registered
nurse, incumbents will be advanced
to staff nurse nurse at $6,208 in the
five counties of New York City and
Nassau, Suffolk, and Rockland
Counties and at $5,940 at all other
locations in the State.

Increased Minimums
in Metropolitan
New York

Pursuant to Section 190.4 of the
Civil Service Law, the minimum
recruitment salary for staff nurse
has been increased to $6208 for
the five counties of New York City
and for Nassau, Suffolk, and
Rockland Counties. This determ-
ination has been approved by the
Director of the Budget, effective
August 4, 1966, In all other areas
of the State, staff nurses are to
be appointed at $5,940, the nor-
mal minimum rate of Grade 12,

Employment
Higher Rates

Pursuant to the provisions of
Section 131.1a of the Civil Service
Law, and rules which have been
established by the Director of the
Budget, appointing officers may
apply to the Director of Classifie
cation and Compensation for
authority to appoint nurses ene
tering the State service at rates
in grade 12 higher than the minl+
mum in order to compensate them
for prior appropriate and satis-
factory nursing experience. Such
requests must set forth a descripe
tion of the job applicant's expert+
ence in sufficient detail to enable
us to evaluate it in terms of ite
length and quality. Authority to
pay a higher y to an individe
ual under this section, granted by
the Director of Classification and
Compensation, must be approved
by the Director of the Budget be-
fore it can be exercised by ap-
pointing officers.

Newark State Hosp
Chapter Sets Picnic

ROCHESTER — The new
slate of officers of the New-
ark State School chapter of
the Civil Service Employees
Assn, will be on hand Aug. 17
for the first social function since
their installation, when the chap-
ter’s annual picnic will be held at
6 p.m, at Roseland Park, Canan-
daigua,

‘The officers, who were Installed
month ago at the Newark Elks
Club, are:

Albert FP. Gallant,
Charles Smith, first vice-presl-
|dent; Edison O'Brien, second
\vice-president and general chatr-
{man of the plenic; James Meaths
treasurer; Rose Pettrone, record
ing secretary; Theresa Pitrella,
corresponding secretary.

Delegates are Gerald Manley,
Harriet Sistek and Harry Doug-
jas. Alternate delegates are Gladys
White and Larry Briggs,

‘The executive board eonalats of
Dr. Edward Stevenson, Pauline
Adsit, Floyd Pischette, Madelime
Douglas and Lols Kardya,

president;

Page Four

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER ~

‘Tuesday, August 16, 1966

EDUCATION
AT HOME IN SPARE TIME

You must be 17 or over ond hove left school. Our groductes
have entered over hi gy e ety “ colleges. Write FREE
let

Mien SEHOOLY

Peal SEN ee, i ee Day or Night
free 56-page High Schoo! Booklet

Age.

Apt.

Stote

The Job Market

A LISTING OF NON-CIVIL SERVICE JOBS AVAILABLE
THROUGH THE NEW YORK STATE EMPLOYMENT SERVICE
| {643182 AEE ee

hour for a 40 to 60-hour, six-day| TAX AUDITORS are needed to
EB week, Free government-approved review financial records of com-

| housing is provided .. . Apply at mercial firms for unemployment
| the Farm Unit of the Manhattan | insurance, Must have three years
| Service Industries Office, 247 West accounting or audit experience or
54th Street between Broadway and two years accounting course and

City Tone
ME BE OOUR 69th YEAR BS ME BE BY Bienes Avene,

The case of the
TERRIBLE

A storekeeper was decorating his show-window with his mouth full of
tacks when a passerby knocked sharply on the window to attract his
attention. This so startled the storekeeper that he swallowed the
tacks. The resulting medical bills, which could have been a heavy tax
on his bank account, were covered by his Accident insurance policy.

We admit this might never happen to you, but each year accidents
and sickness cost millions of Americans a staggering toll in both
disabilities and money,

The C.S.E.A. Accident and Sickness Income Insurance program,
administered by Ter Bush & Powell, Inc., covers over 52,000.mem-
bers. As a group they have already received benefits totaling millions

of dollars, It could also pay you an income each month if an accident
or sickness disables you,

We will be happy to send you complete information.

TER BU & POWELL, INC.

MMU)

SCHENECTADY
NEW YORK

BUFFALO
SYRACUSE

FILL OUT AND MAIL TODAY...

TER BUSH & POWELL, INC.
148 Clinton St., Schenectady, N.Y,

Please send me Information concerning the CSEA Accident and Sickness Income Insurance

Name,

Home Address.

Place of Employment,

Date of Employment. My age Ie.

P.S, If you have the Insurance, why not take a few minutes and

explain It to a new employee.

| two years experience, or college
eraduation with 24 credits in Ac-
counting. Start at $6,300 and go
te $6,075 after one year. . . PUB-
LIC ACCOUNTANTS are needed

from $90 to $175 a week. Must be
college graduates with accounting
majors, and experience with CPA

Manhattan.

In Brooklyn, a CLEANER will
get $55 to $65 a week to acrape
imperfections from statuary .. .
ZIPPER WORKERS will earn
$1.30 to $1.50 an hour aa top and
bottom stop inspectors slide as-
semblers and pinkers . . . An UP-
HOLSTERER will get $3 to $3.25
sn hour to cut and sew tuft .
An experienced SPINDLE CAR-
VER will earn $116 « week to op-
erate single spindle carving ma-
chine ... Apply at the Brooklyn
Industrial Office, 250 Schermer-
horn Street in downtown Brook-
Jpn.

A SCORER with one year's ex-
perience will earn §90 to $110 a
week to do scoring—board push-
ing—on paper boxes... A CYLIN-
DER PRESS FEEDER will get
$60 to $100 a week to hand feed
Miehle cutting press on folding
boxes . . . An experienced JOB
PRINTER will earn $85 a week
end vp as 2/3rds compositor. Will
do make-up work; hand composi-
jon; make ready and hand feed;
Kluge and Chandler and Price
Apply at the Manhattan Indus-
trial Office, 255 West 54th Street
beiween Broadway and Eighth
Avenue.

A SILK SOREEN PRINTER ts
needed in Queens as @ machine or
hand squeegee operator. The pay
ie $85 to $90 » week .. . Pully ex-
perienced FURNITURE FINISH-
ERS will get $2 to $3.25 an hour
te do staining, glazing, antiquing
and polishing ., . A SHIPPING
CLERK able to type 40 words a
minute and needing no other ex-
Perience will earn $90 to $100 a
week © type shipping orders
Manifest, parcel post and bills of
lading . . . Apply at the Queens
Industrial Office, 42-15 Crescent
Siveet, Long Island City.

Experienced TRANSORIBING
MACHINE OPERATORS = are

at all levels with salaries ranging |

firms . . , Apply at the Profes- |
sional Placement Center, 444 |
Madison Avenue near 5t0h Street, |

Where to 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,

CITY

NEW €ORK CITY—The Appili-
| eations Section of the New York
| otty Department of Personnel is
|lorated at 49 Thomas St, New
| York 7, N.¥, (Manhattan). It is
three blocks north of City Hall,
| ane block west of Broadway.

Hours are 9 AM. to 4 PM.
Monday through Friday, and
| Saturdays from 9 to 12 noon,
| Telephone 566-8720.

Malied requests for application
blanks must include a stamped,
self-addressed business-size en-
velope and must be received by
the Personnel Department at least
five days before the clo ing date
for the filing of applications.

Completed application forms
which are filed by mail must be
{sent to the Personne! Department
| and must be postmarked no later

*|then the last day of filing or if

| stated ctherwise in the exame
| ination announcement.

The Applications Section of
the Personnel Department ts 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 &th
Avenue Line. The IRT Lexington
Avenue Line stop to use is the
Worth Street stop and the BMT
Brighton local’s atop \s City Hall
Both lines have exits to Duane
Street, a short walk from the Per-
sonnel Department.

STATE

STATE—Room 1100 at 270
Broadway, New York 7, NY,
| corner of Chambers St., telephone
| Barclay 71-1616; Governor Alfred
PF. Smith State Office Building and
| The State Campus, Albany; State
Office Building, Buffalo; State
‘Office Bullding, Syracuse; snd
500 Midtown ‘Tower, Rochester
| (Wednesdays only).

| Candidates may obtain applica~

tions for State jobs from local
Offices of the New York State
Employment Service.

FEDERAL

| FEDERAL —second U8. Civil
| Service Region Office, News Build-

| ing, 220 Bast 42nd Street (at and
Ave.), New York 17, NY. Just

needed at various Manhattan lo-| west of the United Nations build.
cations, The work ts mostly with | ing. Take the IRT Lexington Ave.
teetrie typewriter, with some Line to Grand Central and walk
manual, Salary ranges from $85 two blocks east, or take the shut~
to $95 @ week .. . ASSISTANT | tle from Times Square to Grand
BOOKKEEPERS with garment Centra) or the IRT Queens-Plush-
manufacturing experience are ing train trom any point on the
needed. Must have knowledge of| line to the Grand Central stom
typing and payroll. Salary ranges
from $86 to $110 a week... Apply | Hours are 8:30 sm. to 6 p.m,
at the Office Personnel Placement | Monday through Priday. Also open
Center, 875 Lexington Avenue Saturday, Telephone YU 62626,
tear bist Sizest, Manhattan. | Applications are also obtains
FARM WORKERS are needed) able at main post officer except
for about six months in New York,| the New York, N.Y., Post Office,
New Jersey end Connecticut.) Boards of examiners at the pare
‘Those with recent farm experience tcular tnatallations offering the

8 EUAD PERI O EEP EMAL AEIEI LSD

are preferred, but any person able
te do heavy manual labor may
epply. The pay range ts $1.20 an
hour plus five cents an hour end-
ef-senson bonus up to $1.40 an

| teats also may be applied to for

further information and aspplica-
on forma, No return envelopes
are required with mailed requeste
for application forma.
Tuesilay, August 16, 1966

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Pago Five

3,000 Jobs To Open
For Police Trainees

Police Commissioner Howard Leary, anticipating some 3,000 Jobs that will be open to
partolmen, has written the following open letter to young men In New York City to urge

them to join the police recruiting program.
An Open Letter to Young Men:

“The New York City Police De-
partment will need more than 3,-
000 recruits during the next three
years. The next examination for
the position of Patrolman is
soheduled for October 22, 1966
The filing period rune are
August 3 through September 30,
1066.

at $144 a week, with increments to
$178 a week at the end of three
years. Benefits include lifetime
security, liberal vacation and sick
leave, pension after twenty years,
Opportunity for promotion and
oollege education. There is no fil-|
ing fee |

“It you are at least twenty
years of age and under twenty-
nine, at least five feet eight inches
tall, in good health, « citizen of
the United States and of oustand-
ing character with @ high school
or equivalency diploma, you may
quality

“Pull information and applica-
tion forms are available at any |
Police precinct or may be obtained
{com the Department of Personnel |
at 49 Thomas Street, New York |
Oity

“The uniformed police officer 4s
our most effective weapon against
orime. To insure @ high degree of
public safety we are endeavoring
to maintain our police force at
maximum strength, We urge you
to consider the fine career oppor-
tunities that will be available to
you as a New York City police-
maa”

Interdepartmental

32-227—SENIOR PUBLIC INFOR-
MATION SPECIALIST — $8,365
to $10,125.

$2-228—ASSOCIATE PUBLIC IN-
FORMATION SPECIALIST —
$10,895 to $13,080.

32-207 — SENIOR STATIONARY
ENGINEER—$6,300 to $7,700.

ARY ENGINEER — $7,475 to
$9,070.
32-2009 — HEAD STATIONARY
ENGINEER—08,825 to $10,670
Education Dept.

190 to 615,255.
Executive Dept.
Office of General Services
32-214 — OHTEF STATIONARY
ENGINEER—$9,795 to $11,805
HeSith Dept.
$2-249—ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR
FOR COMMUNITY HEALTH
SERVICES—$19,550 to §22,775.
Labor Dept.
32-206 — ASSOCIATE INDUS -
HLR. LEARY| TRIAL ENGINEER—$13,500 to

Excellent Salaries For
Public Health Advisors

Applications are being accepted by the United States
Civil Service Commission on a continual basis for an exam~-
ination for public health advisor, Starting salaries for the
position range from $7,220 to $16,460, in grades GS-9 through

GS-15, to be determined accord- ,->—————— ¥
tae (0 experience. "Tha Jobe are n|ZO% Revlon “Ottee, Ua. CW
ous locations th .
“Agi ous locations throughout the is 4 gtreet, New York City, Ask
for form 51.
Competitors will be required to

Pass a written test and show ex-

32-208 — PRINCIPAL STATION-|

| Adjust Claims

Accident Investigators neoded. Train for
company

File Immediately For
NYS Promotion Exams

| Aug. 29 is the deadline for applications for a series of
“Aa & patrolman you will start) New York State promotion examinations, Each test is open
only to qualified candidates in the department or promotion |
unit for which the exam Is announced. The following list
shows exam numbers, titles and salaries,

os
$16,050.

32-213 — PRINCIPAL DRAFTS-
MAN (Cartographic) —$7,068 to
$8,500.

State Insurance Fund
32-211-HEAD OLERK (Colleo-
tion) —$7,085 to 96,590.
Public Works

32-212 — SENIOR DRAFTSMAN
(Cartographic) —$5,615 to $6,-
895
Continuous Recruitment

Health Dept.

| 30-213—SENIOR SANITARY EN-
32-210-—-SUPERVISOR OF PRO-|

FESSIONAL LICENSES — §12,-)

GINEER—$11,760 to $13,080.
For further information contact
the State Department of Civil
Service, the State Campus, Al-
bany, or your department person-
nel officer.

Insurance

Pari
pany car. 10-wk, eourse — evenings,
Write

CASUALTY CLAIMS COURSE
2.0. Bor 1216, New York, N.Y. 10008

or Phone MU 74072 ut

APPLICANTS WANTED
FOR ELLENVILLE URBAN
RENEWAL AGENCY

Deputy Director - Urban Renewal
bas ror wr mee

or
ra experioase fn Urban Renewal
Administration

Salary dependent upon qualifications.
Apply te John Welchsel,

Urban Renewal Director,
70 Canal Street

Pa, Civil Service

‘The State of Pennsylvania cele-
brated the 25th anniversary of
the Civil Service Act which now
encompasses more thea 60,000
State employees.

Puerto Rican Holiday
Nov. 10-14 $193.00
(Yoteranw Day Weskent)
Info ond Reservations
Contact: Mary Calfapletra,
Nassow Co, Health Dept.,
CSEA Unit, 2409 Old Country
Road, Mineola, N.Y.

