Civil Service Leader, 1955 October 18

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Ciwil Sewier 45th CSEA
EADER Annual Meeting

America’s Largest Weekly for Public Employees
Vot. XVII — No. 6 Tuesday, October 18, 1955 Price Ten Cents

Powers Re-elected President:

CSEA Seeks 20 P. C. Raise
And Maximum 40-Hour Week

Lamb Is New 5th Vice President;

!
Pay Resolution Asks Fund to Correct Inequities,
Harry Fox Leads in Vote

ALBANY, Oct, 17 John F. Upon reassuming the office

Powers, of New York City, has President, 1 do so w
of humility, T am

State-Paid Medical -Surgical-Hospital Insurance

1 a feeling) ALBANY, Oct, 17 — The Civil istration put inte force the CSEA|seek administrative and

legisia=
ateful to the Service Em

joyees Association jrequest, those employees now |tive approval of an appropriation
a me and Iwill seek a 20 percent across-the-|working a 40-hour week or less|of sufficient funds to provide the
ay tribute to my opponent for board increase in base salaries, | would recelve 20 percent more pay

been elected to his third term as
pre

nbers Who SUppC

ent of the Civil Service Em-

following benefits:

ployees Association. the forthright and honorable way and a mandatory maximum fivi |than at pr mt; those working 44 “1, A 20 percent across-the-
He thus becomes the first CSEA|in which he conducted his cam-|day, 40-hour work week, for all| hours would get 10 percent more | board increase in base salaries for
head to serve a two-year term, | paign. State employees, in thelr pay envelopes, and a 40-|all State employees:
Mr. Powe hered a total of The problems before our As-| The salury resolution was first |hour week; and those working 4s| ‘2, Establisiment of a fund

to the 6,407 of his op- | soctation are

easy to solve. |in state-wide importance, as well|hours would enjoy a 40-hour week |sufficient to provide for co

ponent mond G, Castle, of |To carry out the ates of our jas first in the order of business,{at the same salary they now get|tion of inequities which continue

Syracuse we will need a strong |a Association's 45th annual|for 48 hours to exist and those which may be-
SI after hix installation as on; we will need the|meeting here last week. | Text of Salary Bid come apparent as a result of fu-

president, Mr. Powers issued le which only unity can| Heart of the matter ts the! ‘The text of the salary resolu-!ture developments

following statement te we will need the best|phrase “base salaries.” If the |tlon | “3. An inerease in the State's

LEADER: | (Continued on Page 14) |State Legislature and the Admin-| “Resolved, that the Association (Continued on Page 14)

t

Employees Associa-
last week for two-
year terms. From left, Joseph F, Feily, lst vice

Harry G. Fox, treasurer; Ver
ith vice president; John F. Powers, r
William J, Connally, 3rd vice pres

Robert L. Soper,
Lamb, 5th vice

2nd vice president, a
president,

Page Two

ErvVil SERVICE LEADER

rison Officers
ote Program;
eek Pension Gain

BEDFORD HILLS, Oct Mi. Kixco; Jame Folts, Woodburne

The Prison Officers Guitare | aa Cornelius Rush, Stormvilie,
of New York, whose members work | Secretaries are Gerald Farley, St.
in State, county and elty penal] Albans; William Warfield, South

Institutions, will press for enuct-|Ozone Park; Mary Garigliano,
ment of a 20 and 25-yenr pension | Bedford Hills and Prank Wolf,
system for prison aldes at the | Brooklyn, Maxwell Virgil of As-
next Jegisiative session. toria was named treasurer.

Harry Dillon of Auburn State| Legislative representatives; Har-
Prison and Nathan Smith of the |ry Dillon, Charles Lamb, James
NYC Corrections Officers Benovo- | Nugent, Alex Schachner and Na-|
Jent Association are chairmen of | than Smith.
the pension committee. NYC Correction Officers Backed

More Than 100 Attend Ete Teste etavO Ginter rence
{sts of Robert Bliss, Elmhurst;

More than 100 representatives | O° Spooks, Bronx: Sam Con-
from every section of the Stu her Rochester: Joe DeCaterina
convened here for the ninth |i iieh: Aaron Peltinutein, Bay
acihons eaten Ric William Gansert Elmira;

“The feht to build membership +o. Gitteran, Ossining; Olen Kel-
hss just begun," said the retiring | shea awry ~ Heaton
“sdscus anima tceay bion: Patrick McCawley Ossining;
Island, “Only through unity C80 | gchael McLoughlin, pees | __ 2s
we accomplish our legisialive| oid Noonan, Poushkeepsle
alms.” ‘The conference had 2.014 Wit, o-prien, Kingston; Tom
members, out of @ potential Of| Or nard, Long Island City; Jane
+ PercheskiRichmor William

Peoples Elected Pritchard, Kings; Rose Spobler,

John Peoples of Plattsburgh | Stoatsburg; Irving Weiner, Wil-
Was elected president for the com-|liamsburg and Arthur Williams
ing year, Vice presidents sre | West Coxsackie,

Robert Lee, Alden; Nellie Larner Nugent Lauded

New offic will be in

Alba:

tallied at
in Janu

Senior Clerk —
Exam in State
Closes Oct. 21

the meetin:

ain
ary
Co-ch

of the 40-hour

are Jim

irmen
equal pay program
and Irving Weiner.
e confer voted to back
in their
back pay.
James tiven a!
anding his excellent |
ewardship of the conference in
ws president, “I will
serve whenever

week
Polts
!
NYC
request

ence
correction officer

retroactive
ont wa
ion for

his two yqars

continue to you

ations will be received by oa Gace ier ined
the State Civil Service coat

ment until Friday, October

from qualified State enploveen

in an exam for promotion to
jor clerk. The written test will be
held on Saturday, November 19.

‘Fire Inspection

The pay ranges from $2,870 to C id |
$3,700, five $166 annual incre- ourse S ven |
ments accounting for the in-
crease

The application fee is $2 BUPPALO, Oct, 18—An inten-

Candidates who are permanent | Ve 60-hour course In fire inspec:

tion winds up on Saturday, Octo- |
ap-| ber 22. It is being given by the
positions | Bureau of Fire Mobilization and
5. and | Control, State Division of Safety, |
Michel H. Prendergast is Division
ctor.

Members of the Bureau staff
and of the fire service are instrue-
tors, Including three county fire
| instructors — Frederick Diets of
Poughkeepsie, Willam McGee of
Buffalo, and John Sedor of Bing-

bs hamton. Other faculty members
received an honorary cokigge 8 r aapaiat

employees of Stute

or Institutions permanently

polnted to competitive

on or before Augst 19, 1

if in titles that are eligible, may

compete. D
|

departments

New York Postman
Gets Chief's Plaudit

Michael Rupin, 1
foreign section of
Post Office,

aicientl as Gah are Wesley Farrington, Deputy
seEe Commixsioner of Public Safety,

master Robert H. Schaffer for a| ©° a

pa eg White Plains, and William May-
Mr. Rubin recommended that| Walt, captain, Auburn Fire De-

certain headings in the depart-| Partment

ment’s international | Comments Invited

schedules be printed more legibly We solicit comments,” sald Di
Mr. Rubin tion also| rector Prendergast, “The course

brought forth congratulations | will be revised to reflect the beat
wm Postmaster General Arthur | thinking of the fire service, and

Summerfield. will be made

| available to counties
for the training of fi

inspectors

In the Division of Safety we have

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER ® great, den Of respect for the

America’s Leading Newsmaga abilities of our county fire instruc-
xine for Public Employees tors’,

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER,

97 Duane St,, New York 7,
Telephone: BEekman 3-G010 VA HONORS JUDEM
Entered as second-class matter For outstanding work as chair

October 2, 1939, at the post of- ||

fice at New ¥ a. Y., unler man of ¢ a rane boned, adjudi
the Act of March 3. 1879, || ication division of the New York
Member of Audit Bureau of || Regional OMce of the Veteran
Cireulations, | Administration, Bertram Judem

Subscription Price
Year, Individual copies.

$3.50 Per

received a $260 award and a cer-
Me.

Ufcate of appreciation,

jan

Jacob Tick (seated), Comptroller of Erie County,

id newly installed officers of Erie

County Home and Infirmary unit, Civil Service Employees Association. Mrs. Jennie Cuger,
seoted at left, is 2nd vice president, and Mrs. Esther Husson, president. Standing, Nicheles

Ginanelli, orator; Mrs. Helen Schindlebeck, recording secretary; John Husso:

Mrs, Linda Vroman, financial secretary; Mrs. Evelyn Molinaro, Ist vice president, and Teak
M. Kurtzman, CSEA field cut rascal

Fast Hiring of Stenderds cur Electricians,

Accountants
Planned by U.S.

An exam for Siling U.S. jobs as
accountant and auditor will be
held on Saturday, November 19,
for those who apply not Inter than
Tuesday, November 1,

Apply to the U.S. Civil Service
Commission, 641 Washington 8t.,
New York 14, NY.

Early hiring is expected

Thos who apply after November
1 will be calied to later written
tests,

Jobs will be filled at $3,670 to!

start.

Completion of a four-year
lege course, with 24 hours in
counting, or technical experience
equivalent to a four-year college

col-

| ngineering
“JobsCanBeFilled

How is
President's Office carrying on

the Brooklyn. Borough |
its
work despite a grievous shortage
of junior civil engineers?