PI 2.3000 - Extension 2073

For

‘The City-wide telephone num<
ber to call In emergencies to sum«

mon either police or ambulance
in 440-1234.

WAKE UP PLEASANTLY—

By Phone
Reliable,
Courteous
Service $5 Mo,
MISSING IMPORTANT CALLaT
Use our number it you have

no phone or ae 8
umber when you are out

24 HR. SERVICE $7 mo,
BE 3-3300

+ Shoppers Service Guide

Elk 88, Albany.
focal ehapisr officers

Get The Authorized CSEA License Plate 7s." “stem

By the Civil Service Employees Asta. te that hich le oold throaeh COM iarters,
‘The piste whisn salle Si, em aes be ordered tarvagh

Help Wanted - Male C3RA REFLECTIVE DECAL for bumper

ag gM ate 7 ice oma tea

Pi hey, Mme Ere 97 P.M} ty atiach, Watherproot and ratanind,
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Help Wanted - Male

Wit, TRAIN — NO CAR
REAL ESTATE SALESMAN
Office - Leasing - Apt. Renting - Gall Bidye

Ta Manhattan + Comm.
TR 44838

Adding Machines

Typewriters Cemetery Lots

Mimsographs BEAUTIFUL non-sectarisn memorial part

Addressing Machines 5 ant

Box
Weve 10007 wire

TYPEWRITER BARGAINS
Th Sete

Underwood-388 50:
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MANHATTA\
JAMAICA:

1S EAST 1

For Career Opportunities

Be Our Guest at a Class Session of
or Write for Class Schedules and FREE GUEST CARD.

The DELEHANTY INSTITUTE

Near 4 Ave, (All Subways)

ST.,
5 MERRICK BLYO., bet. Jamaica & Hillside Aves,
OFFICE HOURS: MON, TO FRI. 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. Closed Sat.

50 Years of Successful Specialized Education

and Personal Advancement

Any Delehanty Course or Phone

@ PATROLMAN

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IN MANHATTAN—MOND.

@ TRANSIT PATROLMAN

PATROLMAN
AY 1:15, 5:30, or 7:30 P.

IN JAMAICA—WEDNESDAY at 7 P.M.

perience in administrative, pro-
fessional or other responsible work
which gives evidence of ability to

If you want fo know what’s happening

CLASSES NOW MEETING

IN MANHATTAN & JAMAICA
@ ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT
@ HIGH SCHOOL EQUIVALENCY DIPLOMA

assume responsibility in the fieid | to you
ef public health | to your chances of promotion
Por further Information and to your job

@pplications write to the New)

College Grads

— ANY MAJOR —
No Experience Necessary
A career in Social Service
awaits you as a Case Worker
with the New York City Public
Welfare Program,
$5750 TO START

84050 Lx
allowed
Aad proaition
Include: Welfare Fund, Health Plan,
Pad Holidays, Liberal Peaslon, Vaca
Home, Graduate Scholarehipe.

Apply IN PERSON

For a Vuort Aptitude Test
Tues, Sept. 6, 9 AM or | PM
0.0. DROE OF PERSONNEL
th 9 (Monaauing) X18,

Miss Conners, (212) 666. 566-8700

MOS; $6400 IN 1 TR

to your next raise
and similar matters!

FOLLOW THE LEADER REGULARLY!

Here Is the newspaper that tells you about what is happen-
Ing {n civil service, what ts happening to the job you have and
the job you want,

Make sure you don’t miss a single fasue. Enter your sub-
scription now.

‘The price is $5.00, That brings you S2 issues of the Civil
Service Leader, filled with the government job news you want.

You can subscribe on the coupon below:

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
97 Duane Street
New York 10007, New York

1 enclose $5.00 (check or money order for a years subscription
to the Civil Service Loader. Please enter the name listed below:

MAME wessesnessemssmmescmessemensmnnmennsst enon eBeeenaeeee

ADDRESS we sesee see rcems cms smmneeeens soe nneny

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An CauAl opouriMulty emplarsr

* PRACTICAL VOCATIONAL COURSES:
Licensed by N.Y. State—Approved for Veter

AUTO MECHANICS SCHOOL
5-01 46 Rood at 5 St., Long Island City

Complete Shop Training on “Live” Cars

with Specialization jutomatic Transmissions

DRAFTING SCHOOLS
Manhattan: 123 East 12 St, nr. 4 Ave.
Jamaica: 89-25 Merrick Bivd. at 90 Ave.
Architectsral—Mechaaleal—Structural Drafting
Pipleg, Electrical and Machine Drawing.

wea: TV & ELECTRONICS SCHOOL
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For Information on All Courses Phone GR 3-6900

Page Six

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Ciwil Sowiee

LEADER

America’s Largest Weekly for Public Employees
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations

Published avery Tuesday by
LEADER PUBLICATIONS, INC,
$7 Duone Street, New York, N.Y.-10007 212-BEekmon 3-6010

Jerry Finkelstein, Publisher
Joe Deasy, Jr City Editor
Mike Klion, Associate Editor

N, H. Mager, Business Manoger
Advertising Representatives:

ALBANY — Joseph T. Bellow — 303 So. Manning Blvd,, IV 2-5474
KINGSTON, N.Y, — Charles Andrews — 239 Wall Street, FEderal 8-8350

10e per copy, Subscription Price $3.00 to members of the Civil
| Service Employees Association. $5.00 to non-members.

Paul Kyer, Editor
James F, O'Hanlon, Associate Editor

TUESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1966 Ce

True Professionalism

NOTHER major battle was won last week by the Civil
Service Employees Assn, — this time for their mem-
bers in the nursing profession,

Salary reallocations for professional nurses, long a goal
of the 140,000-member CSEA, were approved and the result
should be reflected In the next pay check.

The fight for upgradings for these professional people
was carried on in the true tradition of professionalism —
quietly and without fanfare.

Their plight was explained to the Administration by
CSEA, documented where necessary with facts and figures.
Their convincing arguments brought the favorable action
announced last week by the Division of the Budget and the
Director of Classification and Compensation, jointly with
CSEA.

Once again, the OSEA has, without sabre rattling or

wild, irresponsible charges, succeeded where others have
failed.

Decision — Now

HE demonstration held last week in front of the New)

York City Department of Personnel offices by the So-
celal Service Employees Union points out, once again, the
need for the Department to come to a decision on appeal
procedures for unreleased examinations,

Six weeks ago a furor was raised by candidates who took
the senior clerk examination on June 25, This was the first
big test to come under the system of unrelased test ques-
tions and answers.

Before this system was established, a promotion exam-
nation for supervisor I (Welfare) was held, This test was
also not released.

Six weeks ago, immediately after the senior clerk test,
a Department spokesman advised The Leader that a study
of the appeal procedures of all unreleased examinations
was to be made.

Now, The Leader learns, Department officials are just
giving consideration to such a review, If, in fact, a review
4s to be held, it will apparently not start until September,
months after the cries of “foul” were raised by senior
clerk candidates,

There is no justification for this. Although some staff
Members are undoubtedly on vacation, there must be some
officials available who are capable of looking into a matter
#0 pressing for those who have taken the test,

We hope there are!

‘* . supert

‘Asbany banker, bas been elected |. or waiwons wan ene
ghairman of the newly-formed ware an a obo
Hudson River Valley Commission, | *PPoint confidential bookkeep-
‘The board was created by the|@r or cbnfidential secretaries in
1066 Legislature to “preserve and |the future without the authoriaa-
enhance the scenio, historic andjion of the town board. A bill to
Peoreational resources of the |permit the appointments haa been
Hudson River Valley.” vetoed by Governor Rockefeller,

Civil Service
Television

Television programs of

to civil service employees are
broadonst daily over WNYO,
Channel 31, This week's programs
are listed below.

Sunday, August 21

4:00 pm.—Olty Close-Up—Patsi-
ols Marx interviews Frederick
Berman, Commissioner of Rent
and Rehabilitation.

7:30 pm.— Safe Driving —“The
Talking Car’ and “Automobile
Engine.”

9:00 pm—New Dimensions of
Education—George Probst, host,

9:30 p.m. — Viewpoint on Mental
Health—"Treatment for Emo-
tionally Disturbed Teen-Agers
and Adolescents.”

Monday, August 22

4:00 pm.— Around the Clock —
New York City Police training
program: “Use of Force and
Baton Tactics.”

7:30 pm.—On the Job—New York
City Fire Department training
program: “Using Portable Lad-
ders."

8:30 pm—Safe Driving—Films on
driver and pedestrian safety
measures,

Tuesday, August 23

4:00 pm.— Around the Clock —
New York City Police training
program: “Use of Force and
Baton Tactics,”

7:00—Viewpoint on Mental Health
Psychiatric Services m a
General Hospital,”

Wednesday, August 24

3:30 p.m—Viewpoint on Mental
Health—“Psychiatric Services in
@ Generel Hosiptal.”

4:00 pm.— Around the Clock —
New York City Police training
program; “Use of Force and
Baton Tactics,”

$:30 pm.—Safe Driving—Fiims on
driver and pedestrian safety
measures.

7:30 pm.—On the Job—New York
City Fire Department taining
program: “Using Portable Lad-
ders,"

Thursday, August 26
4:00 pm.— Around the Clock —

7:30 p.in.—On the Job—New York
City Fire Department training
program,

8:30 p.m.— Close-Up — Patricia
Marx interviews Charles Ab-
rams, City planner.

Friday, August 26

4:00 pm.— Around the Clock —
New York Olty Police training

“Use of Force and

Saturday, August 27
7:00 p.m.—Community Action —

sioner of Parke Dept. is guest.

7:30 pm.—On the Job—New York
City Fire Department treining
program.

Galasso Appointed

ALBANY—Governor Rockefeller
das named August J, Galasso of
Cobleskill to the Council of the
State University Agricultural and
Technical Oollege at Cobleskill
for s term ending July 1, 3976,
He succeeds Joseph Meade, also
‘of Cobleskill, whose term expired.

“FREE BOOKLET by U. & Gov-
ernment on Social Security, Mail
only, Leader, 97 Duane Sirect,

New York 7, N. ¥.

Thomas P, P. Hoving, Commis. |

Civil Service
Law & You

By WILLIAM GOFFEN

(Mr. Goffen, 2 member of the New York Bar, teaches law af the
College of the City of New York, is the author of many books and
articles and co-authored “New York Criminal Law.")

Light Duty Assignments

THE EVIDENT intention of the provisions of the Ad-
ministrative Code entitling a partially permanently disabled
fireman who had received his injuries in the course of his
employment to a light duty assignment at full salary, is to
encourage brave and faithful performance of duties, Section
Bi9-4.0 (a2) of the Administrative Code of the City of New
York indeed requires the Fire Commissioner to assign such
light duties as the fireman is qualified to perform or, at the
fireman’s own option, he shall be retired at not less than
three quarters of his salary.

NOTWITHSTANDING THE clear language of the Admin-
istrative Code making retirement dependant upon the parti-
Jally disabled fireman’s own application, the Firemen’s Pen-
sion Fund retired Dennis M. Breen and John P. Cronin against
their wills following partial permanent disability. Breen, a
battallion chief, was injured while fighting a fire in Long
Island City, His injury, consisting of “smoke narcosis and @
respiratory congestion,” necessitated four months of sick
leave which was followed by assignment to light duty. He
served on light duty for a year when he was retired on the
application of the then Fire Commissioner on an annual
pension of three quarters of his annual salary.

JOHN P. CRONIN, a fireman, in the actual performance
of fire duties sustained injuries requiring amputation of his
left foot, He was assigned to light duty for a period of
fifteen years, after which he was retired. He, like Cronin, was
forced into retirement with a three quarters pay pension,

THE PENSION fund sought to justify the retirement of
Breen and Cronin because Section B19-4.0(b) of the Admin-
istrative Code states that a fireman must be retired who
has more than twenty years in service and js permanently
unable to perform full fire duty. Breen and Cronin contend-
ed that the governing provision is Section B19-4.0(a2), They
argued in support of their Article 78 proceeding that this
provision of the Administrative Code granting an option to
& partially permanently disabled fireman to perform light
duties in Neu of retirement governed their case,

THE COURT of Appeals agreed with the petitioners. The
Court relied upon its interpretation in an earlier cave of
similar provisions of the Greater New York Charter. In that
case, the relator was a fire department captain who had
sustained permanent injury in the active discharge of his
duties, but subsequently the Fire Department ordered his
compulsory retirement, The Court of Appeals there held that
the controlling provision of the Charter was not the one
authorizing compulsory retirement after twenty years of
service, Rather, the purpose of the Charter provisions was
to entitle a partially permanently disabled fireman who
sustained his injuries in the performance of duties to con-
tinue in employment on a light duty basis at full salary.

THE COURT of Appeals relied upon a general rule of
statutory construction that it Js always presumed that no
unjust or unreasonable result was intended by legislation
and the statute, unless the language forbids, must be given
an Interpretation consistent with such presumption. This
Js ‘especially so when a codifying statute (the Administra-
tive Code) is enacted similar to a statute earlier construed’
by the Court, Further reason for interpreting the Adminis-'
trative Code in the same manner as the predecessor pro-'
visions of the Greater New York Charter appears from a@
provision in the Code that no existing right or remedy shail’
be impaired by reason of any provision of the Code,

THE BREEN decision distinguished the Schoeck case,
Schoeck sought voluntary retirement but was continued on’
full pay while performing no duties because the Board of
‘Trustees was evenly divided upon the question whether his
disability was service-connected. The Court of Appeals di-
rected Bchoeck’s retirement at one half pay. However, the
Court left the door open for the Board of Trustees to amend
his retirement allowance retrouctively if it subsequently de-
termined his disqualification to be service incurred.

{
Tuenday, August 16, 1966

IN SERVICE TRAINING —
Employees at Harlem Valley State Hospital have
Feoeatly completed a course in work simplification
under the in service training program of the in-
stitution. Certificates denoting completion of the
course were recently presented by Dr. Lawrence
Roberts, senior director of the hospital, Left to
right, top row, are: Frederick Saunders, John Hur-

‘ oe ° il
ley, Alfred Meier, Richard Dudley; second row:
Winifred Courture, John Rohrbocker, John Wilson,
John Helmrick, Sam Conner, and Terry Tipton;
fromt row: Dr, Roberts, Mrs, Lillian VanNostrand,
Mrs, June Coryea, instructo iss Daphne Graham,
Miss Sarah Anthony, Mrs, Jean Langlois, Mrs.
Frances Mercay and Edward O'Neill, chief of nurs-
ing services and training,

INSTALLED — newly ciecied officers of
West Searca Stale achool chapier, Civil Service
Employees Asso, were installed recently at « din-
mac te the Camelot Motor Inn. Left to right are

Lawrea
officer;
vice-president;
retary; Jo:
William MoGowan, delegate,

Gail Baumgarten, recording sec

Willston Park Unit, CSEA Sets Goals

WILLISTON PARK — The
Wilitston Park unit of Nassau

shapter, Ciyll Service Em- William Hoff, unit president andj which will inclue longevity after
ployees Assn., will meet with Gertrude Shea, unit secretary—|10 and 15 years.

village trustees on Aug, 23 to Mmcludes * All proposala to be retro-
@isouss a nine-point program ® Formal recognition of the|active to June 1, 1966

whiow te unit ts seeking for its Civil Service Employees Asan

mecabers ® Payroll deduction of dues and) Teachers Bill Vetoed

Tovica to be discussed by the
Dagoliators—trving Flaumenbaum, | #ce Program.
Supervisor | y
Tas New York City Depart-

maou!

eligible iiss Aug. ® with 1,120
games (or promotion to supervisor jevertime after 40 hours,
& (Wallace).

installation of the OSEA insur-

| @ Sick leave plan of 18 days @ | year
accumulative to 150 da;
© An increase of personal days |jservice was vetoed by Governor
of Personnel established an | {rom five to eight days
© Time and half pay for ait/ommended by Mayor John V.
| Lindsay of New York and the jis 138 Union Road, West Sencea, |Civil Service, the State Campus,

president of the chapter; Arnold sion plan.
Moses, CSBA field represeatative;

© A new graded

ALBANY—A bill

retiring after 15 or more years of

|Rockefeller. Disapproval was rec

© A fully non-contributory pea- ' State Department of Civil Service. N.Y, 14224.

Barniog, past president and installing
y Webber, president; Charles Putebach,

Preybyl, corresponding secretary and

salary plan

guaranteeing
4 minimum pension of $3,000 a
for New York City teachers

By JOE DEASY, JR, >=

“It was a job for Father Cap.” Simple as that.

When Engine 58 rolled into 111 Street and Madison

| Avenue last Saturday night, they found a woman perched
on the roof, threatening to jump. Police cars, ambulances
and fire apparatus jammed the street

But the unofficial chaplain of E, 58 and L. 26— Father
Capristrano, was the only one needed for the job, Together
ogo Deputy Chief Chris Matkovic of the Fourth Division
| and a Police supervisor, Father Cap went to the roof and
started to talk to the distraught woman.
| After a half-hour, the woman reached out and held the
Capuchin priest’s brown robes. He had succeeded.
“There were a few anxious moments”, he said later,
“Once, she nearly tripped. One false move by any of us

on the roof would have sent her to the street—and that’s
17 floors.” Nice job, Father.

FIR

“Wee” Willie Wolfe of 69 Engine always wanted to be
a truckie but as his nickname asserts, he was too small.
| So last week, he grabbed a portable aluminum exten-
sion ladder from a garage and rescued a neighbor and his 14
year old daughter.

Wolfe was enroute to the beach with his son when he
heard cries from the house: “Help—Call the Fire Depart-
ment!”

Sending his son, Richard, to pull the fire alarm box,
he attempted to enter the house through the interior stair-
way but was driven back. Grabbing the ladder he brought
out the man and then raced back for the 14 year old girl
whom he found semi-conscious in the corner. Both the man
and his daughter was treated at Jacobi Hospital for mul-
tiple lacerations and smoke pojsoning.
| Wolfe has been recommended for a Class I award by
Deputy Chief Arthur Laufer of the Sth Division

SUMMER HOLIDAY — ric rransit Authority Police De-
partment played hont last Friday to 100 children from the Lower
East Side of New York at the Peekskill Military Academy where
the New York Jets football team was playing an exhibition game,
‘Two TA patrolmes, Robert i ery, left and Nerson Zayas,
were part of the guides for the trip during which box lunches were
served. Inspector Hy Welsbers was in charge of the Transit Police
Department's participation in the program.

Tom Canty Confined (State Positons
ROCHESTER—Thomasa Canty. Fog Librarians
Western New York representa-
tive for insurance firm of Ter-
Bush 4& Powell Ine. of Schene:
tady and known by members of
the Civil Service Employees Assn.
throughout the Sta haa been
confined to his home with Iliness
for the past seven weeks,
f Melba Binn, president of the
CSEA's Western Confreence, said
-|Canty would appreciate cards or |
letters from members. His address | tact

New York State is accepting
applications on @ continual basis
for positions as lbrarians in the
various local and State jurisdio~
tions

There ts no written or oral teat
for these jobs and candidates
will be graded on their education
and experience in the field.

Por further information oon+
the State Department of

Albany,
Page Eight

CIVIL BERVICE LEADER

Tuesday, August 16, 1966

positions range from $10,508 t
913,080.

For further information and
applications eontact the Civil
Service Department, the State
Campus, Albany .N.Y.

File By Sept. 12
For State Assoc.

Librarian's Exam —

The New York State Depart- Senior Typist In
ment of Civil Service 1s ac-|Clinton County
cepting applications until! The Clinton County Civil Ser-
Bept. 12 for an examination| Mer agra s tages ap-
for associate librarian, Jobs are | > hope oa
open in several fields and specific 4
test numbers should be referred to | Sslary im thie position le $9,476

in seeking information, These sre:

to $4,115.

manuscripts and history, test | For further information contact
number 21-056, and medicine, test | the County Civil Service Commis-
Bumber 21-055, Salaries for these sion, Plattebureh.

Organization Spec.
Promotion Exam Set

pay to $12,280,
For further information contact
the Applications Section of the
Department of Personnel, 40
Thomas Street.

NYS Jobs For
Office Workers

Continuous filing for stenographers, typists and key
punch operators is open with the New York State Employ-
ment Service. Starting salaries are; $3,810 for stenographers,
with annual increments to $4,755; and, for typists and key

punch operators, $9,638, with In-————————_—_———
orementa wp to $4,595, Positions | Of the State Employment Service.

are available throughout the state, In New York City, the office to

with some located in New York

contact for the exam je st 675
| Lexington Avenue, Manhatian, ex-

City.

Examinations for these posi-
tions are given regularly at offices

cept for the key punch operator.
That test is given by the State
Civil Service Commission and

rolled into one,

insurance,

needs.

doctor—anywhere,

GHI fills the bill.

you want,

GHI/221 PARK AVENUE SOUTH, NEW YORK, N.Y, 10003
Phone: SP 7-6000

MARKET
GOT YOU?

The New York Stock Exchange,
it has been said, has the lure
of the Kentucky Derby, Las
Vegas, and Monte Carlo all

if the Market tempts you~
fine, but try to suppress your
gambling instincts when you
choose your doctor bill

Deciding on the right health
insurance can bea tricky
business, Consider your basic

You want fast, dependable
payments. GHI pays promptly!

You want to be free to go to the
doctor of your own choosing,
GHI permits free choice of

You want the plan with no
deductibles and no coinsurance
applied to doctor bills,

if you are a New York City
employee, check the box in the
middie of item 14 on form 1053,
That's GHI-the health insurance

that agency should be contacted
for the time and place of that
exam.

There are no education or ex-
perience requirements for these
exams. However, candidates will
have to pass a spelling and vocab-
ulary test and 4 practical test in
typing, stenography or key punch
machine operation, whichever one
applies to your position.

For furtner mformation contact
the State Department of Civil
Service, the State Campus, Al
bany, or the State Office Build-
ings in New York City, Buffalo
and Syracuse, or any local office
of the State Employment Service,

VA Hospital
Needs Guards

The Kingsbridge Veterans Ad-
ministration Hospital at 130
Kingsbridge Road, the Bronx, has
openings for guards as the G&-3
pay level.

Salary’s $4,269 to start.

For further information con-
tact the Board of Civil Service
Examiners at the Hospital.

FREE BOOKLET by U.S. Gov-
ernment on Social Security, Mail
only, Leader, 97 Duane Street,
New York 1, N. ¥.

L CITATION. — Pile No.
HE PEOPLE OF ‘TRE
YORK, By the @rnce
of God, Free and Independent

‘To Helmer Forebeve, Maia

County of New
why letters of

SCHOOL

EQUIVALENCY

DIPLOMA

1d for Civil Service

ROBERTS SCHOOL
S17 W. Sith St, New York 19
PLaza 17-0300
Please send me PREE inform
ation,

Tuesday, August 16, 1966 5 CIVIL SERVICE LEADER Page Nine

' Starting Salaries To $6,440 |County Probation |= sv % ot

Commission or personnel officer

For NYS Probation Officers (Officer Filing fs ot the county wen ou

appointment.

Applications are being accepted on a continual basis by Oo C t M Il For all 01

the New York State Civil Service Commission for the job of | pen on inua y Pedehemeggteninipeos:
probation officer. The positions are located throughout the ’
State and offer starting salaries as high as $6,440 @ year. New York State Is accepting applications on a continual Department of Civil Service, the
Both oollege graduates and ¢ol-) ——————_— basis for probation officers in the various counties of the Siate Campus, Albany, or the
lege seniors may apply for these | applications contact the State De- | State. State Office Buildings in New
Jobs, although a B.A. is neces-' partment of Civil Service, the Starting salaries are as high as $6,780 per year. York City, Buffalo and Syracuse,
wary in order to be appointed. | State Campus, Albany, or the| ‘There are no New York State | - -— ed

Written examinations are given'State Office Buildings, New York | residency requirements for this! For detailed information re-| Refer to examination number

periodically and therefore no ap- City, Buffalo or Syracuse, examination. ‘arding vacancies, salaries, resi- 20-340 in your requeste
peal or review of test papers will
be allowed.

Por further {nformation and}
Jobs With Bd. of Ed. mh
For Stenographers wa a
‘The Board of Education has & 33
number of openings for steno- 4 eo eee
P graphers st $4,000 per annum ~ - :
with vacation, sick leave, health | (ila Ji. he oa
plans and other fringe benefits. F Pd A is
‘The positions are located in all .
boroughs except Richmond.
Apply in person at the Office
of Personnel. Room 103, 110 Liv-
ingston Street, Brooklyn, NY.

“For FAST ACTION

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City, State & Federal
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for public service employees. For one thing, under Major Medical, the list of covered
medical expenses is extensive, It includes all hospital and professional service . . . private
duty nursing . . . all prescribed drugs and medicines plus blood and blood plasma and am-
bulance service, It provides up to $10,000 per calendar year with a lifetime maximum of
$20,000 for every eligtble dependent in your family, Blue Cross and Blue Shield plus Major
Medical is the kind of realistic protection you need.

See your payroll or personnel officer for complete details about the STATEWIDE PLAN.
Then you'll understand why these are...

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Pane Ter)

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Tuesday + August 16, 1966

Forest Ranger Positions
Open Until September 12,

The State of New York Is

Sept. 12 for an examination series in forestry, The exams

open are:

Forest ranger, exam number 27-
202—salary is $4,725 to $5,855

Forestry aide, exam number 27-
291—-salary is $4,465 to $5.545, and

Porest pest control technician,
exam number 27-290 — salary is
$4,465 to $5,545.

‘These positions exist in the
State Department of Conservation

and vacancies are located
throughout the State.
Por further information and

spplications contact the State De-
partment of Civil Service, the
State Campus, Albany, or the
State Office Buildings, Buffalo,
New York City and Syracuse

‘Sr. Persnonel Tech,
Exam In Nassau Co.

Maintainer, F
Filing Is Set
In September

New York City has set
Sept. 7 through 27 as the fil-|
ing period for a promotion}
examination for car main-
tainer, Group F. This test will

accepting applications until

Nassau County is accepting ap-
plications until Aug. $1 for an ex-
amination for promotion to senior

cdo technician (olassifiea-!h. goon only to Transit Authority
ion)
employees.
Salary in this position te $9,670
to start. Salary in this position at the

present time is 83.750 to $3.600
per hour,

A practical examination will be
given on January 5, 1967,

For further information oontact
the County Civil Service Commis-
sion, Mineola

leading to $5,260, By the means
of civil service tests, promotions
may be obtained to the title of
Chief supervising attendant,
salaries ranging from
$9,580. Extensive training 1s of-
fered
hours of formal classroom lectures
and demonstrations of nursing and
clinical techniques.

or
cently that ‘beoause of the ex-| coverage and regularly scheduled
pansion now underway in the De-| pay increases.

Psychiatric Attendant Positions
Offer Advancement Possibilities

Psychiatric attendants, who will work with the mentally

il and retarded, are invited to apply to the New York State

Department of Mental Hygiene for positions available now.
Beginning attendants receive $4,255 annually, with increases

should be U.S, citizens in good
health with a real desire to help
the mentally ill

Those selected for the positions
will receive all the benefits of
civil service employment, includ-
ing year-round job security, lib-
eral vacation and sick leave,
eleven paid holidays, state-finan-
ced retirement and health insur-
| nee programs, Social Security

with
$7.95 to
attendants, including 50

Dr. Alan D. Miller, Commission- |
of Mental Hygiene, stated re~

Persons interested in applying
these positions, or finding out

occur often and promotions will be | more about them, are invited to

{plications until! Aug. 31 for an

Clinton County examination for senior clerk. Sal-
ly ja $3,800 to $4,760 per year.

Clerk Positions Por further information and

The Clinton County Civil Ser- | applications contact the Putnam
vice Commission has announced County Civil Service Commission,
an examination for clerk, for | Carmel
whieh applications will be accept-
ed until Aug. 26.

Salary varies acocrding to loca-
tion, however, the usual pay range |
fs $3,000 to $3,640 per year. tered the world of the computer

Por further information contact |by appointing Dr. Raymond &
the County Civil Service Commis-|Roth as Professor of Statistics
son. Plattsburgh. and Director of Computer Center,

Appoints Roth

GENESEO—The State Univer
sity College at Geneseo today en-

TO HELP YOU PASS

GET THE ARCO STUDY BOOK
Clerk New York City $3.00
Post Office Clerk Carrier $3.00
| Senior Clerk

Bridge & Tunnel Officer
Administrative Asst,

Bev Control Insp.

Janitor Custodian
Clerk-Typist-Steno

Motor Vehicle Operator
Engineering Aide
Vacation Playground Asst.
4S. Equiv. Dip.
Patrolman $5.00

Contains Previous Questions and Answers and
Other Suitable Study Material for Coming Exams

| ORDER DIRECT—MAIL COUPON

S5< for 24 hours 5
¢.9.

ciel delivery
tre

LEADER BOOK STORE
97 Duane St., New York 7, N. Y,

Please send me of books checked above,
lV enclose check er money order for $____.