We're hiring persons who are
not true engineers, those with two
years of college, and making do,”
said Borough President Jobn
Cashmore at a recent NYC Board

|of Estimate meeting

| Jewish State Aide
|Group Meets Oct. 26

| ‘The Association of Jewish State |

Employees will meet October 26 at
|5:15 P.M. in Hearing Rooms 1
and 2 in the State Office Butld-
ing, 80 Centre Street, NYC,

Pians will be made at that time
|for the 4th annual Chanukah din-
ner-dance, for which Ben Kra-

mer, Edna Carlin and Samuel

course, entities any one to take Reader will be co-chairmen,
the test who is a U.S, citizen.| Morris Gimpelson, of the Mo-
‘There: aro no) age: limits. tor Vehicle Bureau, association
Possession of a certificate a> ®| president, announced that all
public accountant also entitles | Jewish State employees wishing to
one to compete. Join the group may receive Infor-
Attractiveness Stressed |mation by contacting him at
‘The eligible roster will be used Swi Be Gals One

for filling Jobs
tor, and Internal Revenue agent,
over the United States, in:
cluding the Metropolitan Di
but not the Internal Revenue
Service in the Metropolitan Dis-
trict, which has
lint.

After six
training,
lows, After 18 months, advance-
ment to $5440 is possible,

months’

# accountant, audi- |

a sizeable eligible

satisfactory |
promotion to $4,250 fol-

after

SOCIAL SECURITY AIDE
GETS $230 MERIT AWARD
Warren C, Wolf of the
urity Administration has
ceived @ $230 cash award for a
|suggestion improving efficiency
and economy of agency operations.
Other awards: $150 to Edna I.
Tamaroff; $100 to Bernard J, Ma-
jeuire, $80 to Edna A. Bennett;

ch one becomes eligible for |#40 to Sarah G. Greenberg; 30 to

promotion to $6,390.
‘At present

tunities are excellent,” says the
U.8, Civil Service Commission,
Appointee ay go in for gen-

eral, cont, of
auditing

‘The nature

tax accounting,

tivities is such,” reads the official
announcement, “that there will}
ever be a shortage of stimulating
problems to be solved.

THADDEUS PODOSEK NAMED
TREASURER
Governor

ONEIDA COUNTY
| ALBANY, Oct. 17
Harriman has appointed
deus M. Podonek, of
Mill

er, Mr

Thad.

promotional oppor-

or
\s, Mandell.

of government ac-

New York |
as Onelda County Treasur-
Podosek succeeds Stanley

Morton A. Lebow; $25 to Irving
Felner, Harriet B. Green and
| James G, Brawley; $15 to Anthony
'T. Perrotti, Winifred Lemkau, Max
Stamler and James Ca
to Arthur Goldsmith

BAO

Social |
re- |

$10)
and Diana}

Boatbuilders,
Riggers Sought

The US. needs boatbullder
electricians (power plant), rig-
jgers, and sandblasters,

‘The jobs pay $15.28 to $17.84

a day, a@ five-day, 40-hour

|week. or up to $89.20 a week,
Requirements: a four-year ap-

|prenticeship in the trade, or four

years of equivalent experience,
For electrician, training or ex

perience will be accepted on «

for

year-for-year basis, for up to
three years,
Sandblasters must have at least

six months’ experience in the op-
eration or maintenance of fixed
and portmble sand-blast or abra-
sive-blast equipment in the clean-
ng of metal parts.

Tn addition, all candidates may
ave to pass a practical test,

Apply to the Board of U. B,

|

\Civil Service Examiners, New
|York Naval Shipyard, Brooklyn 1,
N.Y., or the U, 8. Civil Service
Commission, 641 Washington
Street, New York 14, N.¥., until
further notice,

| ‘The exam ts No, 2-1-12 (55),
Mention title and number

| chen applying,
FAST HIRING OFFERED
TO ARCHITECT, ENGINEER
‘The NYC Department of Health
jofte rs immediate hiring in these
$35,450 jobs;
| Assistant architect; bachelor's
|degree in architecture and three
years’ experience required.
| Assistant mechanical
B.A. degree and three
mechanica) engineering
ence required
Apply to the department's bu-
reau of personne} and budget, 125
Worth Street, Room 344, NYC,

ngineer;
years’
experl-

Exam Study Books

Excellent study
in preparation toi

nawered on civil se

Questions

vice, Address Editor, The LEADER.

§. J. MAU APPOINTED
TO STATE SCHOOL COUNCIL
| Governor Harriman has an-

|nounced the appointment of Shae

jron J. Mauhs, of Cobleskill, as a
member of the Cor 1) of the
| State University Institute of Ag-

|riculture and Home
Cobleskill,

Mr, Mauhs succeeds David En
ders whose term expired July 1,
| Members of the counct!

onomics ab

L, Evans, of Utica, who resigned, 97 Duane Street, New York 7, N.¥, YeMr won-salaried torms,

erve nine

:
CIVIL SERVICER LEADER

Page Three

|Association Has
'5 New Chapters

ALBANY, Oct. 17 — There are
five new chapters in the Civil Ser-
vice Employees Association, The
| directors charter committee,
Charles J. Hall, chairman, repart-
| ed that new units are: Syracuse

Division Thruway Authority Em-

ployees; ‘Western Division Thru-
| way Abthority Employees; Taconic

State Park Commission; New York
| si

* Thruway,
and Lewis County.

Albany Division,

| Other committee members: Eve
Armstrong, Solomon Bendet, Peter

| Chester Nodine.

‘Annual Wage
Is Sought for
PW Per Diems

| ALBANY, Oct. 17—State Public

| Works employes will press for an

Raymond G. Castle, defeated candidate for CSEA president, | Sonus! Wane poled pee
congratulates John F. Powers on his re-election to the As- | Woree?s of the department, at no
| reduction in present pay, and 11

sociation's top office,

paid holidays a year,

| A resolution to this ¢

| voted Inst

| delegates to tt
ing of the Civil

Association President
Sums Up CSEA Year ae amuse

| form rate of pay throughout the

ice Employees
ociation,

ne objective L

¥, OCT lowing is, pub! employees and has con-| department, and to provide paid
Brendon: of the <avit Sersies BN aes nad t the standards of | time off on holidays is deducted
Ployees Association, on CSEA ac-) work which they have set for in-| from annual leave
eyes Cee See pene CONDE: | Cereal Sones Rejected was a motion to seek
1954 to October, 1955, However, ax we all know, the | : , "
The year which just ended fuct problem is r Vely easy of solu- i tae = ey pal : on
the Association on’ September 30/00 In all areas except that of based on & hour year, for
a year of marked changes | !stitutional Here the | the department's laborers
within our organiaztion, We have Probl on mene poet Charles J. Hall, Public Works
% only had changes which af-| Problem of insufficie ersonnel | renresontative on the CSEA :
fected our Internal structure, but|S8d administrative costs, Also, | FePreneniatlve on the CARA Board

| of Directors, presided at the ses-
sion, at which Warren Welch, the

among our own members, we find

also the advent of a new admini-
| strongly div

station has brought with it some

ided {celings as to how |

new problems of adjustment. psy nse Theo ahente hace ck | department's personnel director,
See Maasai for institutio employees can edinar: ton 5 t

The di tna nich, oo-| best be -efented. “These steung | PARE Tucker, head account clere

pecial vote of the|{eclings which our members en-| Of the Albany office, and William

curred by a
delegates at a meeting in July of | &
1955 was the change of greatest |
internal importance to the Assoct-
ation, As president I had urged

head account clerk,
Babylon, answered delegates’ ques-
tions,

ain have made a clear and un-| Greenauer
atandable program for our As-
ulate. I since

delegates at

sociation to form
hope that our

|

‘Real Progress’

Reported

In CSEA Bid for Higher
Subsistence-Mileage Rates

| ALBANY, Oct, 17 — The spe
cial committee on subsivtence and
mileage has “mode progress”
ward an adjustment in such al-
|lowances to State employees, Roy
McKay, chairman, told delegates
to the 45th annual meeting of the

tion.
"L feel justified in expressing
some confidence that adjustment

may be made in the near future,”
he said.

Mr. McKay and committee
tmembers—Robert J. Merklinger,

| Michael Murphy, Maurice G. Os-
borne and William R. Roberson
submitted the following report on
background of the current nego-
tintions with the State Adminis-
tration:

| ‘The CSBA special committee on
subsistence and milenge rates has
been active during the past year
in an effort to secure an increase
in the present allowance of 11 a
day for traveling expenses, and 8
oe mile for personally owned
automobiles operated on State
business. In the middle of July.
we addressed a letter to Comp-
trolier Arthur Levitt in which we

stated that we felt that the pres-
Inadequate
to

ent
and a
meet with t
representative
matter further, At that time
advised us that his departme
had had the matter under ady
and had discussed it with the
rector of the Budget, as well
having provided the Office of the
Budget with s memorandum look-
ing toward modification of exist-
ing scheditle

During this time, the commit-
tee had been compiling data in
preparation of conferences that
we hoped might be held with the
|State Administration to discuss
| the problem, We also enlisted the
|

allowance
d for

were
an opportunity
or his des!

to discuss

he
at

aid of the Association's research
staff to assist us in reviewing in-

formation and analysis of the
data that we had. This research
report was presented to your

|chairman on August 26, and much
Jof this data was included in a
lienethy letter addressed to Comp-
troller Levitt on September 13

In response to our submission
of extensive factual material, we
| d acknowledgment of our

from the Deputy Comp-
troller on September 19.
| Then on September when

the Comptroller returned to State
duty, he wrote Mr. Powers again
acknowledging the letter of Sep-

|. Hilton, Joseph McKenzie and | Civil Service Employees Axsocla- | tember 13, and stated, in part:

“The facts set forth in your
letter are revealing and most per=
svasive, I share your view as to
the Importance of the problem,
and agree completely that a con-

ference would be helpful, I sug
gest that you phone me for the
purpose of arranging an agree-

able date.”
| At the time of writing this re-
port, this conference had not ta-
ken place. It is presently my in-
|tention to bring you up-to-date
| verbally in the svent that there is
|further progress to report, (No
|supplementai report wag given —
Editor.)

It is my feeling that it is im-
Pperative that the State make ade-
[quate adjustment for subsistence
|and milenge allowances because
|the present ones are insufficient.
It also my feeling that this
committee has made progress to-
| ward securing an adjustment, and
in Hight of the Comptroller's let-
ter of September 28, feel justified
in expressing some confidence
that adjustment may be made in
the near future.