108s mae eee teeeere

Department until filing opens,

Federal Prison
Operating Engineer

No written test is required
for the position of operating
engineer In United States
prisons. The United States)
Civil Service Commission ts ac-
cepting applications for these Jobs
on @ continual basis, with appoint-
ment to be made on the basis of | aug. 26
experience in the field, Salaries) gGatary in this position Is $3,475
range from $3.00 to $3.85 to start. to $4115 per year.

A final selection of candidates, Por further information contact
will be made according to thelr the County Civil Service Commis-
position on the eligible list and sion, Plattsburgh
the aptness of thelr residence to ——_
areas with job vacancies. Sr, Housing Inspector

For further Information and} ‘The New York City Department
applications, write to the Board |of Personnel established an elt-
of U.S. Civil Service Examiners, | gible Hist July 19 with 144 names
United States Penitentiary, Lea-|for promotion to senior houstng
yenworth Kansas inspector (Buildings)

ther pointed out that these posi-

rich, personal rewards of such

No educational or experience
requirements exist for psychint-
tie attendants, but those applying

Senior Steno In
Clinton County

Applications are being accepted
by the Clinton County Civil Ser-
vice Commission for an examina-
tion for senior stenographer until

NOTICE OF NAMES OF PERSONS
APPEARING AS OWNERS OF CERTAIN UNCLAIMED
PROPERTY
Held by
THE CHARTERED BANK
76 William Street
NEW YORK, N.Y. 10005

howe dames aud last known addrmvse are ae
appear fr records of the above-named baoking organina’
sntitled to 1 proverty in amounts of twenty-five dolls:

AMOUNTS HELD OR OWING FOR THE PAYMENT OF
NEGOTIABLE INSTRUMENTS OR CERTIFIED CHECKS

The “ fortes

Mee. BK Che
Thomas A w
Marcelino Cue allo
A report of uncaimed pruperiy an bern made to Artie Lavtth, th
Compiroiler at" the Siaie of" New York, pirmiant to Sacton Dil ot the
a’ Progerty nee contained in, wich nolina ison

principal offiee of tle bank.
New York, Now York

4
abandoned property achibeics

Such abandoned property will be paid on of Dafora Octo
1 persone establishing |o ite eatisfaction their right to reoely:

M1 neat
2 aNine.

Notice of Names * Persons Appearing as Owners
UNCLAIMED PROPERTY
MELD BY
AMERICAN BANK & TRUST COMPANY

70 Wall Street, New York, N.Y. 10005

of Certain

‘The pero howe names and last knows xddtessas are om
Apoexr frou records of the above-named banking organisation
'@ onclalmed property in amaunte of twenty-five dollars oi

AMOUNTS DUE ON DEPOSITS

Schneebaum, Morence 8, —2771 Bainbri Ave., Bronx, MY.
Severin, Rudolph F, — 1745 Walton joing om ur
Tamarin, Michee! — 66 East Park St, Newark, WJ,

AMOUNTS HELD OR OWING FOR THE PAYMENT OF
NEGOTIABLE INSTRUMENTS OR CERTIFIED CHECKS
Payee Unknown — Address Unknown

publie tuepection
, ia the Clty of

Huh aby property will be

oe on oF before Oviod me
te pernone establishing to fle satiel or Lat next

their ight to receive
To the auccosding November, and om or

reat
valine

Putnam County Se ete ree a ye | Partment of Mental Hygiene, 2°. |
published in ie ler when | portunities for advancement will | ¢
Senior Clerk available from the Department of i
Putnam County ls accepting 8P- | Personnel, Do not contact the

made frequently.” Dr. Miller fur-| inquire ab these institutions:

State schools for the mentafly

tions offer “a real opportunity tO retarded — Letchworth Village,
help others and to experience the | Thiells, Rockland County; Rome

State School, Rome; Wassaic
State School, Wassaic; and Wil-
|lowbrook State School, Staten
Island.

State hospitals for the mentally
jill — Brooklyn State Hospital,
Brooklyn; Harlem Valley State
Hospital, Wingdale, Dutchess
County; Hudson River State Hos-
pital, Poughkeepsie; Kings Parle
| State Hospital, Kings Park, Long
lIsland; Manhattan State Hos-
| pital, Ward's Island, New York
City; Pilgrim State Hospital, West
Brentwood, Long Island; Roches-
ter State Hospital, Rochester; and
Rockland State Hospital, Orange-
burg.

While the greatest number of
vacancies for psychiatric atten-
dants exist at these facilities,
there also are positions open at
other state hospitals and schools.
Information is available from; Of-
fice of Personnel, State Depart-
ment of Mental Hygiene, 119
Washington Avenue, Albany, New
| York 12225.

NOTICE OF NAMES OF
PERSONS APPEARING AS
OWNERS OF CERTAIN
UNCLAIMED PROPERTY

Held B
FEDERATION BANK AND
TRUST COMPANY
New York, New York

set forih below

war trom the reconte of the abave
‘organization to be en-
nelaimed property in amounte

the dollars or more.

AMOUNTS DUE ON DEPOSITS
. New York, N.Y,

0% Bay 14h Bt
Irene itackey

895 Weat 1h St
Dora Sokol 1/0/¥

0/0 Altman, S405

Brookiyn, ¥.¥

AMOUNTS HELD OR OWING
FOR THE

NEGOTIABLE

CERTIFI

Brookiyn, N.Y.
vu, |

New York, N.¥,
Man Sokol
Kings Righway,

Givubach aad Glasaman,
Address Unknown
Lee Jenkins
Aditrems Unknown
Reieman and Reisman
Address Uoknown
Anna Rosen
Addrem Usiknown
Loville Wall

Ine

aimed property bas
Lavilt, the Comp-
ie ot New York,

ant to Section 401 of the Aban-
Properiy Law. A lat at the
fm such notice le om

to public inapection at
office of the Bank, le
Columbue Circle, in the

ind at 1
City of New York, New York, where
0

ndeoad property, ie parable,

|

property will
paid oa OF Delors October
Yorone eatablishing le its
Wher TiaML Ve Feorve the

November, amd

In the sucoeeding

oa uF before the tenth day thereof,

‘wich Unelnined property will be pald

te Arthur Levitt, the Comptrolier of
New York,

botore the tenth day
sok unclaimed property will be paid to Arihur Levitt the State Com:
204 1) shall thereupon goase te be Hable therefor. =

the Babe and it shall
jorotor.

Tuesday, August 16, 1966 CIVIL SERVICE LEADER Page Floven

——$_———_

+ REAL ESTATE VALUES +

LOTTE 4 SE ma OE a eal EE TREE TM Sea
err ORT PEM iT 8 NE AT)
[CCR RON,
CONCRETE and BRICK |[cinnnra nmomrs vic. sizavo St. Petersburg - Florida BRON PE _ ™
RENT WITH OPTION) isle IX SPECIAL JAMAICA _ DETACHED
WORK Only #700 ear Gown, 7 rm detached FRE $7,500
Catala, ¢ vedrme, § barbs, Ianve E §, 213 ST VICINITY f
Driveways, Sidewntks, Carbs, Patton, {J Harden plot, Onraee RETIREMENT GUIDE wxoUISITE 1 FAMILY BRICK |||) Larse oversied S-reom and
Sane, Garvae Floors, Concieis ant || LONG ISLAND HOMES Wonderful 72 Page Color Book Suir yortet Vener a wae bath, fully detached, full
Joop, Yard & Ce
F f 160-19 Millelde Ave, dam, RE 8-7900 About Exciting St. Petersburg $900 DOWN - PRICE $18,990 basement, many extras,
. Fodera bs nt rinsing retirement Mecca erifice te GI with no cash
oa Caan ei iy
Teme tamsview saul Suhe'Sa te, setae ||| FIRST-MET REALTY || =e ' ot
CALL: 516 IV 9-9320 CASH OVER MORTGAGE, ‘5 ROOM 4375 WHITE PLAIN |p cows FHA with $300 down,
: ! BRICK STONE SHINGLE tesa - |
uMENT WITH. BAR, 1 seenery, pity. all modern ‘com if BRING DEPOSIT
After & FP. FINISHAPLE ATTIC, f0xi00, 1 OAR Yoniencee dovigned to make your re- 7 De lf
GARAGE, PENCED YARD WITH || titement ihe happiest time ot sour tite, ||| OPO® ys if
PANIC, “PRINCIPLES ONLY, OWNEN|| The” Teer Dooklet—with, move, 1nd i
16 6-837 if format lomes. T
ERGAL NOTICE Pinel | nS egy oi Bog Sy doa (EXT BET f
Pay ipa AAT izaan Norke Rawtatranta,  Aliractony, Beating DISTINGUISHED f NEW F
jm ——- ages in, Swimating oe other stive: ai {
Whe Wo. P4048, 1068, — CITATION, —| CITATION. — THE PROPLE OF Tam|] Well sa Spectator Bporin, Niebt Tate, AIR CONDITIONED
THE PEOPLE, OF THE STATE OF | STATE OF NEW YORK, By the Grace of |] Schools, Churches, Hobtiion and Re i
Hm FEOULE OF GUE STATE OF] God, Pree and Independent, “Yo Rule f tiremeni Activitioy--explaina how you : i
Bnd Independent, gy Fi, obtel), named tn pur | an me were seine - full re t
To ROBERT GOTTSCHALK BARRTTY, | | Bort IM and Codicll ae oy eee cer OS He ge in Mgt '
ROSH BLANCHE RASTRN & ALICE | Gula Diekbath: Janet With 58, wiles of eoenle watettront | 159-12 Hillside Ave,
BRANDT, and to alt the heirs at inw, | Rockmore se exeon ops gi ge tw She moto Roger
Peat of Kin, deviaeen. legatere, dint | Robert Mockmore, fa At. Feteca JAMAICA
Dolees maniees, aasignecs, creditors, lin rine sue, peng .
Gre, trusteen, executorn, nluiniateators or | FTAA H.Campbe “he Mineral Church,” |
auccessore In toterest of HEDWIG HLVINA | 2e.: Atteratt Litiograph and Printing re Oe? Senge (Open 7 Dare, 9:80-6:80)
SMITH, a/k/a HEDWIG E. SMITH, de-| ComPuny, Inc.; The Maine Thonpron Com censdl we oars 5 m
Pel tae Cerra Suintion, Ines Actinic || Beaette ae ee aren under tne 140 SEVENTH AVENUE :
of kin, de © Gutfitlers, Ine. wid by RDS Be —
. ‘a D nites ange mp bnocarsnet ra section of the Flor A FEW UNUSUALLY SPACIOUS, Farms & ; caer ane
Jonech €. Monsen Con tne, | Conetitation SCIRNTIFICALLY DESIGNED APTS
Lane Theft wervi|] stoma nas xO ixcomm Tax: || AVAILAME AT eras wiicH Ulster County
 Atoronald, chase aris of taw York Mhectren, too Nort || REPRESENT ““OUT-OP-ORDINARY | COUNTRY PRorENTY
| isnt oh, ame he Stell | Sie “Sound eeoorains i |] & E+ ZERKINS, Boot, OT, Rox 1871 1) Vitons. MOST CUNVENINNT, CANT | ‘ACHEAGR HOMES, FREE Tio
it any, all of wham ‘ant whose | Nicholas Xeno! et Art Galleria: ‘Noi Lea ghey deepal LOCATED AREA ©. P. JENSEN, 2 John 81, Kingston, W-%,
Ramee ‘and pinces of rewidence $8 Seonesy. ast: Finte, Winceae — Sane = —
. t Pogune: Service Messenger ‘Company. | “gaye oN YOUR MOVE TO FLORIDA 3 ROOMS (46) ..........$188) Regt Estate, Ulster County
ta rwerd" Rpaster. Freguctiens, ' ted Compare our com per 4,000 ibe to Living Room, Bedroom, Dine |
Wallon i mrcagese Core: eal Bane Sit ie Living Boom, Satroow: Di | raw bedroom dunce
Prank @. Ware: Jerome) $08 , Ca Nd Pepe et “pamiete ‘Siding Gommeaiey
ree wert aereme] S416. Yor an tnisiats to any dail: 1917 RMS (6M) is.e0+0s-.$217 sta.000 ie own Pome
TRANSFER & A very sppealing apt, €2.0x12" Livin per month, rs AX]
q Deol. 0. PO. Moom, 12817" Beavoun, 12 eta" Dine Rethonkeon, NY. (016) 680
bf aw burr, Florida ing. oom (wanoewas) Norms “Dore
EcnwAaNtz and WILLIAM J —

“Perms & Country Homes |41,"ans Gy”

141. Broadway, Brovx, New +
50 Kenwood Te

Ea TS “Farms & Country Homes _

NJ. should not be probatnd ae the ie Orange County A loxury, apt 38426 Living Room, a Orange County
tnd. personal “property, of HEDWIG WATER - WATER - WATER rvonia, iniye Foyer | Mite Liat of Retirement Wetien
VIRA SMITH, a/k/aq HEDWIG Natures Ow vows Kitchen, 9 Bathe, 8 Gentes aan
SMITH, Deceased, Who Wan ub the th prion away — £5 Pie, Pe OUDMAN AGI :
gf her ath cellent of 310 Went 460 | tre mm ever fowine, atveum: 1 Algo Beautiful Garden Apt. | — rt Jarvie; HY. (W14) 660-6088
fa the Couniy of Sew York, New | Timon boul, table & Diar Bouse, |e eee mMAR Fores & Caustiylivane
ed, Atteried and Sealed. July 11. 1966 iF ving Foomae with DECORATHD LOBBY Ulster County mes

poi ARAGE 1X. BULLDING BEAUTIYULLY tread land, Year  reu
© citer eueoh: onbina RGUIPPED LAUNDRY PActE, | $750 pee sere, Swim cn Fi
r $18,500. lowe, 26 per mo, CA’ =KILL, LAND
6. tun; iy, Walden, NY (ous) r74-eau4 SUPE on Prom Phone AL 5.0614) CORD. Kementacn, NY \oi4) 626-7882

cepspilor es
PHILIP "A.

County
y

rogate’a Court of the Coun:

- at ie Courthouse in pan; i Te re
18th day of dniy, | Retia F. Polvom: American Comualty, Com- Farms & Country Homes | Farms & | Country Homes - | House For Sale - Catskills
any; New York Siaie Income Tax Hurea } oMPLE oe
VHESENT: HON, JOSEPH A, OOX,| New York Ciiy Excee Tux Dureau; Jobn Orange County | stay pig COMPLETELE swotecn | Siuualiy, dete
SURSORA TE 3 ‘ San | BOO these! Revirere om $2,000 uD, Catsiclt Mountains. Por details writer
Probate Proceeding, Will of HEDWIG with lay ro. D BLOODGOOD, Braker Janes Bimey, Main St. Jeffexom,
BLVIRA SMITH, a/k/as HEDWIG F, launary Garage, | Upper Him $1., Rt, 10, Cobleskiit, N-¥.| NY 19009 oF phone Jelferson
EMITH, Deceased and places ef tenidence are ry homme (818) AY @7a88 oA YS
Paaitt gat Putitcnion of Chailon | tonnes, alieg Giigent, tneuhey Be. eerat Mire Sion! COUR YOR BALM WoGbanla. Gomme
at 1n6 tained by the pellticner herein, belng Wy ar —— | sizep srupio For MIN!
Teaiding and filing the verified | persone interested se creditors, distribatees +eoci| House For Sale - NJ. STUDIO FOR SALE, MINIMUM
petition of WILLIAM # WILLIAMS, pro-| or otherwise in (he elaie of Howard O.| | VACATION & Retirement ving at J. INCLUDING WALL-TO-WALL
Pounding the Last Wilt and Testament | Bore, ‘s@ Courtney Burr, de-| | ake, bri. ee. ear. View of lake.| CARPRTING, DISHWASHER, GAS AND
of HEDWIG BL SMITH, 0/k/a0 | ceased, the time of Mie stat | | 26, Fs. f/p., beni, sncrifl ELECTRIC, LOW MONTILY NEP
: HEDWIG BH, KMITH, deceared. Inte of PILE No. 6708, 18 1 ~| PO. Box S88, N.Y, 83, cost, TW 9.4007
the County of New York by which 1t | Tt PEOPLE STATE OF | —— M con btieee ace =
hus been established to my satistaction Aition ot she Public ‘ain NEW YORK. Ry the Grace ef God Vree|
the Conniy ot New  York,| and t
Taving ie ice in ihe “Sutmarnias| Ny wily ‘hiea, Gert | NO CLOSING FEES
A e| Courthouse, Room 909, Borwveh of Man-| YOU ARE HEREBY ClreD ‘TO SHOW |
i i ate of New York: hatian, Clty and County of New York.| CAUSH before the Surropain’e Covrt, Now | cir HIQLLIS — ONLY $360 FULL DOWN PAYMENT
) (8). hak there are persons to te} se temporary administrator of the good, | ty, at Room 604 in the Hail)f Beaasitul @ Meum Colonial W 4 King Sixe Bedrooms And A Modern Laxury

names and| chattels and eretite of said deceased: de in the County of New York, throom, A Garmge in Meur On Large Plots Price $18,000—And Only
Montes coke Lah undi'eeth oh som ore hese” tied | So September 19, 1966, st 10 AM. |p $109.21 Xo Bank Monthly

etted herein w
places of Teak

1 Ror afier due dillrence be aacectalnod br | to show ouuse dwlore the Surrogates in writing dated April 20, | QUEENS VILLAGE — ONLY $440 FULL DOWN PAYMENT
Whe petitioner her | Gout of ew York Conuty, held a8, the has, been offered for pro-|] Immaculate Solid Brick 7 Room Moase With 4 Exceptionally Large Bedrooms,
thet the aggregate val ef the] Sarn e Covrthours in the County of | bate by ihe Public Administrator of the} On ® Landscaped Flot With Garage Price $22,000—And Only 8185 Te
cor tnterests in the estate of all of| New York on the 7th day of October, | ¢ janty of New York, who has his offices) Bank Monthly,

fo be served by pubitention | 1906, mt 10.80 6

tn the forenoon

‘Sf Chambers Street, New York, ¥.¥. SPRINGFIELD, _SARDENS —— ONLY $320 mat 8 sown >paruenr
rf

There ‘than five sheueande | of that account ef pro-| shold not be protnted as the inst Will] Byeeptionalty ‘Reems. omen Win 3 ee ca
, a ceed Administrator of} relating te teal and per) Fancy Ratbreen. Oversized Garage On 40x100 jee Ley Plot Pived ‘} neces
Now, on mollon of WILLIAM | 2. only of" New York pict gis, ermal "ules |] “a Only 40 "To Bank’ Senin.
WILLIAMS. alormey for the sald pelt: | administrator co known as Oo na, Bernat. Thies
| tt ia credits of eh and Renat th il] We Specielize end Soli Only the Most Becutiful Homes In Queens
ORDERED that the service of the eita-| ndiciaily Te MTRSIIMON | fhe tlre ot * Praore
toin Iu the carer eulltied mailer upon | WHEREGP, We Rave coused the seal of | Bast Shih Street, In tle County of New |
the persons whose names ond places © Con id County of | York, New York, and why there of Ad-|
} Saree, ene atlas Ra ag By ol Sg E. J. DAVID
Thote’ persona. herelnehove named | NESS, HONORABLE JOSEPH A, COX, | thereon to the Public Admin(straicr of 159.
! ore ‘of reeldence are unknown |e Surrogate of our sid County, at she| the County of Now York. (Oven very oe see Aven, temelee 880)
wpe i aod} County ot New York the 20th day of | Dated, Attested oe Sealed, July 10, 1666
oo of July, in the year of our Lord one thow HO) JOSEPH A, ©OX,
be made by publication sand piae bondred « ix. Philip | (8) Reese ao York County
tn (Wo Bexespapers, to wit, in the New) A. Donahue Clerk of tie Surrogste’s Phillip A. Don
York Law Journal and the re} Service | Court. (SEAL
Doi pubilshed in the County | —
gm eg | i LEGAL 2 FAMILY
! ive weeke the first publication ta SPRINGYLD, GUNS, 610.000 LAURELION £22,906
! at doaat 1s aly eight ae be FORECLOSURE BALE 7 & 6 LEGAL & FAMILY
: Be Sapna Rag, Page Beincked @ room Ranch, all ma on| Tle Colonial stucco heme, consisiing
of sald floor plus expansion atic ie gy ig ae
tne ‘ennainer press nections Live rent fren. Completely rede
£0 of the Surrogals’e Court. Act oriied ik ghd ouh. pluie me
Sha Gthee nppliesble provisions ‘of nw FAMILY BRICK kitchens &
AND telug satiafiod that the peiitiower oS

HOLLIS 0,080
TUDOR BRICK VHA FORECLOSURE
pronenoue niet! 10 xr, old eolid brick legal 9 fam
iy, Consisting of 5% & 814 rm.
ap 9 nile club fin. asement,
karage, Completely modern throug
Out, Newly decorated, Move right in!

eonict with resonable diligence asceriain
4 where th

ea are uBkno’

receive matler

» hrough the post office

BY DISPENSE with the mail

a Sas
eopy ef the eltation to them / Troe Colonial, Bhelteres
; AND DINBOTED that on ot before the & corer, Hellywoed kit

pT

SNS SS CAMORIA Hers. 420,908
CAMERIA re. r Meduetion Bale
Det. Brick 4 Bérms, ® Bath ‘Thi Geiached legnl Swine otyle ¥
This Geinched Eagilsh todor isve consisting ot 6 & 8, & bed
Brick Bema, slivated om & ireetine each apt 8 ear garage,
wmlined Kitchens & bath
nt | appliapoes, completely redevorated tt
with bar side witra modera kitchen | side @ oul. Located on ® large. laud
& bath. Garace, sanoliancer, tm: | neapet plot, This
msculale throughout, Meat sell, — | eale—miove right in,

Many other 1 & 2 Family homes avaliable
QUEENS HOME SALES

MEE, eee ene oe

day ct the firat publicatoin the pet

Loner deposit in & boat office, branch
tion, station, aubatation, lelier

oF other official de

: the

| ody of the Uniled Su

Department, & copy of the citation, com
tale Io & semurely closed postpaid wrap:
Der. directed to each of the following
reepectively, ab the address de

halle Barvety, Inlerna’

Usremivance 87 IM Bay Y Dunrerions Y Chk Bell a
A Ona )— oe
ohet Mune 16 Bapera, Bavar Z i “ig Tistes ‘un oven Hanae,

Was Cite Ave Tomroes Eevee Ave, 0 low Vel Sve, Stam

‘ie Linden ivd, farm te Van flea Ave,
one Hance Basten, Rola, Rb then’ lett te Diodel

many, Deaeelele, 18 ih low ny
‘Allee “Wrahat.  Gneleenausivasee 40-47 met ke oe ee a

B Berlin BW, 86 Germany,

Page Twelve

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Tuesday, August 16, 1966

PLEASANT
ACRES

Leods 5, N.Y, Dial $18-943-4011
FEATURING
VINCE GARRI--HOST

%& Dancing

Professional Acts

x Htalian-Amer. Cuisine
Olympic Style Pool
All Sports

Early Reservations Suggested
% Free color brochure and rates

MEW PLATZ 5, N.Y. 914 TU 3-9368

ITALIAN-AMERICAN CUISINE
New Summer Resort — Swim Pool

DRIFTWOOD LOUNGE
RIDING HORSES ON PREMISES
78 mites ont of N. ¥, City
ANG miles off N.Y, Siate Thruway

Gall oe write for Brochure

§ MOTEL

VERLOOK

NG

Carkiall Loung

fer Fawilies, Bend for free color Brochure.
Weite Frank & Ann Doyle, Box 748

CEDAR HILL tooce

RD
Ja the glo

2 Northe
from N.Y, City. Tel, ari

Office Jobs In
Westchester Co.

Applications are being re-
ceived through Aug. 26, for
civil service examinations for
the positions of clerk, senior
clerk, senior typlss and senior
stenographer in the various school
| districts. Salaries for these posi-
tions vary according ta the sctool
| district.
| ‘The examinations will be held)
‘on Oct, 1. Candidates must have
| been legal residents of Westches-
for at lesat four
months immediately preceding the
date of the written test Prefer- |
| ence in appointment may be given
| to candidates who have been legal
residents of the locality, or school
district, In which appointment ts
to be made for et least four
| months immediately preceding the
date of the written best.

Purther information and appli-
cations can be obtained at the
Westchester County Personnel |
Office, Room 700, County Office
Building, White Plains.
—$————

FREE BOOKLET by U.S. Gov-|
ernment on Social Security. MAIL
ONLY, Leader, 97 Duane 5t., N.¥.
City, N.Y. 10007.

2, Catskill 6, N. ¥.

kilt Mts.—2 hears
code 518-943-2357

“ITALIAN-AMERICAN CUISINE”

BROCHURE & MENU,

Special Low Rates Until Sept. 2nd

C'MON OUT AN

“tw ‘MONTAUK YACHT CLUB’ WAY

Whather you come by boat or
naturally relax in the quiet b

rustia shore line setting here at

famous yacht club,

For your vacationlag pleasur:
fishing, swimming and gol! ne

5k

car you'll ust
y of the
Montauk’

@ there is boating,
arby.

No ths... .no-ackats |

FOR ROOM RESERVATIONS, CONVENTIONS
OR GROUP OUTINGS CALL (518) MO@ 2121
ASK FOR MANAGER TOM PENNER

MONTAUK YACHT CLUB

MONTAUK, LONG

ISLAND, NEW YORK

Nurses Of Many Kinds ‘

Needed

By Fed. Govt.

The United States Government Is accepting applications on a continual basis for a wide
variety of nursing career positions. Nurses, clinical nurse, operating room nurse, psychiatric
nurse, supervisory clinical nurse and occupational health nurse are some of the positions

available, The Jobs have startt
openings in the New York
area.

All applicants must have active,
current registration as a profes-
sional nurse in @ State, the Dis-
trict of Columbia, Puerto Rico or
a territory of the United States.
Recent graduates of professional
nursing schools may be sppointed,
pending attainment of State reg-
istration within six months after
appointment,

For further information, contact
the Interagency Board of US.
Civil Service Examiner, Greater
New York City Area, 220 East
43nd Street, New York City 10017,

File By Aug.
26 For West.
County Exams

Westchester

sall, Jr., has announced that
applications are being re-
ceived up through Aug. 26, for
civil service examinations for the
positions of supervisor of employ-
ment services, in the Department
of Pamily and Child Welfare, sal-
ary from $7,480 to $9,600; senior
engineering technician (electric-
al), salary from $6,160 to $7,920;
inspector of weights and measures,
salary from $5,110 to $6,550;
senior law stenographer, salary

| from $5,600 to $7,200; intermediate

law stenographer and junior bud-
get clerk, both positions at a sal- |
ary of from $4,640 to $5,960; and
medical record typist, medical re-
cord clerk and receptionist, all at
a salary of from $4,300 to $5,500.
The examinations are to be held
on Oot, 1. Candidates for the posi-
tion of inspector of weights and
measures must have reached their

ing salaries which range from $4,641 to $6,269, with many

TA Promtion —
Surface Line

Dispatcher Test
Is Set In NYC

The New York City Department of Personnel has ten- —
tatively set Oct. 5 as the opening date for accepting ap-
plications for promotion to surface line dispatcher. This
test will ba open only to qualified employees of the Transit

County |
|sonnel Officer, Denton Pear-

Authority.

Tt is empeoted that the filing
will continue through Oct. 25.

Applicants may request the De-
partment of Personnel to mail an
application. The request must also
include @ self-addressed five-cent
stamped envelopes (9'¢-inch). All

by Oct. 18.

February 4, 1067.
Eligibles must also submit to a

| medical and physioal examination

examination and a license to op-
erate a motor vehicle, issued by
the Stave of New York, must be
submitted to she County Person-
nel Officar at the time of ap-
pointment. For ali the examina-
tions candkiates must have been
legal residents of Westchester
County for at least four months
immediately preceding the date of
the written tew.

For furher information and ap-
plications contact the County Per-
sonnel Office, Room 700, County
Office Building, White Plains,

Eligible List
The New York City Depart-
ment of Personnel established an
eligible list recently for promotion
to assistant supervisor (track)

2let birthday on the date of the

with eight oames.

Nae

t tat aun i Ml
GOING FISHIN' —

Doan of the College of
State University College at Fredoula, was honered by the members

mail requests must be postmarked |

‘The written teat is scheduled for |

|
immediately prior to appointment.
Alter filing opens, further in-
formation may be obtained at the
| Applications Section of the De-
partment of Personnel, 49 Thomas
Street, Do not contact the De-
|Partment before that date.
| Definite dates, when given
by the Department of Personnel,
j wilt be announced in forthcoming
issues of The Leader.

METROPOLITAN GRADS CAN EARN

200 Me we

INVESTIGATE

ACCIDENTS...
FULL OR PART TIME

FREE PLACEMENT

wilt
an Institute, 20

‘Vesey Street, W.Y.C,
Classes in W.Y.C, and Jamaica, L. 1,

“Applications New Open

ENROLL NOW!
For Next Written Exam

PATROLMAN

SALARY

173

A WEEK

AFTER 3 YEARS
includes Pay tor
Holidays aod Annsed
Usiform Allowance)

Excellent Promotional Opportunities
PENSION AFTER 20° YEARS
Ages: 20 through 25—Min. Hat, 5'8”

OUR SPECIALIZED TRAINING
Prepares for Official Written Test

Practice Exams at Every Session
For Complete Information

Phone GR 3-6900

Be Our Guest at » Class Sersion
Aug, 17th at TM

Fill to and Bring Coupon

LEHANTY INSTITUTE,
110 East 16 St, Mankatian or

tivefightor was killed recently

while responding on a false alarm!