I would Hke to expr my
thanks for the cooperation of the
other members of this committee,
as well as the staff of the Asso-
ciation

~|Mame of R. L. Munroe

| To Be Inscribed on
CSEA Memorial

ALBANY, Oct. 17 — The name
|of Raymond L, Munroe will be
inscribed on the Memorial Plaque
of the Civil Service Employees As-
|sociation, with appropriate cere-
|monies, in the near future,
| Delogates to the CSEA Annual
meeting Inst week approved the
|recommendation by the special
memorial plaque committee that
‘this be done.

ting will successfully resolve
and present your of-
4 mandate which can
interpreted so that your

strength
eve this much needed goal.

that the dues be Increased to $10,
and added my efforts to achieve |
that end. I had urged the increase
to that figure because I felt that
the expanding program of the As-
sociation needed at the very least,
& doubling of our dues, However
the delegates at a special meting

icer t
be clearly
organization can lend its

wi

to act

Legislation

Our legislative progra eC
on July 29, voted to increase the Re recat th tat oe
Satopia Oa ae 4% marked victory for the
y hope that when this problem Arvicnk Ak & result. ¢ ‘
pe Byori thar Seip Sel nea vices AS a result of] ALBANY, Oct. 17 — Soclal Se-
Of a further increase in dues to Which hits closed pablic mt. | curity is no substitute for sound
meet the needs of our growing or- a every c on Saturday, | !ocal retirement systems, John
Ganization will be seen. » off are closed tt yne, : © Na-
offices are close Me y oynt, vice chairman of the Na.
Forty-ho in
Parr dan! ec Plage CE fra | suns instead, of te, the tional Conference on Public Em
bersistent prob! ic * | only. ner front, we suc-| 44, assassin kVA
been facing our Association for) cecded in getting a bill affecting | PY Rotirement Systems
some years has been the 40-hour | the State employeca so that they | %@ here.
week, The oclatic aS aly ® y ‘ " * |
menithatisnd that pringeins aainigiog may be pald at the end of every| Mr. Coyne, principal speaker at
the maximum established for alll month This Tit wiht be ciccivy| the final dinner of the 45th an-
Mes Jon April 1, 1956. It was a bill | "val meeting of the Civil Service
| which we have been trying to have | Employees Association, declared
Health Aides Debate | pased for a long time. This was a| that Social Security can not al-
slative victory of great impor-|ways be adopted to meet the
| wi tance for Lhe Associatio js
40-Hour Week, Pay Aig Garth seed the | #teatly varied retirement prob-
For Hazardous Work |iay which was ena but also | lems which occur in different to-
ALBANY, Oct. 17— Ramifica-| because it represents the persistent | calities throughout the country.
tlons of the 40-hour week for in- | efforts of the Association, was the | While integration of Social §
stitutional employees, with no loss | the right of m hearing, and veo | curity with Jocal retirement sys-
in present take-home pay, occu-| rese an by counsel for all com-| Wms Is sometimes desirable, it ts
pled much of the meeting of | petitive as employees against| Obvious that the local stems
Btate Health Department dele- | ¥0m disciplinary action has been | must be made even stronger than

Bates to the CSEA annual meet~| Givi Sortice Con reed the) they are now to provide equitable

ing state those employees who wore | 994 Just
Hasardous pay for TBS Service| found innocent by the Commis-| public employ:

retirement plana for all
5, Mr, Coyne said

workers who do not get the extra| S98 On appeal from a dismissal | He is a former president of the
compensation, for those who work | FEF pr re Rope Reggeneagstal Massachusetts Employees Assocl-
im the Division of Laboratories | bil, Tt has had. persistent oppo. | Sto
and Research, and for those in| sition from many quarters. Its of Mr, Coyne's address embraced
the new arcas of laotope treat. | forts were rewarded this year/many aspects of both types of
snenh. was > dlactnand when the bill became law in April, | sonsion plans,
Delos ua The Association also won a long 5

legates urged & 3TYe-bOUF|iovintative fight of over ten years| ‘The dinner, held October 11
week for office employees in the] when the bill to grant unemploy-| was presided over by Joseph D.
@opartmont’s institutions, and the | ment insurance to State employees | Lochner, CSEA executive seere-

on the same basi
private

eating of retirement rights. as employees 1) tary, As toastm

industry was passed and

ster, Mr.

Lochn

r

John Coffey presided. He, Char- saa laee appeared in top form and roused
Jotte M, Clapper and Emmett J. | issuance of the Executive | hls audience to laughter many
Durr answered questions from 0 | Qader by Governor Harriman on | times during the evening

(Continued om Page 16)

|

On the dais during the dinner

JOHN E. COYNE
Expert on public employee re-
ement systems and guest
speaker at CSEA meeting,

|

session were several State and
city oMelals including Deputy
State Comptroller Joseph Kelly,

William J, Murray, ade
director, State Civil Ser
partment, and Maxwell Lehman,
NYC Deputy City Administrator,

Association dignitaries on the
dais included Mr, and Mrs. John
F. Powers, Joseph F. Feily, Harry
G, Fox, Charlotte M, Clapper,
| Virginia Leathem and Labelle

nistrative
¢ De-

Expert Terms Local
Pension Plans Best

JOSEPH D, LOCHNER
CSEA executive secretary who
| demonstrated his expertness
at the task of toastmastering,

| O'Hagan

Edward D, Meacham, and J.
Earl Kelly, both of the State Civil
| Service Department, were intro-
duced from the audionce,

Miss O'Hagan read the election
results at the dinner on behalf of
the A

ociation’s Board of Can-
vassers. stood in place of
Mrs, M ©, Meskil, board
chairman, who was committed to

& previous speaking engagement,
Page Four civ

FL SERVICE LEADER ‘Tuesday, October 18, 1955

‘Grade 3 Clerk Pay Is Called Far Too Low

Grade 3 clerks in the NYC

Board of Education are being of-
aries

ere aa “Our records reveal that there |

under the Carcer and Salary Plan,| a6 959 3rd grade employees. in|

says the Association of Adminis-| the service of the Board of Edu-

years. ‘They have assumed addi-
tional duties and responsibilities
that should be rewarded.

500. For the present grade 3 em-
ployee. This is $56 Jess a year
than what they now receive upon
entering the grade.

“The new plan should provide
pay commensurate with satisfac-

trative Employees. Objections to} cation, 30 whom have from 35 to | tory service over a long period of
the clerical reclassification Avil be |40 years of service, and 51 of | years, and grade 3 should be

.g-|Whom have from 25 to 34 years | placed in salary scale 9, as recom.
Wolced by. James P. Gartisy. 108° | or service. ‘The remaining 160] mended by the Boatd of) Suen
Islative representative, before the |Ai16 trom three to 24 years of | tion, $4,250 to $6,390, instead of
State Civil Service Commission, | service, | crade 6, $3,500 to $4,580, As the
which had before it, for decision..| “"Grade 3, a senior clerk, has a | result of downgrading, employees