4

4
Tuesday, August 16, 1966

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Page Thirteen

A BETTER JOB— HIGHER PAY

THE QUICK, EASY ARCO WAY

For over 28 years, fa

have helped candidates

ACCOUNTANT AUDITOR 400
ACCOUNTANT (New York City) 400
ACCOUNTING & AUDITING CLERK 3.00
AOMINSTRATIVE ASSISTANT (Clerk, Gr, §) 4.00
AOMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT.OFFICER 400
AMERICAN FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICER = 4.00
APPRENTICE4th CLASS 3.00
ASSESSOR APPRAISER 400
ASSISTANT. ACCOUNTANT 400
ASSISTANT DEPUTY COURT CLERK 400
ASSISTANT FOREMAN (Sanitation) 400
ASSISTANT STOCKMAN 300
ATTENDANT 300
‘MUTO MECHANIC 40
AUTO MACHINIST. 4o
pm BATTALION CHIEF 4s
BEGINNING OFFICE WORKER 3.00
BEVERAGE CONTROL INVESTIGATOR 400
BOOKKEEPER ACCOUNT CLERK 3.00
BRIDGE AND TUNNEL OFFICER 400
CAPTAIN, FIRE DEPARTMENT 4.00
CARPENTER 400
CASHIER 3.00
CHEMIST 400
CIVIL SERVICE ARNTUME LNG 200
Civit. SERVICE HANDBOOK 1.00
CLAIMS, EXAMINER 400
CLERK, GS 14 100
CLERK, OS 47 300
CLERK Whew York City) 100
CLERK, SENIOR AND SUPERVISING 4.00

CLERW TYPIST, CLERK STENOGRAPHER, CLERK:

DICTATING MACHINE TRANSCRIBER 300
CLIMBER AND PRUNER 300
COMPLETE GUIDE TO CIVIL SERVICE BS = 1.00

CONSTRUCTION SUPERVISOR AND INSPECTOR 4.00

CORRECTION OFFICER (New York City) 400
COURT ATTENDANT UNIFORMED
COURT OFFICER 400
COURT REPORTER.LAW AND COUNT
STENOGRAPHER 40
pew 400
TLECTRICIAN 40
ELEVATOR OPERATOR 300
EMPLOYMENT INTERVIEWER 400
} evcinese, cove 400
ENGINEER, ELECTRICAL 4.00
ENGINEER, MECHANICAL 400
ENGINEERING AIDE 400
FEDERAL SERVICE ENTRANCE EXAM 400
FILE CLERK 300
FIRE ADMINISTRATION AND TECHNOLOGY — 4.00
FIRE HYDRAULICS by Bonadio 400
ANE LIEUTENANT, FD. 400
AVREWAN, FD, 400
FOREMAN 400
GENERAL TEST PRACTICE FOR $2 US. JOBS 3.00
GUARD PATROLMAN 300
HIGH SCHOOL OIPLOMA TESTS 490
WOMESTUGY COURSE FOR CiVi SERVICE
JOBS by Turner 495
HOSPITAL ATIENDANT 300
HOUSING ASSISTANT 4.00
HOUSING CARETARER: 300
* WousING GUARD 300
HOUSING INSPECTOR 400
rm HOUSING MANAGER-ASS T HOUSING
MANAGER 500
WOUSING PATROLWAN 40
HOUSING OFFICER- SERGEANT 400
WNTERNAL REVENUE AGENT 400
WNVESTIGATOR (Criminal and Low 400
JANITOR CUSTODIAN 3.00
JUNIOR AND ASSIST CIVIL ENGINEER 5.00
JUNIOR AND ASSIST MECH ENGINEER $00
! JUNIOR DRAFTSMAN-CIVEL
| ENGINEERING DRAFTSMAN 40
LABORATORY AIDE 40
LABORER 250
LAW ENFORCEMENT POSITIONS 400
LIBRARIAN AND ASSISTANT LIBRARIAN 400
WACHINIST.-MACHINIST'S. HELPER 400
Wait, HANDLER 30
WAINTAINERS'S HELPER. Gro 400

LEADER BOOK STORE
97 Duane St., New York 7, WY,

mous

ARCO CIVIL

core hi yn
MAINTAINES'S MELPER, Group B

SERVICE BOOKS
te

MAINTAINER'S HELPER, Group D 400
MAINTAINER'S HELPER, Group E 400
MAINTENANCE MAN 300
MECHANICAL TRAINEE 40
MESSENGER 300
MOTORMAN 400
MOVOR VEHICLE LICENSE EXAMINER Aco
MOTOR VEHICLE OPERATOR 400
NURSE Practical & Public Health) 400
OFFICE MACHINES OPERATOR 400
‘OLL BURNER INSTALLER 400
PARKING METER ATIENOANT ifeler Maid — 3.60
PARKING METER COLLECTOR 300
PAROLE OFFICE 400
PATROL INSPECTOR 400
PATROLMAN, Polsce Depariment- TRAINEE 40
PERSONNEL EXAMINER 500
PLAYGROUND DIRECTOR-RECREATION

LEADER 400
PLUMBER-PLUMBER'S KELPER 400
POLICE ADMINISTRATION AND CRYMIMAL,
INVESTIGATION 50
POLICE CAPTAIN 400
POLICE LIEUTENANT 400
POLICE PROMOTION, Vols, 1 & 2 Wenee vet) 10.00
PORT PATROL OFFICER 406
POST OFFICE CLERR CARRIER 300
POST OFFICE MOTOR YEMICLE OPERATOR — 4.00
POSTAL INSPECTOR 400
POSTAL PROMOTION SUPERVISOR ~

FOREMAN rT)
POSTMASTER (1st, 2nd, 314 Class) 400
POSTMASTER [4th Cisssd 490
PRACTICE FOR CIV SERVICE PROMOTION 4,00
PRACTICE FOR CLERICAL, TYPING

AND STENO TESTS 30
PRINCIPAL CLERK (State Positions) 400
PRINCIPAL STENOGRAPHER 400
PROBATION OFFICER so
PAOFESSIONAL CAREER TESTIS MY.S = 4.00
PROFESSIONAL TRAINEE EXAMS. 40
PUBLIC HEALTH SANITARIAN 400

PUBLIC MANAGEMENT AND ADMINISTRATION 4.95

RAILROAD CLERK 30
MAIROAD PORTER 30
AESIOENT BUILDING SUPERINTENDENT = 4.00
AURAL MAIL CARRIER 300
SAFETY OFFICER 300
SANITATION MAN 40
SCHOOL CROSSING GUARD 300
SENIOR CLERICAL SERIES 400
SENIOR CLERK 40
SENIOR FILE CLERK 40
SERGEANT, PD. 40
SOCIAL INVESTIGATOR TRAINKE RECREATION
LEADER 400
SOCIAL SUPERVISOR 400
SOCIAL WORKER 40
STAFF ATIENOANT 7)
STATE CORRECTION OFFICER—

PRISON GUARD 40
STATE TROOPER 40
STATIONARY ENGINEER AND FISMAN a0
STUNOGRAPHER, SENIOR AND

SUPERVISING (Grade 341 400
STENOGRAPHER--TYPIST, GS. 1-2 300
STENO—TEPIST. IN, Y. Stated 30
STENO—TYPUST Prachea 18
STORENEEPER, GS-7 3.00
STUOENT TRAINEE 3.00
SURFACE LINE OPERATOR oT)
TABULATOR OPERATOR TRAINEE (10M) = 3.00
TAR COLLECTOR 40
TELEPHONE OPERATOR 300
TOLL COLLECTOR 4@
TOWERMAN, 400
TRACAMAN a0
TRAFIC DEVICE MAINTAINER 40
TRAIN DISPATCHER ae
TRANSOT PATROAMAM 40
TRANSAT. SEAGEANT AAEUTENANT 40
TREASURY ENFORCEMENT AGENT 40
VOCABULARY, SPELLING AND GRAMMAR = 2.08
RAT TECHNICIAN 308

Needed By

POUGHKEEPSIE—Word
more than 100 professional

with highway and other State
construction programs through &
civil service examination on Sept. |
10, according to J. Burch MeMor- |

ran, superintendent of public
works,
Written examinations for the

Positions of assistant right of way
agent and right of way aide II,
will be given by the State De-
partment of Civil Service.

‘The position of assistant right
of way agent has a salary range
of $8,825 to $10,670, The right
of way aide job offers # sal-
ary of $6,675 and promotion with-
out examination to junior right
of way agent after one year's
service. The salary of the latter
starts at $7,065 and through five
annual increments increases to
$8,590.

File Before

to upper
administrat! professional and
technical positions are open to
candidates who pass the exams,

Maintainer, D
‘Filing Opening
‘For TA Aides

e,

The New York City Depart-

jment of Personnel will ac-
jcept applications from Oct,
|5 through 2
examination for
Group D.
only to
ployees.

The present salary in this job
is $3.750 to $3,600 per hour,

A practical test will be given
on February 6, 1967.

Candidates may receive applica-
tions by mail and must have them
returned by Oct, 18,

Further information will be
published when available from the
Department of Personnel, Do not

car maintainer—
‘This test will be open
‘Transit Authority em-

ing opens.

Nassau County
Fire Inspector
\Closes Aug. 26

| Nassau County is accepting ap-
plications until
open-competitive examination for
fire inspector, Starting salary in
Unis position is $6,324 a year with
oix anual increments bringing
the salary to $8,148.

Candidates must have been
| legal residents vf the County for
| at least 12 months preceding the
| date of the test.
| Por further infrmation contact
| the County Civil Service Commis-
sion, Mineola,

contact the Department until fil- ,

Aug. 2% for an|

100 Professionals

State DPW
In Poughkeepsie Area

was received here this week

that the State Department of Public Works plans to recruit

personnel for work in land

acquisition and relocation spear Ab service In [saad

Assistant Track —
Superintendent
|Filing To Open

New York City has tentatively
set Sept. 7 through 27 as filing
dates for the promotion exam-
ination for assistant superinten-

dent {track). This test will be
open only to Transit Authority
| employees.

| Tt ts expected that the written
test will be held on Dec, 7.
Purther information will be
| published in The Leader when re-
| leased by the Department of Per-
sonnel. Do not contact the De-
| partment uniél filing opens.

Two-Year Graduates

Nov. 10

Noy. 10 ts the closing date for applications to the New
York State Department of Civil Service for examinations
open to two-year college graduates,
ssmen In the two-

The tests are also open
year institutions, A variety of

with starting salaries ranging
from $4,725 t© $6,300.

It ts expected that an examin-

ation will be held on December 3 |

| for this group.

For further information and ap-
plications contact the State De-
partment of Civil Service,
State Campus, Albany, or the
State Office Buildings, Syracuse,
New York City and Buffalo.

RR Clerk Medical
| ‘The New York City Depart-

25 for &@ promotion | ment of Personnel held qualifying |

medical and physical examina-
tions recently for 907 candidates
for railroad clerk

EMPLOYEES
| s DAILY PER PERSON
| Airline limousine, train

terminal, garage, subway,

transportation
to ail points right st our
front door, Weather pro-
| ff tected arcades to dozens of
office buildings.
NEW YORK'S

MOST GRAMD CENTRAL LOCATION

|
|

the |

Accountant I

In Onondaga

Onondaga County is accepting
applications through Oct. 18 for
an examination for accountant I.
Salary in this position varies with
location

For further information contact
|the County Department of Per-
|sonnel, Syracuse

HILTON MUSIO CENTER .
beon Gulinrs, YAMARA
weed teetre-

MAYFLOWER - ROYAL COURT
APARTMENTS — Furnished, Un
furnished, and Rooms. Phone HE.
+1994. (Albany).

if I wanted
Service with Ne
Service Chargesa--
I'd contact...

The Keeseville National Bank
Keeseville, N.¥, 34-7333
Member ¥.D.LC.

TRAVELING? CALL
AMERICAN TRAVEL OF
THE CAPITAL DISTRICT
AT THRUWAY MOTOR INN
Opposite Stote Compus
AU Services Witheut Charge
eke
Iniividuale er Groupe

Phone 459 - 9010, Wisi!

— Reservas

ALBANY
BRANCH OFFICE

FOR [INFORMATION regarding a¢vertiatng.
Please write or call
JOSEPB T. BELLEW
203 60. MANNING BLYD,
ALBANY 8. N.Y. Phoove IV 2-B476

ARCO
|| CIVIL SERVICE BOOKS
ond all tests
|| PLAZA BOOK SHOP
380 Broadway
Albany, N. Y.
Mail & Phone Orders Filled

AWANY W YORK

CIVIL’ SERVICE BOOKS

SPECIAL RATES

for Civil Se Employee:

HOTEL

~
Wellington
DRIVE-IN GARAG!
AIR CONDITIONING « TV
pa nag)

Pomily rater, Cocktail lounge,

136 STATE STR:
@PPONTE STATE CAPITOL
hee pow Irisadty rere! eyent

SPECIAL WESKLY RATES
FOR EXTENDED SI 4YS

Page Fourteen

_eIVIL SERVICE. LEADER

Tuesday, August 16, 1966

Eligible Lists

PSYCHIATRIC STAFF
ATTENDANT

(Continted from previous editions)
1744 Pinckney © Broox
745 Warddiaw © Brooe
Ootila K Brome .,

947 Younkine GF Orinieburre

Parraile B Binghasmion
Richarde FF Marey
Bheman © Coline
Foausll C Medford
Poaan © Queena Vil

rvs

White $ Bronx

Staqi I Kings Paarl

Bove T Buffalo .

ke vee ore
R

59 Owen

@ Onoide
NY

Brooklyn
Plage W_ Brantwood
Watking M- Brooklyn
Huskabona L. Onttarrangu
Cxnnod G Cnoteraach

Br

Bangher
Fikee

Brine -D Puoshkorpsle
Casey W Haverstraw

Staten Te
T Keniaarskt § Rome ve
Roem B Stony Poin.