a resdlution pa
The grade 3 clerks in City serv-

d by NYC. Jower entrance minimum than at were disqualified from the 40 per-

|

present, and a pitifully smail|cent of the raise, retroactive to
ice, too, are not sufficiently re-| maximum increment, There is a | July 1, 1954, enjoyed by others in
warded, Mr. Gaffney said: The) three-year longevity wait before | the higher brackets.
Board of Education is not a City} the last increment of $190 is] “Under the new proposals, it
department, but voluntarily ag-| reached. The Salary and Career| would take eight long years to
ty Al Mumot | reed to be bound by the Career | Plan calls for a minimum of $3,- reach the top of the grade.”
Brigadier General Howard W. Giattly swears in Edword be | ana salary Plan s ——— _——__ —— ————— —_
Lyon as the first commissioned male nurse in the get “In every department,” said
Nurse Corps. Lieutenant Lyon, a graduate of Kings Park )ny, Gariney, “Job assienments f N F
State Hospital School of Nursing, was head nurse ot the im joan be cited to illustrate the re- Prepare Yoursel ow or
stitution for two years. His mother, Mrs. og bas nal og sponaibilities carried by the 3rd =
Sophie Dutton of the School of Nursing; Mrs. Marie Flynn, | grade clerk. These employees have . Ci il S$ T t
Fsident of the hospitol’s Nurses Alumni Association, and | jong years of service, 25 to 40 Coming U. S. ivi ervice es S
Teas Mandigo, president of Kings Park chapter, Civil Service | years, and have been at the max-
mployees Association, attended the ceremony. imum of thir gradé for many During the next twelve months there will be many appointments te
sear = ee | US. Civil Service jolt in many parts of the country.
+ These we jabs paying as high as $377.00 a month to start. They
! > 4 are well paid in comparison with the ind of jobs in private industry.
H J Connors Social Security hap lag Reap ieaah wl reg gp hchgpn ic Eatineg og
.uU Bix: chariges have Bee made in| these jobs require little or no experience or specialised education. They are
the tentative key answers to. th Employees Rewarded available to men and women between | Band 55. :
written test for N¥C Jobs ns| BUT in order to get one of these jobs, You mast pase « Civil Service
ameti nea painter. ‘The changes: Item ¢,| Cash awards amounting to $705 |] fe he compaition, in lhe fs intone, I some, com as few one
both A and C considered correct; | were presented to 15 employees of ef posing is well worth your whil
22, C and B; 32, B and A; 38, C/ the Social Security Administra Franklin Institute isa privately owned school which helps many pare
and B; 67, B and C; 80, C and A ia 6 sving |f these tests each year. The Institute is the targest and oldest organization
Of Tax Bureall Nine hundred took the text Ap- | tke ae oie qisecing a of this bind and it it pot connected with the Government, aps
ril 2. ‘The Department of Person- ney wi To get full information free of cheege on these U.S. Civil Service jobs
ALBANY, Oct. 17—Harold J.| 10) received 97 letters of protest |€rations, Joseph B. O'Connor, Re- |] fil out and mail the coupon at ence, TODAY. The Inetitute will alse. show
Connors is proof the State career! ocinst @ total of 47 tentative |@lonal Director of the U.S. De Yon Boe you can qualify yourself to pars these t
service pays off. answers partment of Health, Education :
Mr. Connors joined the Corpor- se Welfare, announced, ne
ation Tax Bureau in tk State The awards to employees in dis- Franklin Institute
Tax Department 91 years ago as A | N ts offices in New York and New |] Dept, Ké6, Rochester, 4, M. Y.
a clerk, On Oct, 18, he was named OW or | Jerse dna L, Tamaroff, $150: Rash to me, entirely frew of charge (1) a full deteription of U.S. Civil
director of the bureau at $11,620 | pp y jAnthony T. Perrotti, $15; Wini- Service jobs: (2) fren copy of 4 2t-page book with (3)
sis Sih dex (abe Obit AB SORSG ot teed Eavibad, $18) Ada BGanler US. Civil Servies jobs; (4) tell me how te prepare for one of the
which means he began hi * 7100 Job $15; Arthur Goldsmith, $10; Sara
State career at 18, | G. Greenberg, $40; Irving Feine tance hee |
A native of Watervliet | 838 Diana S. Mandell, $10; Har-
Connors now lives in Albany es “I$ h B. Green Warren ¢ tent
is married to the former Mabe C 00 ree ss Wol $230; James G.
Dugan. The reat of the Connors Edna A. Bennett, $80; James |] city Apt. No. Pane
family ineludes John, David, | ano, $15; Berna: Maguire
Anne, Marth and Mark | Friday, November 18 will be the |Gasano, 8; Ber ee d. = iio, || Coepen is valuable. Use it before you mislay it,
In the shift, Arthur M. Gund-| Inst day to apply for NYC Jobs aa|
Jach, who was named director School crossing yard, 1.50 an hour, | _
during the Dewey Admin cation forms are obtainable | Ediamm
returns to his former po idence precinct station | PHOTO by Com!
for (ax administrative ©
at $9,340, | Candidates must be :
Mr, Connors is a grad of | school graduates, 0 enn and
LaSalle Institute of Tre and of | NYC tsidents, between and 50
the Troy Busine College year fa Mi n u
fe qui it for women, 5
KAVANAUGH. RESIGNS POST |‘Hehes, for men, 5 feet 5 inche
James V, Kavanaugh has ro-| Weight must onate to
sland’ as chairman height. Good and 20/30}
resolutions commit fon, ¥ pormitted, are re-| et
gave him a rising ovation for quired | 1H |
many years of service on behalf | School crossing guards direc “|
of CSEA. traMe at crosking while childre
= _______] are going to and from school, ‘The |
work is part-time five days a week |
throughout the school term.
Hours are about one hour in the
morning wo at noon time and
one in the afternoon
training course is
by the Pol Academy to
|those who pass the written test
VERY FEW LEFT... 9) ana oral interview, and medical
‘55 exam.
DESOTOS | POMP AP CP Vi PAF

PLYMOUTHS

LARGE SELECTION OF
USED 1-OWNER CARS
EXCEPTIONALLY CLEAN

FLEET DISCOUNTS
i you!

GRACIE i da tna
SQUARE | ; see ears
MOTORS, INC. ff ie suice'tia'thet OY PS

Auth, DeSoto-Plymouth Dir,

lst Ave, of 63 St, TE 2-0585
toms

"HOUSE HUNTING?
SEE PAGE 11

QUESTIONS of general inter-
ext are answered in the interest-
ing Question Please column ef
(ihe LEADER, Address the edit

ROCKVILLE
Centre Motors
Ro 6-0720

353 Sunrise Highway
Rockville Centre, L, 1,
ING OR MENTION THB AD
FOR PARE OIFT

Pigskin Time. Crisp football days are here—and freezing winter

weather isn't far behind. Now's the time to switch
to automatic gas heat, Now especially—because with Con Edison's new reduced
gas house-heating rates it costs no more to heat your home with gas than with
ordinary fuels, Find out how easy it is to convert to gas heat. For a free survey
phone Con Edison; LE 2-0100.

CIVIL SERVICE LEA

Tanoday, October 18, 1955

After Business Comes —

At the dinner marking the close of the 45th annual meeting, Civil Service Employees As-
sociation. Front and center is Donald Buchanan, Woodbourne, and to his left: Dorothy
Durham and Laura Lyman, Orleans County; Anna Kinnear, Albion. To the left of cigar-toting
Jack Solod, Woodbourne, are Tom Pritchard and Irene Lavery, Mt. Morris; Mildred West-
bury, Livingston County; Rupert Raymer, Ontario County, and Lieyd Weir, Geneva.

Correction aides Charles E. Lamb (left), Sing Sing, and Joseph F. Grable, Napanoch chap-

ter president, flank Onondaga chapter's delegation to the CSEA ual meeting. To the

left of CSEA's new Sth vice president are Anne P. Osterdale, Arthur S. Darrow, John J.

Backman, Norma Scott and Laura G. Gurniak. Norma is co-chairman of the state-wide
membership committee.

Around this table, clockwise from left, George W. Cooper, Edwin J. Roeder and John S.
Wyld, Commerce chapter; Mrs. Jennie Allen Shields, Manhatten State Hospital, ond Mrs.
Gerard Campie: Arthur Heidearich, Creedmoor State Hospital.

New Attendance Proposals |
Expected ‘In Month or Two? jsut:

ALBANY, Oct, 17—A draft of | in the report of the CSEA special |giate service on November 1
propowed changes in the Attend. | attendance rules committee to| she is second vice president of
ance Rules for State employees ts | H#lesates at last week's annual/ Rochester chapter, Civil Service

meeting , Margaret M. Fenk is | empio) ‘esac
pected to b ti ployees sociation.
be be presented to the) «mittee chairman, assisted by
Civil Service Employees Associa: | John P, Coffey, Joseph Dell, Jean-

ELEANOR RIBLEY RESIGNS
FROM STATE POST NOV. 1

ROCHESTER, Oct, 1T-—Eleanor
Ribley, who for seven years has
been counselor for vocational re~
habilitation services, State Com-

Hon “within the noxt month or/nette M. Pinn, Henry E, Lewis,|CSEA Board of Directors for
two.” | Plorence Quackenbush, Kathryn | transmittal to the State Civil Ser-
William J. Murray, administra-| Randolph, Howard Ross, Fred J,| viee Commission
tive director of the State Civil| Walters and Kenneth EB. Ward 1, Remove from Article IX of
Bervice Department, informed! ‘The commitee's report Attendance Rules for institutional
CBEA that the revisions, it is| As result of consideration by employees the requirement that
hoped, will solve many of the| the special attendance rules com-| death be imminent insofar as
ehronic problenw involved. | mittee, the following amendments leave with pay for sickness or
CSEA proposals, which have) to the present Attendance Rules death in immediate family is con-
been transmitted to the Civil Ser-| governing State employees were | cerned, Employees generally foel

Mev Commission, wore embodied approved and submitted to the (Continued on Page 10)

CSEA Legislative
Unit Set for Action

ALBANY, Oct. 17 — The basis
for action by the legislative com-
mittee, Civil Service Employees
Associntion, was laid last week by
delegates to the 45th annual meet-
Ing here, The 67 resolutions voted members, in addi-
| by the assembled delegates will be | tion to Mr, McFarland, are: Wil-

put in appropriate form for sub-| liam Connally, James P. Evans,
mission to the State Legisiature | Joseph F, Peily, Louls Garrison,
in January, Anthony Giordano, Fred J. Kram-

Jesse B. McFariand, chairman,| man, Charles E. Lamb, Samuel
and his committee reviewed some | Miller, William Miller, Grace
of this year’s more important leg- | Nully Robert L. Soper, Vernon A,
isiative accomplishments, in their} Tapper, Kenneth Valentine,
report to delegates—extension to|Frank E, Wallace, Kila Wetkert
}all competitive class employees | and Gertrude White
the right to hearing and counsel |
before dismissal; a five-day week | ———
for the counties and subdivisions;
extension of unemployment in-
surance to all State employees on
the same basis as to employees in
private Industry; incorporation of
the supplemental pension legis
tion into the permanent provi- |
sions of the Law and the approval |
Jof pay every two weeks for State
employees

meeting, since it is at this meet=
ing that the delegates will ap-
prove the resolutions which will
become our 1956 legislative pro~
pram.”

Committee

Visual Training
OF CANDIDATES For

PATROLMAN

FOR THE EYESIGHT TESTS OF
CIVIL SERVICE REQUIREMENTS

DR. JOHN T. FLYNN

Optometrist - Orthoptist
300 West 23rd St., N. ¥, C.

ty Avot WA 9

| “Preparation
sion of the Legislature,
Farland said,
the conclusion of th

the

“ean onl

ony —

-—

ATTENTION NON-HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES

whe ore interested in the exams for

PATROLMAN and POLICEWOMAN

You are NOT REQUIRED to have a s 1 Equivalency
Certificate UNTIL TIME OF YOUR APPOINTMENT. This may
be from one to three years after the written examinations, de-
pending on your position on the eligible lists

Immodiately after the written exams for these positions, all of
our students who have passed will be offered, WITHOUT ADDI-
TIONAL CHARGE, & course of preparation for the High School
Equivalency Examination,

The Percentage of Failures in Popular
Examinations Is Extremely High! ...

In the last exam for PATROLMAN, 14.710
+ ONLY 2449 NAMES FINALLY
GIBLE LIST.

AND, in the last examination for POLICEWOMAN, 934 took the
test but only 114 ATTAINED A PLACE ON THE ELIGIBLE
List.

FOR EXAMPLE:

|
| - ++ But Over 80%, of All Those on
Each List Were Delehanty Students!

CLASSES NOW MEETING IN MANHATTAN
AND JAMAICA AT CONVENIENT HOURS FOR

PATROLMAN and POLICEWOMAN

Applications for Both Exams Will Open Nov. 3
Official Written Exams Are Scheduled for Janwary

Complete Preparation for Both Written and
Physical Phases of These Popular Exams

FREE MEDICAL EXAM — Doctor's Hours Day ond Eve,

Classes Starting in Preparation tor the NEXT

N. Y. CITY LICENSE EXAMS

Our Guest ot @ Cless Session

MASTER ELECTRICIAN

CLASS MEETS MON, & WED. of 7:30 P.M.

REFRIGERATION MACHINE OPERATOR

OPENING CLASS — THURSDAY, OCT, 20th ot 7 P.M.

STATIONARY ENGINEER

OPENING CLASS TUES, HOV. 1 ef 7:30 P.M.

Thorosgh Preparation in All Phases of Official Written Tests

© exp INSTRUCTORS © SMALL GROUPS © EVENING CLASSES
© MODERATE FEES PAYABLE IN INSTALLMENTS

* VOCATIONAL COURSES °

® AUTO MECHANIC © DRAFTING © RADIO & TELEVISION
® SECRETARIAL, STENOGRAPHY & TYPEWRITING

STUDY TY-RADIO-ELECTRONICS AT HOME!

Shop Work $ ith First Lesson — We Furnish
All. Equipment ing 2l-ingh Set With Picture Tube

NO RISK — NO OBLIGATION — MONEY BACK GUARANTER
Ww L for FREE Illustration Booklet

he DELEHANTY %nsccente

MANHATTAN: 115 EAST 15th STREET — Ga. 100
JAMAICA: 4 SUTPHIM BOULEVARD — JA, 6-8200
OFPION HOURS) MON, te FRI @ AM ™. A, 9 AM, to 4 Put

te Dept

Poge Six CIVIL SERVICE LEADER Tuesday, October 18, 1988

@ THADER TO foe panen | M i} OFE

SENIOR CLAIMS EXAMINER .

America’s Largest Weekly tor Pablic Employees pay TANGLE ROTLS WIFE P -
nam? aia ey fa we Editor, The LEADER. |
civin §s £ RVICE LEAD bf Rm, INC. Senior unemployment insurance candidate was called to an oral interview, the Jaxt hurdle in his

97 Duone Street, New York 7, . ¥. ahaa’ AOE | eter Semmes Net te Pate Bz quest for a public job.
eon Finkelnein. Contulting Publisher ployment Service received # raise “Define the difference,” said an examiner, “between yesterday,
Maxwell Lehman, Mditur (om leave) as of April 1, 1964. All examniers | today, and tomorrow.”
“Tomorrow,” answered the candidate, "is when you do what you
. J. Bernard, Bs Bai Paul Kyer, Associate Editor Who had been appointed prior to 1

ans fateh peste eae N. Wi Meger, Business Manager | that date did not get a raise, not | *hould have done yesterday, while the day that you thought would.

even thoxe who got only a tem- | never come, Is today.”
Price $1,025 10 members of the Civil! porary promotion, In other words,

We Per Copy. Subserij

Service Employers Association. $5.50 10 non-members, both groups were penalized for Danny Kaye's Opportunity to Go Places
r eR 18. 3 ALi high ‘k on the ex- o
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 19 aim. Tt doesn't pay to be smart in]. FOr his fine ork, and frierid-making Asiatic tour for the

civil service. The exatinera who | United Nations Children’s Fund, Danny Kaye, stage and movie star,

placed highest on the Net will lose | 's Betting an honorary degree of Doctor of Humanities from the
M uch Weight Behind Move Rae se |Atsertean Inlerational College, peingfeld, Mase, As the ew couree

There ave Just a handful of !n the NYC Police Academy will include the humanities as one of the

hece bewlldered examiners. At Principal subjects, Danny may at last qualify for a job as patrolman,

For Forceof Educated Cops "0.50 en sain

bly to amend the law that blocked Satiety

he question whether or not educational standards | their raine, but the bill was de-

should be required of competitors in exams for ap-|fesled. Then they wrote letters

. : YC Poli land met after work in an effort

pointment as patrolman in the NYC Police Department |/, get some intelligent official ta

has been decided by the Civil Service Commission and the comprehend a problem thut any

Personnel Department, The answer is yes, person working for private in- |

Police Commissioner Stephen P. Kennedy, in a speech |austry would understand after one)

to the International Association of Chiefs of Police, broad Can Re eee and a hair “!* Sat be should always be able to give a good account oF himself.*

ly hinted that the day is passed when men with no forma’ behagidiave Sens: lawyer to try | "Ef you'd only told me seoner,” the candidate retaliated, "I would

education should be accepted as candidates, In a plea for /to get for them a raise that should | P8VE browweht the marringe certificate with based ness ae tient i
raising police work to that of a profession, he hinted that |have been theirs right from the | eetiteaten, and Nise de pen Geasintapeld ll he ri aa i

educational requirements should be imposed, comparable jstart, TRATE WIFE ene

to those that obtain in exams in other professional fields. 'pugiic EMPLOYEES |
Not a requirement of a college degree, of course, but at AND POLITICAL FUNDS

least an educational standard equivalent to that required | Editor, The LEADER;
of a nurse. | We employees of the State and

| At another oral Interview, an examiner asked a candidate for an
accountant job where he had been on the night of April 4, 1952. The
applicant surprisingly was able to tell him, because that was the
night of the day he got married.

“But why do you have to ask candidates questions like that?”
queried the candidate,

“The first, requirement of an accountant,” replied the examiner,

Here, There, and Who Knows Where
A competitor in a civil best was explaining to a friend who works
in private industry how unfair the Civil Service Commission turned

out to be,
The subject. gains importance by the fact that NYC ba enansipion an ace “When T applied in an exam,” the candidate related, "the Com-
is to open a patrolman (P.D.) exam on November 3. rae entitled “Political Assess. DSMOM sent me sample questions and answers, I memorized every

fone. On the day of the written test, the Commission shot a hundred

The LEADER aske * patr = beat w * So
The LEADER asked some patrolmen on the beat what ments Prohibited’ ‘Some emp! caleationie: ali Bib! bull rok one Ge Aid Geueations: (b prowilned| lb/ask”’

they thought of the idea of educational standards, for |ees Inadvertently forget that the
instange, at least a high school diploma, Most of them, as law exists, and thereby invite

n a ' ° trouble for themselves, A  vioin- “I was job-audited this week,” a NYC employee told his cousin,
expected, did not like the idea, They said that what it esa ts aaaaeenmnnion. “How did it turn out?" ‘
takes to make a man a good cop is common sense, and they DAVID D. ROGERS “It takes three months before anybody can tell if the operation
did not know of any school or college that could provide President, was a success.”

Suppose it {wile
‘hen I have to go to the finance company for help."
“And if it succeeds?”

Onondaga Chapter, CSEA.
Syracuse, NY,

anybody with that, Others pointed out that the Police De-
partment abounds with able men, 500 with college de-
grees, 18,500 without, and that the difference in a police-

“Then I start paying off my pension loan,’ *
man’s value to the force and the community did not de- 125 to Be Recognized |
pend on the extent of his education at all. For Their Long Service| Gambiing ofers the possibility of something for nothing but the

probubllity of nothing womething,

Mayor Is Behind lt, Too One quarter of its 600 civilians
Nevertheless, the idea of a force consisting of edu- | Wil receive Alr Force recognition k ; ‘ cays : ; ;
f 1 + $4 458 for 10 or more years of govern- man who would rather beg than a man, # less the man than
vd. cops is . The s spe ons 8,000 0
cated) cons 7s lke Mai The: City te spending: $4508,000 00 te sextet dn ding five | tte beggar, while a man who would rather work than beg is an exe
a new building for the Police Academy, so that present

i - | years with the Alr Force, the New  tovert.
and future policemen may be trained in psychology, the |York Air Procurement District ar
humanities, and kindred lofty subjects. The Academy is |announced todas
now affiliated with the Baruch School of Business and Pub-| Personnel who have completed
lic Administration, City College, The aim is to develop a |22 % % 3 wilt" Feoelve “Als
2 i |Porce certificates of service not- ¥
corps of truly professional policemen.

u ling this fet, Lapel pins will be
Mayor Robert F. Wagner himself has expressed the | awarded to those who have com-

hope that the Police Academy would become the West | pleted 10 to 20 years. “Then 10 must have been my friend Bill.”

Point of Police Department. | 4 What makes you so sure?” she snapped, “Don’t you think T have
The movement to create a force of educated cops is Finnick Retires any friends of my own?”

real, it has high official backing, there is money behind it, een Resin Shae ot =

and the only element that could possibly stop it would be |! 1@ne Island State Park Com- ss

the line organizations. As yet, they have not taken any Eggi ee ate ne | 350 ARE READY TO ORATE ON

position, Privately, members say that if the City ean not |}iee since its |

) y e tablish |
get recruits in a sufficient number and quality with no |1947, and had men nines oe ANY SUBJECT you NAME, FROM

educational requirements, how can it get more recruits |{fom 54 to the present foree of

by imposing educational requirements? A408 yormanent patcolmen: aad LOW BLOW TO HIGH FREEDOM

|more than 100 temporary patrol-

men during the summer montha.
.
NYC Dragging Its Feet |
ee @ '

|

On Provisionals' Raise | Eso fall Mee sull coe lhe igh rec
| ‘ange from “Academic Freedom |Colleges at Albany, Brockport,