A Stony oPin

Hotelovever 0 Middtes
wares O Pereyabure
J Wingdale

M Relorse

Smith RK Bay Shore
Fr

Mi MeGrewo

‘Troniman R Oealereach

ki & Whtesboro

M. Ponghorpew
Rntarwes

P Butfalaa
N Wansale
Tomkine Co
Kings 4 stip
oJ

Sooner BK

Pair Jamaion

Killoran Re Brentwood
ft

Cl}
1 Fahey J Albany
20 Corran J

ST Keley Wo Troy

SPRCIAT,

‘Troy
‘Tramp BR Albany
Mewitt J Sens
3 imam A ate
MeGasugban

"ohnaiowa
Poulin D Utica a,
Mulverry 1 Albany.

MarDonald ‘P Clinton
Brown Re Schneetady
MarPhorsson Albany
2 Morehouse W Ravens
Conley RK Watervliet
Porkett © Albany
Jarsot D ackawanna
Shirley F Geneva
squire 2 Ravens
Webb O Albany ooo...
Vieming Re Rensssinar
@ 81 Johnavi
D_ Schnectady
Pinkana M_ Atbany
Allister BR Choos’
Comparetta @ Albany.)
Overion A Springtid @
Clement J ‘Tr

MeKeom Mf Albany

P Lockport |
B Ylushing
aid M Athany
Bailey Re _Schoweetady
Piers B Kenmore
Ziemike A. Cobone

Alvaro J Albany
h OC Delmar
h Harding B Albany |").
Faleanio L Green Tin

Render A Jamaica
Film Wo froy ....
Heed B Kenssslner
Indwig J Red Mook

Rooney L Albany
Huvden J Amatertan
Hendrie A Albany
Dovkat J Albany

8 Bosse Albany

Praneriia. ¥ Cosymnn
4 Booltcher Hf Babylon

| PRIN. MAIL & SORELY
— EIPUCATION
1 Clark % Stillwater

88
Anne
HON

POF, INDUSTRIAL.
EDUCA

Wielefeal

DEPUTY COURT CLERK,
CLERK'S OFFEOK, KRIK 00,

|

Arioe D Buffale |
Xadbenuch ¥ Boftalo a7 |
3 Jacobs Te Buffato m5)

Lohman B Rutfalo
Wipperman 4
Yromen Rufialo
Andrews M Butale |

i Bocobulte’ 8” Delmer
A Murphy B Matawan NZ
4 Streeter R_ Rochitenang
5 Mulligan R LICiy .,

PRINCIPAL oty'

iC WORKS

List A
Langhorst W Disghamion
fyman 0 Rh

List
k Marcioth K Delmar ...,..
Bis) Burnett W Sitogeriin
8 Nevin J Tonamaniia sal SENIOR HOONOMINT
4 Da Cotes 59 RESEARCH) —= INTKRDEPARTMENRAL
A Delnar 41/1 Hackus @ Binghamioa , f

Cropaay i

oa |
1 Flow M Albany

008 | Komroich  derioha”

2 Kaye Bo ONYO

900) talling provisions of the new re-

| benefit ls important, The follow-

3 1/60th retirement plan?

8 tire at age 3S. A pension of 1/60th |

}to April 1,

| F-06
16 Moore J Albany "|

ENGINERE, G34 {it *

| 34 Murnetter J * Schenectady

Provisions of 1/60th Retirement «
Explained By Comptroller Levitt.

ALBANY — “Before members of the New York State Employee’s Retirement System
— other than State employee members — may receive beneits under the new, non-contrt-
butory 1/60th retirement plan, their employers must file a resolution electing to come
within the provisions of the plan,” State Comptroller Arthur Levitt said today. The plan be-

tia| comes effective August 19, 1966.

‘This and other information de-

tirement allowance, in addition to
the foregoing pensions, will also

Urement plan was included in a ‘a ee pakd freak

special retirement bulletin sent
by the Comptroller's office to
Participating municipalities and
authorities now covered by the
old, non-contributory plan, The WHl mombers under spectal 20
bulletin wilt also be sent to alt °F 28 year retirement plans re-|
members and other participating | Cve any new benefits wader the’
employers of the New York State | *¥

Employees Retirement System up-|_ Yee The new pension will be)
paatierd Peso obaleepobm gegen |

This amendment to the law miney Soe eae ree eee
provides greater service oe | A 1960. This will be in Meu

ment and death benefits to State | Of Present pensions of 1/60th or

employees and other retirement |1/100th of final average salary

system members whose employ- Sade lancet one re ah ce|

era elect to adopt this plan. baer ergs than re |
The Comptroller, who sponsor-

ed the legislation, said, “Under- | Tetlrement ager

Beneficiaries of deceased mem-
standing your eventual retirement pent bon by tite ‘wil tas

ceive @ month's salary for each
year of service, to a maximum of
three years salary. The previous
maximum was two years salary,
‘The members contributiona will
also be refunded

When do the foregoing benefits
become available? |

On August 19, 1966, for mem-
bers who retire or dis on and |

employers have elected the plan, peopel gene: sky rid - %
In addition, it provides simplified | %,

ing questions and answers should
give both employees and employ-
ers & better understanding of
the new plan,

What fs the non-contributory —

It continues the non-contribu-
tory feature of the plan now in
effect for State employee mem-
bers and other members whose

automatically covered by the plan.
Other members are covered by
‘the plan when their employers #0
tleot. No action 1s required by any
member,

How does an employer partlol-

| pate in this plan?

An employer presently covered
by the provisions of subdivision
aa Section 70-n of the law
which provides for the former
non-contributory system must
adopt and file with the retirement
system a new resolution electing
to come within the provisions of
the non-contributory — 1/60th
retirement plan, This will make
the plan applicable on August 19,
1966 or when filed, whichever
shall last occur.

Any other employer must adopt
and file a similar resolution for
participation, This resolution,
however, must specify the first

payroll period after the date of
filing for which no contributions

| shall be required of retirement

system members in its employ,

Do the 1/60th pension benefits
and other benefits accrue to «
member from the effective date of
his employer's resolution?

No, The new, enlarged service

and beblax ‘benueiia’ before | 1967. Extension requires legisia-

and after retirement.

What are the improved retire~
ment benefits?

All members in the plan may re-

Does this mean that ia the
future a member will not be per-
| mitted to contribute?

A member formerly covered by
the old, increased take-home pay
plan now contributing shall oon-
tinue to contribute until he elects
otherwise. Any other mamber in

of final average salary is payable |
for each year of service from April
1, 1060. This ts in leu of the
1/120th or the 1/140th pension

id the nsion able from |
lnoreased takechonte ‘pay. funda, conteibute by filing an spproprt-

All covered members, whether | ®t form within one year,

now on the age 85 or the age 60| How does a member Join the |
plan, will be eligible for a 1/120th Non-contributory — 1/60th retire-
pension benefit for service prior | ment plan?

1960, The total re-| All state employes members are

1 Shepard P Yonkers

5 Hose © Bklyn

7 Ribando A Forest Hi
List B

1 Siorfor M- Detm
®t Harvey BR Albany

CHIRF CLERK, 6.-20—
INTERDER ART MENTAL

1 Tatia &

LATHAM — Officers of the
“tan | Office of General Services
aa || chapter, Civil Service Em-
#31! ployecs Assn, were Installed dur-
‘a76|4ng the chapter's annual dinner
lat the Jamaica Inn, here recently,

New officers installed by As-

& Bowman @ Rensselaer
7 Maher B Albany
® Mune W Croton,
D Crary H atbang
10 F W Albany
1? seu

P Hudson,

1 Wotaetate H Muushing sociation President Joseph F.
iy mereiestk bie: 4 iy were greeted by General ©.

15 Korean J

17 iornes BR Albany ,;
18 Metilt J Col
10 Wyeant @ Al

So Conference, assisted Feily.
| New chapter officers are: Wil-
President; Ozzie

‘go? dents: Lawrence Barry, Al Han-
39 sen, Karl Kent and Edgar Luby.
Wy Delegates are Douglas Barr,

3 | Lionel Carp, Jan Cohen and

Charney T Fulahing ..
33 Algor R Loudanvilt

aT Loweosteta

‘Fit | men are Walter Coulter, Patricia

qu Hay, Harry Kolothros and Grog-

763! ory Tobin,

SENIOR
BWARAROH)

NOMS (LABOR

— WXTERDEPARTMENTAL Lint
A 1 Storfer M Delmar .,

ths 4 Hareery ho Albaay

annem GmrroniAL

=s

4 Korareioh
5 Seacord P ‘rena’ L 2k: OF —
hae

rela Wanille 1. Seemwiews a8
700! & Davie B Alvan 4... “0

tive action. |

service on August 10, 1966 may)

.|ta house

retirement benefit is payable for
service since April 1, 1960. But, of
course, the service retirement ben-
efit and death benefit do not be-
|come available except upon @
| retirement or death which oc-
curs after August 19, 1966, and
only after the employer has elect-
ed to provide these benefits.

Will the 1/60th benefit generat-
ly be greater than the former
| 1/1ete or 1/140th benefit and
| the benefit payable from increased
take-home pay?

Yes. The lnw provides that in
the event it 1s not, the greater
benefit will be payable. However,
the comparison of retirement ben-
ofits must be made by consider-
ing the member's entire period of
service,

Rehabilitation Hospital
To Erect New Residence

WEST HAVERSTRAW — New
York State is planning to build «
new residence on the grounds of

-|the Rehabilitation Hospital here

63 nurses and other
~ |female employees.

Cost of the project ts estimated
‘at $600,000 and it will mee, a
“pressing housing problem” for
women employees at the hospital,
state officials said.

Governor Rockefeller noted the
new building would be “a val-
uable investment because the
West Haverstraw facility not only
restores the lives of its own pa-
tlenta bu; also is a pioneer in
training nurses and physical ther-
apists for rehabilitation work.

“This specialty,” he added, “ls
of particular need at hospitals and
nursing homes where more and
more persons will now be able to
enjoy the health care they re-
quire.”

Bids on the residence will be
opened an, Co

4
Tuesday, August 16, 1966

‘No Application For
City Case Workers

Needed: Public
Health Nurses

Many career jobs for nurses
being offered by the

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Page Fifteen

|Senior Clerk
|Jobs Open In
amore County

Clinton County is accepting ap-
| Dlications until

sry in this position ts $3,475 to

No previous applications are necessary for those wishing | United States Civil Service| 4115 per year

to take the written examination for New York City case

Legeeenatesainn on a continual
worker. Applicants may register on the test dates which,

basis. Currently available posi-

For further information contact
the County Civil Service Commis-

Aug. 26 for an
| ¢Xamination for senior clerk. Sal-

Senior Steno In
White Plains

The Municipal Civil Service
Commission of the City of White
Plains is accepting applications
until Aug, 26 for an examination
for senior stenographer.

For further information contact
the Municipal Civil Service Com-

according to a new policy, will be on the fret Tuesday of | tions are located in various parts | sion, Plattsburgh

every month. |

Applicants should report to the |
test center on the mezzanine, 40)
Worth St, Manhattan, at 9 a.m
or 1 pm. No advance application
is necessary, A baccalaureate de-
gree from an accredited college
is required for appointment. Pre-
Vious experience is not required.

Case worker I positions sre in
the Department of Welfare. Most
appointments are to the Bureau of
Public Assistance. Appointments
sre also made to the Bureau of
Child Welfare and the Bureau of
Special Services. The starting sal-
ary is $5,750 per annum with an
increase to $6,050 after six
months. At the end of one year
of satisfactory service employees
are advanced to case worker II et
96,400. Annual increments of $300
lead to « maximum salary of $8,-
200

‘The newly appointed case)
worker participates in « compre-
hensive orientation program
which includes training in the
investigating process and inter-
viewing techniques. Case workers
are responsible for a caseload |
which may require them to pro-
vide = variety of services to wel-|
fore clients. After two years, case
workers who wish to pursue «
master's degree in social work are |
eligible for any of over 200 grante
providing salary and tuition,

‘State Openings For
‘Sanitary Engineers

Applications are being ac-
cepted on « continual basis
by the New York State De-
partment of Civil Service for
&n examination for sanitary en-
gineer positions,

Salary ranges from $6,176 to
$9,880 for assistant sanitary en-

gineers to $10,000 to $12,110 for,

senior sanitary engineers.

For further Information contact
the State Deparment of Civil
Service, the State Campus, Al-

bany or the State Office Build-

ings, New York City, Buffalo and

Byracuse,

Onondaga County
Auditor Il Test
Open For Filing

The Onondaga County Depart- |

ment of Personne] is accepting
applications until Oct. 19 for an
examination for suditer HI. Sal-
jary in this position i $7,072 to
98.606.

For further information contact |
the County Depariment of Per-

‘sonnel, Syracuse,

of the United States, as well as in;
foreign countries. iz

Salary ranges from $4,345 to
| $10,635. There are positions as
staff nurse, head nurse, nurse
| supervisor, operating room nurse
| and many more.

There is no closing date for this
announcement.

For further information, con-
tact the New York City Regional
Office of the US, Civil Service
Commission mt 220 Bast 42nd
Street, and ask for announcement
128. |

Court Reporter Students |

Get Practical Experience

Assignments in the field at the
professional rate as high as #20
per hour have been obtained by
graduates of the  Sienotype
Academy at 259 Broadway, Man-
hattan, according to Mr. Milton
Paul Houben, Principal. The stu-
denta and former students who|
have obtained the skill required
are Donald Brayboy, Albi Gorn,
Bruce Hartman, Jean Jefferson,
Eileen Mercurio, Norma Oziery
and Julia White,

| Practical experience with the |
use of the stenotype machine {s|
| ros ided by the Academy. A fully |
jea courtroom provides a)
Feallatie atmosphere for students | ~
{preparing for court stenographer
testa.

| ‘The Academy is open from td
jam until 8 p.m. daily and Satu
day morning:

eos!

New Courtroom Dedicated |
At The Stenotype Academy

canna White Plains

Do You Need A
High School

for personal satix’action
Course Approved by
Sule Education Dept.

nen-pradvates of High School for:

Eqvivalenc Equivalency
DIPLOM .
This N.Y, Stote diploma Diploma
Aid ¥ the legol equivalent
yeor High Scheel Ie velvoble to | Lat geese
}

Our Special Intensive 5-Week | |
Course prepares fer o'
conducted at regulor inte
N. Y. Stote Dept. of Edveation.

Eastern School AL 4-5029
721 Broadway N.Y. 3 (at 8 St.)
free shout the Bieh

ai bas or 748 Peale

#£ OUR GUEST
AT A CLASS SESSION!
vi

FOR ALL TESTS

ARCO BOOKS AVAILABLE AT

PAUL'S BOOK STORE
18 H. 125th St, NY.City 38, N.Y,
nOOKS MAILED
SAME DAY AS ORDERED

10 AM, te & PLM.
Seturdey 11 A.M, te 6 P.M,

“jeer |
SCHOOL DIRECTORY

DELEHANTY INSTITUTE p04
115 Bent 13 St., Manhatten
oor

'

'
| ouerseri ied Some |
Hee

PAO

Tone. :
‘Adit to One WS. Equiv. Clam

PASS YOUR LEADER 0}
TO A NON-MEMBER

Bienotype machine shorthand secretoric
court reporting. Stoffed by CERTIFIED and
OFFICIAL court reporters. Dey/evenings/Set
Ch

FREE BROCHURE AT

)WO 2-0002
259 BROADWAY:

(t7ain ve Chambers St, Broviirn Bridge or City Mall Statham)

“4 pty

NE AT STENOTYPE ACADEMY during the proceedings held recently at the school, 259 Broad~

Standing from left to right: Milton Paul Houben, principal ef the Stenotype Academy, whe ||
introduced the speakers; Jack Champagne, forman of the Kings County Grand Juries, who related
his experiences in combating Ilick traffic In narcotios; Abraham Schlacht, guest of honor, who captl-
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assassination of President John FP, Kennedy; ory Perrin, former assistant district attorney, whe
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professor of taxation and member of the American Arbitration Association, who outlined ly in
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type Academy studenis whe took down every word of the proceedings om their sienotype machines
as an on-the-job assignment, The Stenciype tapes will be transcribed and analyzed. Stenotype
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CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

"1966 Legislative Report

(Continues trom Page 1) |

onda the Olvil Service Law that)
Provides for State employees
‘whose salaries are reallocated, the
game increment level in their new
eades that they had in their for-
mer grade. This waa effective
April 1, 1956.
L-12 SALARY PROTECTION ON
JOB ABOLITION — Purpose of
bill ls to provide a fuller measure
of salary protection to State em-
ployess who are shifted to lower
grade position upon abolition of |
their permanent position. Under
bhis law the salaries of such dis-
placed employees would not be
limited to the second step but,
Instead, they would be entitled to
receive the full salaries of their
abolished positions, providing the
employee does not refuse an offer
of permanent appointment to a
position in the same geographical
acca in a grade higher than the
position in which he is serving

L-30 RE-OPEN THE 55-YEAR
PLAN — Re-opens the 55-Year
Plan to December 31, 1966,

L-49 EMPLOYMENT AT RACE
TRACKS — Would enable public
employees employment at race
tracks and harness tracks whose
annual salary ts less than $10,000. |

L-78 CORRECTION OFFICERS
25-YEAR PLAN — Improves Cor-
recbion Officers 25-Year Plan, re-
Opens plan to September 1, 1966.

L-73 CORRECTION OFFICERS
25-YEAR PLAN — Allows mem-
bers who joined 25-Year Correc-
tion Officer Pian prior to Dec. 1,
1985 the right to withdraw thelr

option
L-36 «JUDICIARY PAY IN-
OREASE — Provides increased

compensation to all State paid
Officers or employees of Judiciary,
obher than judges and justices,
who are entétled to any compensa-
tion during fiscal year beginning
April 1, 1966, except where pay-
ment of additional or increased
compensation is not permitted by
‘Constitution
L-81 REUMBURSEMENT FOR
MEDICARE PREMIUMS OF AC-
TIVE AND RETIRED EMPLOY-
EES ENROLLED IN STATE
HEALTH INSURANCE PLAN —
Provides that appropriate deduc-
tions be made in contributions of
active and retired participants in
State Health Insurance Plan eli-
gible for medicare, and inclusion
of reimbursement in retirement
allowance of retired employees |
whose health premiums are paid
for In part or wholly through use
Of accumulated sick leave credits.
HEALTH INSURANCE PLAN —
Amends the Civil Service Law to
Provide that commencing October
1, 1966, persons who terminate em-
ployment with vesting privileges
and who were participants of the
Stale Health Plan can continue to
participate in the plan, paying
full cost of such coverage follow.
ing termination of employment
and prior to commencement of re-
trement allowance
RETIREMENT LOANS-MILIT-
AKRY SYSTEM — Amends Retire-
ment and Soctal Security Law
Provides that members absent on
military duty may borrow at any
‘time instead of before July 1, 1066. |
TEACHERS RETIREMENT,
SYSTEM — This amends the!

TION LAW — Amends Work-| FITS — Amends Retirement and
men’s Compensation Law in rela-|Gocial Security Law, to extend in-
tion to voluntary coverage of em-| crease in ontinary death benefit
ployees in municipal corporations | for members of State Employees’
under the disability benefits law.| Retirement System to deaths oc-
MEDICARE PAYMENTS —/ curing on or before June 30, 1967,
This bill authorizes the Comp-| instead of 1966.
trolier to deduct from the retire-| RETIREMENT - SPECIAL IN -
ment allowance of a retired mem-| TEREST — Extends provisions

jber the $$ charge for Part B of granting special interest to cor-

the Federal Medicare program) tain members (8 per cent mem-
upon filing the authority to do 90 | bers) of New York State Em-
ployees Retirement System.

with the Comptroller,
RETIREMENT — Amends re-| ansuSTMENT OF CIVIL SER-

| tirement social security law. Al-) vice EXAMINATION DATES

lows member or beneficiary of on RELIGIOUS HOLDAYS —

‘Tuenday, August 16, 1966

12 Point Program Submitted
To Board of Supervisors By
Nassau County CSEA Chapter

MINEOLA — The Nassau County chapter, Civil Service
Employees Assn, has submitted a 12-point program of em-
ployee benefits to the County Board of Supervisors and
Eugene Nickerson, county executive,

Irving Flaumenbaum, chapter president, has asked for
jan early meeting with county

| officials to discuss the program
| in order that 1 could be included
| in the 1007 budget.

The program to be discussed

retirement system whose monthly | Amends 850, Civil Service Law, to | includes:

State Health Insurance Program.
* A fully non-contributory
| Retirement System.
® Provision for a non-contri-
butory Dental Insurance Plan,

allowance Is less than $10 to elect
to receive the actuarial in « lump
sum.

AGE REQUIREMENT oF
POLICE OFFICERS — Amend
Section 58 of the Civil Service
Law and Section 243 of the Mil-
itary Law to deduct military duty
and time spent on terminal leave
not exceeding a total of six years
in computing age in determining
eligibility for appointment in the
competitive class of Civil Service
as potlee officers of force or de-
partment of any municipality or
police district.

RETIREMENT — ORDINARY
DISABILITY — Liberalizes bene-

| provide that @ person who because |

of his religious beliefs is unable
to take a civil service examination
on a day which is @ religious holi-
| day observed by him, shall be per-
mitted to take another examina-
tion on some other day designated
by the partioular civil service de-
partment
| CLASSIFICATION OF POSI-
TIONS AND SALARIES OF
| STATE UNIVERITY — Amends
5355-a, Education Law, to provide
shat beginning in 1966, any clasal-
| floation or reclassification of posi-
| tion in the service of state uni-
| versity, and allocation or reallo-
cation of position to certain salary

were ait of servivee and additional longevi-

Petes eapfael aia faene. | © True longeviviy after 10 years
© Cost of living increase. | of service and additional longevi-
© Implementation of the 1/eoun 17 inerements after 18 Years of

service,

wy tures yoat death, benefit; wa | © Tine-and-a-half for all over=
amended to the Retirement Law, ‘me for both per diem and per
© The $2000 death benefit for “NUM employees

retired employees under the Re-| © 8% differential

| tirement Law, work.

© A fully non-contributory, © Unemployment insurance.

for night

Wassaic State ‘School Honors
Evelyn Paddleford on Retirement

WASSAIO—Evelyn Paddileford, chief supervisor at Was-

| fits for members in employees re-| grade shall take effect at the be-

‘$5-Year Pian, who after age 60

tirement system enrolled In dhe | ginning of the payroll period the
first day of which ts nearest July
1 following approval of budget |

apply for disability retirement, to |

sale State School was honored at @ recent tea given in the
auditorium of the boys' school. Miss Paddleford is retiring
after 43 years of State service.

Miss Paddieford received many

he accorded a retirement allow- |
ance based on provisions of the |
55-Year Plan. This is offective
July 1, 1966.

LEAVE OF ABSENCE FOR)
VETERANS — Amends Public Of-
fleers Law in relation to leave of
absence for veterans and extend- |
ing the privilege to members ot |
the air force or coast guard of |
the United States who have been |
honorably discharged in the same |
manner of the privilege extended |
to those members of the regular
army, navy or marine comps. — |

RETIREMENT INVESTMENTS
— Amends Retirement and Social
Security Law to allow trustees of |
State Employees Retirement Sys-

director and appropriation
funds.

EMPLOYMENT PRIVILEGES vy. Salsman, director of nursing |

FOR RETIRED EMPLOYEES —
Amends S2i4, Retirement and

privileges to certain persons re-
tired from public service, to in-

| clude retired persons employed |

before July 1, 1964, instead of dur-
ing the year immediately preced-
ing July 1, 1064

STATE THRUWAY RETIRE-
MENT BENEFITS — Amends
8167, Civil Service Law, to auth-
orive State Thruway Authority to

tributes and gifts from her co-
| workers and friends, Dr, Lillian

services; Miss Evelyn Perry, diree-
| tor of education services; and

| Social Security Law, to extend| Miss Y. Blimabeth Parr, assistant
| Provisiona granting employment

| director of education services
| trom the central office in Albany,
| attended and represented the De-
partment of Mental Hygiene.
Dr, George FP. Biling, director,
read letters from Charles I. McAl-
lister, deputy director of the divi-
sion of mental retardation; Dr.
Arthur W. Pense, former assistant
commissioner of the Department
of Mental Hygiene now retitred:

| elect to make additional contribu-| Md Dr. Harold Schiller, formerly

| tions toward changes for health On the sohool medioal staff. All

tem to invest part of tte asseta in for retired employees | Paid tribute to Mies Paddleford

first mortgages or real propery
located anywhere within boun-

| and their dependents and ts based | for her long yeare of service and
jon value of unused accumulated | Outstanding devotion to the pa-

Compensation Bill

Coordinators OK'd

| ALBANY — Governor Rock-
efeller has approved, as a
|“temporary solution,” a bill to
|benefit county fire coordin-
ators and deputy fire coordinators
in connection with the Workmen's
Compensation Law but urged its
sponsors to work with appropriate
[State agencies toward “an im-
\proved long-range solution,”

| The approved legislation pro-
vides a method for computing the
average weekly wage of such fire

daries of the United States sub- | | tlemts, employees and institution. |coordinators, who are also volun-
| sick leave at time of retirement. d +}
Jeot to present limitations for In-| Syoronan CREDIT FOR| The hall was decorated with | ‘eer firemen for the purpose of

compensation and

vestments in conventional mort-| Vprppang OF VIET NAM OON-| flowers donated by Dr. Biling and determining

ai ‘This is effective ummediate- | FEICT — Amends vec. 85, Civil!
¥ | Service Law, for additional credit

| TRAVEL EXPENSES — Aut for veterans in competitive exam. | ments.

orives appointing authorities Of | inations, w include hostilities tn |

the employees, The food service death benefits under the Work-~
department furnished the refresh. en's Compensation Law.

“In the past I have been con-
The committee for the arrange- strained to withold my approval

‘state departments or agencies to

reimburse persons for transporta-|
tion expenses incurred in travel to!
attend interviews conducted by |
departments and agencies for |
positions for which the Civil Ser-)
vice Department finds that there |
exists a shortage of qualified oan-|
didates.

RETIREMENT  OONTRIBU -
TIONS — Continues for another
year, provisions that contributions
by members of employees retine-
ment system shall be reduced by
6 per cent and additional 3 per
cent of compensation of menibers.

RETIREMENT OONTRIBU -
TIONS — Extends for another |
year, provisions to continue pay- |
ment in excess of 8 per cont to
members contributions.

VESTED - RIGHTS RETIRE -

Viet Nam.

Annual Picnic Held By
Wassaic State School

WASSAIC — Members of the
Wassaio State School chapter, |
Civil Service Employees Assn., con-
ducted their annual picnic here
recently,

The committee in charge of ar-
rangementa included Richard J.
Snyder, chairman, Marguerite
Brawner, Clara Pusey, Thomas
Hoffman, Joseph Mann, Milford
Beal, Thomas Aheran, Stanley An-
guin, Raymond Sullivan, Roy
Simpson, Edith Bolsevert, Florean
Snyder, Leo Ballinger and Byelyn
Sherman.

|

ments tnoluded: Dr, Enest 8,
Steblen, chairman; Mrs. Alma
O'Neil, Miss Martha Jakway, Mrs,
Mary Gilbert, Mrs. Adelain Tripp,
and Mrs, Madalyn Herbert,

|Mrs, Lenoard Named

To Nassau GS Post

John R. Niesiey, chairman of
the Nassau County Civil Service
Commission, has announced the
appointment of Mrs. Adele Leon-
ard of Merrick as secretary and
ohief examiner for the Commis.
sion. Mrs. Leonard, a oareer oivil
service employee, succeeds George
W. Simmons, Jr., whose resigna-
tion became effective August 4.

Mre, Leonard placed number
One Of At OPEN CoMYperbiive Stati

BMlucation Law in relation to the MENT — Bxtends to April 1, 1067
time limitation upon the transfer | for members of the retirement
Of contributions between the New | system provisions w apply for
York Stale Teachers Retirement vested retirement allowances on
Gystem and other retirement ays-| attaining 55 years of age or with
tome, 10 years of total service at age 60,

WORKMEN'S OOMPENSA-| RETIREMENT DEATH BENE-

Petrella Named

Governor Rockefeller announced
the appointment of Albert J. Pet-
rolla, $48 Parker Avenue, But-
falo, as @ field consultant in the
New York State Office of Boo-
nome Opportunity.

Otvil Services test for personnel
technician in 1063, Tn 1005, she
placed firet ia @ promotion test
for senior personnel technician,
the highest competitive vitle in
Soe CHAE Ho Heinen: Chciante-

|from bills with a similar purpose
because of their cumbersome for~
mulas and the administrative dif-
ficulties which they could create,”
the Governor said. “While this
bill overcomes these specific ob-
Jections and is sufficient as @
temporary solution I urge the
sponsors of the bill to work with
the Office for Local Government
and the Workmen's Compensation
Board in an effort to develop an
improved long-range solutioa
which can be offered at the next
|sesston of the Legislature."*

Vetoed— With Pleasure

ALBANY—Governor Rockefeller
vetoed @ bill increasing the pay
of certain Barge Canal employees,
noting:

“Zam please to announce thas,
while this bill was pending before
me for execitive action the Civil
Service Commission reallocated to
higher salary grades the positions
held by the Barge Canal employees
covered by this bili."

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Date Uploaded:
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