Previously, he had 2 years’ sery-
ice with the. State Police. |
Mr, Pinnick received the Pisher
Memorial Award for his service in
organizing, equipping and train.
ing the LL foree.
YC is not moving as fast as it should, in fact there are STOCK TRANSFER t to “Wood.” Among them are sci- | Buffalo, Cortland, Predonia, Gen-
alarming indications of some opposition among of- Movs TR ANSTER UNEE entific treatises by profisors of lesco New Palte Oneonta, Oswego,
ficials, regarding the granting of the sume retroactive pay | q PSs WRSECS. OF. Tp earn | Hanseaeate BOM: VokOae)
honahtn to weovinakate ane avant hy he stock (Wansfer section Of leducational methods by teachert.| Also from Harpur Collewe in
ala a ere given to regular employ~|he State Departmont of Taxation and advice lo amateur gardeners | Endicott, Medical Centers in New
ec, Jand Finance has moved from 80 |from experts ut the College of (York Ciiy and Syracuse, College
Employees at the minimum of a grade, if the mini-|Cemter Street to 15 Park Row, /Povestry. |of Forestry in Syracuse, Maritime
mum was raised, generally get 40 percent of the raise Agi The Aentonneater inchorge| Here are some examples of |College at Port Sh rand ag~
retionctive to duly 1, 1954, if they worked the full fiscal the section in Jamen J. Cor- peech titles: "Look Behind | riowltural and technical institutes
wear hat foliawed: cod got tha tail ame Jul jHene, News,” “Let's Go to School," |at Alfred, Canton, Cobleskill,
; r ed, and get the full raise effective July 1, — 1¢ KO in Boxing,” "How About |Dethi, Parmingdale, and Morrise
1955. Provisionals seck a public hearing. COL HART TO RETIRE — |reon-Agers?", and “Are Cities | ville,
A public hearing could expose the C ity to an ugly Heht, Colonel Vincent Pavin Hart will Obsolete?” A 96-page brochure entitled *A
That would be unfortunate, but warranted, if it is the prs December 1 asx Assistant | A Community Service Service to Program Chairmen,"
lowe? Attorney General of New York| The Speakers Bureau was or-| may be obtained from the Speak=
only way that the attem ot stice for the . ene ¥ mee ee Ee ee
or onate Gan ‘i Pt to obtain justice for the pro lsiate, He has been m State side |panined an a community service to| ers Bureau, State University of
m an succeed, Mor 25 yeuta, ibelp prowvam chairmen find |New York, Albany 1, N.Y, | ae=*

A traveling salesman returned bome from the road and com-
plained to his wife he heard a man had taken her to a night club
10 18 the Ruy?” he demanded. “Was it my trlend Paul?”

Lied.
friend Herman?”

“No.

More than 360 faculty members speakers, and to acquaint the
of State University of New York|public with the lecture service
re available for speaking en-{offered by the Univernity’s facul
gagoments before professional ty.
and civic groups of the State, Included in the list of speakers

Taney, October 15, 1955

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Page Seven

ELIGIBLE
LISTS

aT ae.

oh

ments,

ED VOGEL TO BE HONORED

Attendant Exam
‘The jast day to apply for NYC
jobs aa attendants (male) is
Wednesday, October 26, at 96 Du-
ane Street, two blocks north of
City Hall, Just west of Broadway,
No experience is required.

Pay starts at $2,750 and rises
to $3,650 through annual incre-

Ed Vogel Night will be cele-

Engineers
Are Offered
Quick Hiring

‘ast’ hiring of

engineers is

PERSONNEL DEPT. TO GET
FLUORESCENT LIGHTING

The Board of Estimate voted
$35,000 for a Muorescent Hehting
system on the second, fourth,
sixth, seventh and eighth floors of
the NYC Personnel Department's
quarters at 209 Broadway.

“In Dinette Sets

STATE bhp bir ag ae vy rer | promised by the NYC Department | Name to
a ption by the Unite gular :

Promotion Democratic Organization of the|! “jee Works, The Jobs and| Remember is eee
COMPENSATION CLAIMS Sixteenth Assembly District, | PAY? assistant civil engineer, and
r STIGATOR Brooklyn, on Wednesday, Octo-| assistant mechanical engineer,
(Prom), State Insurance Fund | ber 19, at Hollywood Terrace. Her- | $5,006 each, and junior mechani-
Applied, 36. bert L. Wasserman is president of |cal engineer and junior civil en-

Qualified, 17. the: organiaation. incer, $4,080 euch, Sem Fe
ye —GENION UNEMPLOYMENT | For the “ussistant” titles the

Abe, NYC.
Rert., Meow

i
Jones, Ravenna H., Molin

INSURANCE CLAIMS

ther,

Foley, Jahn 2

requirements are a college dogree
and three years experience, or a

factory equivalent suffices. Candl-

o|dates must be citizens of the

United States and a residency for
the three years preceding appoint-
ment.

Domine means top qual
dinette sete at direeta

prices, Each get is custom
made in our awn factory.

ing
‘The LEADER, Address the Editor.

Have you hada
Wasserman lately?

Just Received Shipment of
dH

jats
All oors

EXAMINER (Prom.)
poe er : satisfactory equivalent. Por the THIS FALL!
Prrecuse Guatites,! 11 “Junior” titles, a college degree,
yiushine rd, 181. ABE. WASSERMAN
w Oar Alem, Hemtle 4, Shuboateld [oe tikes: renee: cosas. worm. Bae Can Give You Value!
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Workmen's Compensation Bowed) 57: sacismen, sianiy, rons ile. —
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Applied, 56, ee a RR Exams Close for 5 Gla vaettil: Lecietins

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Open Daily Except Seturda

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The NYC Board of Education
closed the following tests on Fri-
day, October 14, Pay for “regulars”

pa00e
Lana

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aura 1H Bowery AltL ADK

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tate BS criss Via as acer for substitutes: starts at $3,750. l] coetsat Discount 4m Civil Sere pie, tartaene SOs
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Qualified, 90. Teacher of social studies, junior | ~
2 high schoots | 7" ot ~ ‘

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it t
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general science, mathematics,

Substitute teacher, junior high
mathe-

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RONNIE'S

73 CHAMBERS STREET
JUST OFF BROADWAY

Special Discount to Civil Service Workers

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matics

Teacher of English, junior high
schools.

Substituie teacher of English,
Junior high schools.

Substitute teacher of English,
day high schools,
sery foreman.

science,

Glen Had

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r

hy. Kaward J. Dhyne

(To Be Continued)

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i

Page Eight

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Tuenday, October 1%, 1955

Grievance Committee
Tells ‘Most Important’
Aspect of New Plan

ALBANY, Oct, 17—The new
Executive Order streamlining
grievance procedures and making
determinations mandatory “is a
vast improvement over the old
order,” sald the grievance com-
mittee, Civil Service Employees
Association, in its report to the
45th annual CSEA meeting,

“Probably the most important

advance... is in the area of en-
forcement of determination
said Emil M. R. Bollman, chair-
man, and committee members
James Lb, Adams, Anna Aunest,
Daniel J. Daley, Glenn Green, Ed-
ward Limner, William Price and
Havel Nelson.

The committee's report:

The grievance committee, com-
Posed of a chairman and seven
additional members, held ita first
meeting the night of January 12,
1955. The chairman and six mem-
bers were present; also John J.
Kelly, Jr., John 'T. DeGraif, and
Dr, Prank L. Tolman,

Past Efforts Reviewed

At this first mecting, a very
thorough and detailed veview was
conducted in respect to the As-
sociation's past efforts to secure
the establishment of labor rela-
fions machinery, incliding the
legislative measure the Associa-
tion first proposed and the Exe
utlve Order which was finally ad-
opted and the shortcomings of
the State Employees Relations
Board which was finally set up.
Every possible avenue for im-
provement was discussed by the
committee and counsel and cer-
fain suggestions were submitted
which we considered were most
essential for assuring the success
of the forthcoming new Executive
Order, ‘These changes were sub-
mitted to our counsel for incorp-
oration into the proposed Exeeu-
tive Order,

‘The second committee meeting
was held on February 16, 1955.

"Jernor Harriman on Atigust 5,

We were all of the opimion that
the prevailing attitude among
those responsible for the admitis-
tration of this new procedure
would be one of willingness to
make any changes in the future
which would improve this new
order both from the employee and
employer point of view,

In our March report we indi-
cated the likelihood of a new Ex-
ecutive Order with respect to
grievance procedures, We can now
report that the Executive Order is
an accomplished fact and that
the new order was issued by Gov-

1955. The committee met several
times in order to discuss problems
in connection with the new Bxee-
utive Order so that the Executive
Committen might be advised with
respect to the position that the
Association should take concern-
ing proposals for the new order.
and the State Executive Commit-

‘The three most important prob-
lems considered by the committee
tee were: (1) componition of the
top board; (2) streamlining of the
cumbersome procedures that ex
isted under the old order and (3)
enforcement of determinations of
the grievance board. We can re-
port that overall the new order is
& vast improvement over the old
order and to express our hope
that it will be freely used by State
Jemployoes in order that we may
have as early ax possible an eval-
uation of the procedures set up
in the new order.

The new order streamlines the
procedures that previously existed |
| by providing for grievances at two
stages within the department,
The grievance need not be r
duced to writing by the employees
until it reaches the stage of the
|department or agency head, Em-
ployees may be represented by
jany representative of its own
choosing in the processing of an
agreement in all stages accord-|
ing to the order. The third stage
under the new order is the appeal
to the grievance board, consisting
of three members one of whom |
shall be an employee of the De-
partment of Civil Service and the
jother two of whom shall repre-

‘The chairman and four members
were present, three members be-
ing unable to attend due to ill-
ness. At this mecting, CSEA coun-
sel, Mr. Kelly, reported on the
reactions of the Governor's staff
as to our proposals resulting from
the first meeting, Further changes
were unanimously agreed upon by
the committee,

The third meeting of the griev-
ance committee was held on June
29, 1955 in conjunction with a
meeting of the State Executive
Committee. At this meeting the
main discussion centered around
the proposed composition of the
erievance board.

At a fourth meoting which was
held July 28, 1955. with a com-
bined meeting of the State Exec-
utive Committee and the Board of
Directors, again the dixcussion
was relative to the composition of
the grievance board. At this meet-
ing & final decision was made to
accept the so-called “three man
board,”

‘Tremendous Improvement?

Tt was the feeling of the group
present that this was not the ex-
act or perfect solution to the
Problem of grievance procedure
but that it was a tremendous im-
Provement over the old method.

PROBATION CONPERENCE
TO HEAR HARRIMAN

The New York State Prob;
Commission winds up its
nual Conference on Probation on
Wednesday, October 19 at the
Hotel Now Yorker,

A dinner will be given on the
evening of October 18, at which
time Governor Averell Harriman
will make the principal address.

Thomas J, McHugh, Commis-
soner, State Department of Cor-
Fection, Will speak on the forward
movement in the correctional field

JANSEN STARTS DRIVE
FOR NEW YORK FUND

Tn a circular to associate and
ersistant superintendents and
ether bureau and divisional heads
of the NYC schools, Dr. William

Jansen launched the anoual ap-|

peal of The Greater Now York
Fund within the school system.

sent the public. The order
provides that State employees und
thelr representatives, if the rep-
resentative be m State employee,
shall be allowed ti off from
their reeular duties for the pur- |

poses of processing employee
grievances

Findings Are Mandatory }
Probably the most important

advance over the old order was in

the area of enforcement of doter- |
}minations of the grievance board, |
|The new order provides that |
where the appeal inyolves a law,

rule or a written negotiation of

the department or agency, the

findings of fact and the recom. |
mendation of the grievance board |
shall be transmitted to the de-
partment or agency involved for
appropriate action, In cases where
there is no rule, jaw or written
order, that is in the field of pol-
icy the determination of the
board shall contain a statement
of fact and advisory recommend-
ation to the department or agency |
involved. The essential difference |
of course ix that under the old |
order all delerminations were ad- |
visory, Under the new order the |
findings of the order will be man- |
datory in all areas where there |
are written rules applicable to the |
situation.

Your committee is well satisfied

with the substantial improve-
monts which it feels are embodied
Jia the new Executive Order. It
|hopes that it will prove to oper-
fate to the best Interest of all
|State employees, thereby serving
as a suitable basis for legislative
recognition of the establishment
of nrievances procedures:

“As chairman of commit-
tee,” said Mr. Bollman, "I wish to
take this opportunity to thank

the other members of the com-
mitteo for their invaluable coun-
sel In this matter, and on behalf
of the committer to express the
appreciation of the committees to
members of the Association staff
who have cooperated with us so
fully this past year.

“On behalf of our grievance
committer, T wish to express ap-
preciation for the cooperation

and valuable assistance of mem-
bers of the Association's staff, es-
pecially Counsel John T, DeGraft
| Assintant Counsel John J. Kelly

Jr, and Dr, Prank L. ‘Tolman,
former CSEA president, who ts
now & member of the Preller

Commission,”

ACTIVITIES OF EMPLOYEES THROUGHOUT NEW YORK STATE

Suffolk Names
Committees

BAY SHORE, Oct,

ter, CSEA. They are:
Salary—Glendora App, ghee

chairman; Mrs, Jessie M.

mann and Arthur Miller, Welfar

17 — Com-
mittees for the coming year have |
been appointed by Suffolk chap-

Phillip Halsey of the First Super-
visory District to sit in on the
school district planning commit-
tee meeting held in Albany Oc-
tober 15, The committee was
named by Vernon A. Tapper,
| chairman of the CSEA County Di-
vision, to develop a program ap-
h, Plicable to all schoo districts in

all_ counties,

Suffolk chapter was represented
at the CSEA annual meeting by

tionately called has already es-
tablished her niche in the annals
of chapter history by her devotion
and tireless energy expended in
its behalf,

Employees extend thelr sympa-
thy to the family of Mary Mc-
Creay, popular attendant from
West building, who died at Kings
County Hosptial on October 5.

Sympathy to Dr. and Mrs. Ta-
rantola. and Mr, and Mrs. Chris

Russell Griffin, County Highway;
Mrs. Ann Jackson, Suffolk Sani-
torium, and Seth Morgan, Health,

Mem! Carl Helms,
Huntington Town Highway, and
Mrs. Muriel Lawson, Health De-

rtment, co-chairmen; town,

ed Vopat, Brookhaven High-
way; Samuel LaSasso, Smithtown
Highway; Henry Voight, Hun-
tington Highway; Edmund Brown,
Islip Highway; Edward Prieman,

Mr,
representative:

Eve Armstrong,
Arthur
ident;

executive

Miller,
Glendora App, Mrs.
el Lawson and Mrs. Merry
Arnott. Mra, Armstrong, Mrs. Ar-
mott and Mr. Miller are Welfare
Department employees.
and Mrs. Lawson work for the
Health Department.

Mrs. Streisand

Mins App

Islip Highway;

Babylon Highway;
jak, Highway;
Riverhead Highway:

Edmund Bu:

District; Tracy Pearsall and Joh

Steller, Third Supervisory School
Arthur Boskin,
Health;
Joan Jackson, Suffolk Sanitori-
Russell Griffin and James

District; county,
Welfare; Seth Morgan,

um;
Barnett, Highway;
Suffolk County Home.

Personnel Relations Unit

Edna Mill

George Kelley,

Stanley Bokina,
Phillip HH.
Halsey, First Supervisory School

2: Resigns Bklyn Post

BROOKLYN, Oct. 17 — Emil
Impresa, president of Brooklyn
State Hospital chapter, CSEA, an-
nountes that the board of direc-
tors has accepted the resignation
of Mrs, Molly Streisand as chap-
ter secretary. The officers were
unanimous in their expressions of
is, |regret that Molly decided she
could no longer carry the extra
work the office of secretary en-

hn

Grucel on their recent berenve-
ment, To Charlotte Sherlock on
the loss of her mother... . To
Gilda Trapanotta on the loss of
her_ grandmother,

Employees on sick leave: Wal-
ter Dixon, Arnold Moses and Mae
Tansey,

WHY PAY MORE?
Save 20% to 40

QUALITY

i)
STERLING

FURNITURE

Ferme Available

ALBANY,

‘The chapter's personnel rela~
tions committee mot on August 21
with the Board of Supervisors
public relations committee. After

ciation,”

tailed,
Mrs, Streisand, or
as she was often affec-

“Mrs,

Asso-

® discussion of the Social Security
request made by CSEA last
March, the item was referred to
County Attorney Lioyd P, Dodge |
to make legal preparations.

The CSEA committee asked for
a date to be arranged to hold a

Now! Completely
redecorated —
featuring the

| membership meeting at Riverhead
House, This was referre

Court

to Mr.
Bourd,
arrangements.

clerk of ¢
the
CSEA con

Maclean,
to make
‘The

mittee then asked for an appoint- |

ment with the Supervisors’

nance committer, under the chalr- |

manship of Normen Klipp,

meet with the CSEA salary com-

mittee.
Mrs. Eve Armstrong wan chal

man of the chapter rroup.
Suffolk County

Moyflower - Royal Court
Apartments

Furnished - Unfurnished

ALBANY 4-1994

In Time of Need, Call

W. Tebbutt’s Sons

176 State
Albony Ss 2 A

Bistinguished Peseral hertive
ALBANY, N.Y.

necessary

chapter sent

Rooms with Linen & Maid Svee

420 Kenw
Delmer %-2212
y G

new Town Room!
he

m=

Sueraton- |

—@® Ten Eve

ALBANY, N. Y.

fi- |

to

| PLENTY OF PARKING

FURNITURE
@ son ies

‘314 CENTRAL AVE Dear Quail St)

Open

Daily 9-6

Monday, Tuesday, Thursday

Evenings Til 9 P.M.

PHONE 5-232!

Ob  —— — -
MEN'S SHOES

MANUPACTURERS' SHOE OUT-
LET, Nationally advyertived men’s
shoes at cut prices, 25 8. Pear! St, |
(Near Beaver) Albany.

HUESTED DRUGS

®
State and Eagle Streets
| Woshington and Lark
Broadway at State

ALBANY, N.Y.

The
KERRY BLUE

Launch & Supper Club
61 Eagle Street Albany, N.Y.
Good Food

Home of Tested Used Cars

ARMORY GARAGE

DESOTO - PLYMOUTH
926 Central Avenue
Albany, N. Y.

Vending Machine Service
MILK, COFFEE, HOT

| CHOCOLATE, COLD BEY. |

Wedding Parties
HERBERT'S

1054 Madison Ave., Albany
Tel. 2-2268

Dining . Dancing . Banquets

ERAGES, CIGARETTES }

x H
DESORMEAU

AUTOMATIC SALES CO.

ARCO .
CIVIL SERVICE BOOKS
and ail tests
PLAZA BOOK SHOP
380 Broadway
Albany, N. Y.

Atm 5.0404

Mail & Phone Orders Filled

BAMER & McDOWELL
Over 45 Ys Service to Public

Mechanics Tools -
PAI

38 Central
1090 Ma:

/ALBANY, N.Y.

Complete Line of HARDWARE |)
Household Geeds |)
1S

HOUSE HUNT in Albany wi
Lady Licamed Real Extole

MYRTLE C, HALLENBECK
Bell Real Estate Agency
50 Robin Streat
Phone; 5.4836

Albany, N.Y.

Sctithns uP To 705
E ba iled this FREE
—1\ for 50
| Fill Out Th

Member N.Y. Stock Exchange
J. ERWIN HYNEY, MGR.

WE'RE GLAD!!!

TO WELCOME YOU TO THE||

42 Se

Monoger

Vi at taal

John J, Hylond

50 STOCKS WITH
| 50-YEAR DIVIDEND RECORDS

SUTRO BROS.

17 ELK STREET, ALBANY

© 9 SELLING UNDER $30
list of 50 stocks that ha

Is Coupon
& CO,
and other principal exchanges
Ph. 5-4546

73 Central Ave
4-7128

e
ALBANY MERCHANDISING CO., INC

4-7129
Open Every Nite Till 9 P.M.

We offer tremendous discounts and trade-ins
on all maior appliances . . . Famous brands.

Albany, N. Y.
5-5833

7
Tuesday, October 18, 1955 cry

IL SERVICE LEAUER

rage inne

on the date of the written test,
tentatively set for December 17.
Poe $5, (Wednesday, October 26).

7506, CHEMIST (Prom.)
tamended notice), $5,750 to $7,100,
Open t employees of NYC Tran-
sit Authority, Queens Borough

NEW YORK
CITY JOB
OPENINGS

Air Pollution Control, Health and
Purchase. Six months as assistant
chemist. Fee $5, (Friday, October
han

7454, CIVIL ENGINEER
| (WATER SUPPLY) (Prom,), Board
| of Water Supply, $7,100 to $8,900.
Six months ss assistant civil engin-
eer (including all specialties); phy
valid State professional engineer's
Neense, at time of appointment
Pee $5, (Wednesday, October 26).
7450. DEPUTY WARDEN
‘Prom.), Correction Department
$7,000 to $7,600, Six months ar
captain (men), Pee $5. (Wednes-
¥, October 26)
7306, MAINTENANCE ENGIN-

Open-Competitive

‘The following NYC open-com-
petitive exams are now open for
receipt of applications. Fuller di-
gests of requirements appeared in
last week's LEADER, Apply at 96
Duane Street, Manhattan, until
Wednesday, October 26, | unless
another dale or address Is given,
Application may also be made by
mall where specifically indicated.

7479. ARCHITECT (MATERI-
ALS RESEARCH AND SPECIF!
CATIONS), $7,100 to $8,900.
Bachelor's degree and six years’ | eer at time of appointment.
} $5. (Wednesday, October 26)

experience; or high school gradu- |
ation and 10 years’ experience; or |’ 7499. NOK FOREMAN UEX-
M «(Prom,), NYC

equivalent. Mail, TERMID
SISTANT CHEMICAL | Housing Authority, $5,150 to $6,590
Former title: foreman of exter-

95.450 to $6,690.

Bachelor's degree in engineering | minators, grade 4. Six months as

and three years’ experience, Mail. | foreman (exterminators) (old title
foreman of exterminators, grade

7536, ASSISTANT SUPERY

| One year ay assistant maintenance
engineer (structures and track) or
assistant maintenance engineer
(surface track), plus valid State
registration as profe:

3). Fee $5. (Wednesday, October
OR OF RECREATION, 84,550 to | 9g) . bveanasrad rs
85.990, Bachelor's degree in per-| 7401. ‘SIGNAL MAINTAINER
tinent Meld and three year’s ex-| (Prom.), NYC Transit Authority

x months

perience; or B.A. and five years’ | $1.96 to $2.14 an hour, £
experience jor equivalent. Mail, | maintainers helper, gro A
ri rege ‘ in ‘signal section of maintenance
7518. ATTENDANT, $2,750 to | of way department. Fee $4, (Wed

$3,650. Men only, No educational
or experte requirements
7501. CHEMIST, $5,750 to $7

ee eens
Where to Apply

190; Boche degree and six
years’ tonee; uivalent =
Mau, “Permenees oF sau" For Public Jobs

7568. COLLEGE OFFICE AS
SISTANT, A, $2.815 to $4,140. Ap-
ply to State Employment Service,
1 East 19th Street Manhattan, un
tl Friday, October 21, High School
graduation required; plus four
years of collexe study or office ex
perience, or combination.

7509. COLLEGE SECRETARI-
AL ASSISTANT A, $2,815 to $4.-
140, See No, 7658 for requirements
where to apply until F Oc
tober 21

7570. HOUSING COMM

v. Second Regional OfMice,
. S, Civil Service Commission,
641 Washington Str ew York
14, N.Y, (Manhattan), Hours 8:30
}to’ 5, Monday through Friday;
closed Saturday. Tel, WAtkins
-1000, Applications also obtain-
able at post offices, except the
New York, N. ¥,, post office.
STAT Room 2301 at
Broadway, New York 7, N. ¥., Tel.
Barclay 7-1616; lobby of State
Office Building, and 39 Columbia
Street, Albany, N. ¥., Room 2
Buffalo 2,

PP COORDINATOR, | State OMice Building,

$4,550 to $5,990. Bachelor's degree In ¥. Hours 8:30 to ing |
in” pertinen and. two | Saturdays, 9 to 12. Als 400
eens’ er BA. and|at 155 West Main Street, Roch-

Tuesdays, 9 to 5, All
of foregoing applies also to exams
for county Jobs conducted by the
State Commission,
NYC—NYC Departme
sonnel, 96 Duane St

four years’ experience. iL

7473, ILLUSTRATOR, $4.250 to
$5,330. helor’s deg in art
and one year’s experience; or high
school graduation and three year
or combination, Mail

|
|

t of Per

Sxpertenne: 7, N.Y. (Manhattan
7321, LINEMAN, $19.92 a day.|north of City Hall, Just west of
Pive years’ € nee; or com- | Broadway, opposite The LEADER
bination of training and experi- | office, Hours 9 to 4, excepting Sat-
ence t orqual five years. Maxi-|urday, 9 to 12. ‘fel. COrtiandt
mun age, 40, except for veterans. | 71-9880. Any mail intended for the
MEDICAL SPECIALIST, in fol-|N¥C Department of Personnel

notild be addressed tc
way, New York 7, N. Y.

Board of Education, Teaching
Only) Board of Examiners,
Board of Education, 110 Living
ston Street, Brooklyn 1, N. ¥
Hours 9 to 4:30, except Saturdays
and Sundays. Tel. ULster 8-100.

299 Broad-

lowing fields: dermatology gastro-
enterology, opthaimology, ortho-
pedics, otolaryngology proctology
urology $9,000 to $11,000 full-time
or 20 # session. Medical school
graduation one year's internship
two years’ residency, five years’
experience in appropriate special-
ty. Mail.

7549. RECREATION LEADER,
$3,750 to $4,830, Bachelor's de
in appropriate specialty, or
lor’s degree and two years’
experience, Mail |
REMINGTON BOOK
ING MACHINE OPERATOR, |

to $3,650. No educational |
or experience requirements: mast |
pass performance test, Mail | 4/
TATLSOCIAL INVESTIGATOR yy
$4,000 to $5,080, Bachwlor’s de- hie
gree. Mail, and
7328. SPEECH AND HEARING
THERAPIST, $3,750 to 4,830
Bachelor's degree in speech,’ in-
cluding appropriate cot. and
200 hours of clinienl experience, | cneerty, enerming
Mail sinale Feome tom
7481. STATIONARY ENGIN-| $,
BER, $19.68 a day, Stationary en 65
gincer's license issued
Housing and Building
ATOR ¢ Gunsts enjoy FREE: Salt water

swimming pool, aic-conditioned
YM, scignlitic dryshot & steam

50 to $9.050.
experience

must puss performance oom, nightly entertainment, TY
| Jounge, game rooms, Wake up
Pp. ti fond Live—at the thrilling, Uuifty
romotion | St George! MAin 4.5000,
Candidates must be present, Sip hety Wighas wih sal

qualified employees of the depart. |

ment mentioned. Apply until dates | Hotel
indicated |

7500. CAPTAIN (Prom), Fire
Department 5 with five an
nual increments of $100. Open to

ml who are serving as Loulenant

President's Office, Departments of)

nesday, October 26). Education, Markets, Public Works,

‘71284.

amended notice. General promo-|and NYC Transit Authority,
tion exam for employees of the! months

STATIONARY ENGIN-| Sanitation, Hospitals, Parks, Wel-
EER (Prom.), $19.68 a day, Second) fare, Board of Higher Education
Six
stationary fireman, oiler) ed for January 10, 1956. Fee 5@
following departments: Correction,!or maintenance man; pius valid| cents, (Monday, October 17)

stationary engineer's license in-
sued by NYC Department of Hous
Ing and Buildings, at time of prace
Heal-oral test, tentatively schedule

BEGINNER NETS
BREEDING

THE SEPT. 13 IS DP THE CIVIL SERVIC

$8.000

CHINCHILLAS

(THE FOLLOWING STORY REPRINTED FROM

E LEADER)

PHIL LAVELLI, head of Associated Breeders Chinchilla Corp.,

A small cuddly animal the size of a squ
people in every walk of life. From Maine to California,
jnewest industry, is provin
small investor can make.

The friendly little Chin-| Sarah Bernhardt owned a coat
Jechilla now being raised in | ¥tth $60,000; the Inte Mrs. Hero

| ert Hoover's was valued at $80,-
basements and spare rooms |000, and Lily Pons owns one ati

. largest suppliers in the Eost,

is making dreams come true for

tising Chinchillas, America's

In addition Mr. Lavelli provided
them with a cage, all accessories,
and written guarantees that the
animals would live and reproduce,

all over the country did not | thoritatively valued by insurers at| With the competent guidance re
just happen in the t nited | ‘upwards of $50,000," | ceived from Assocluted Breeders
States. Originating ee Corp., the Morgans ‘ranch” flour-
rate A aoe eee ee of | ished and the Chinchillas kept in-
he Andes Mountains of | Fork fashion Jcreasing in. number, This year
South America, Chinchillas | ;™P! «| alone, Morgan has sold 8 puir
’ bargain basement price of only x

were pursued and pelted in | $30,000! Empress Chinchilla, inci- bang $2000 and at a count had
aver: . ors un- | dentally, is the trademarked prod. | 22. Pale remaining. These he in-
ever-inc ing numbers un- | dentally i the trad Th dp tends to keep without any further
til by 1918—largely because | Uct of the Farmers Chinchilla Co- | © 0 .
ft tl 7 ; oe [Operative (the organization to/ Marketing until next year when
of the great value put ON |which most Chinchilla breeders | Mey will Produce & conservative
their pelts—they were yirtu- | belong) which matches and 1 ar |e sgh Pak phe dd

5 ‘ pedal Fecrsay G Enined te Sa | Mr. Lavellt interviewed at the
ally trapped out of exist |kets the pelts raised: by member | ranch office of Associated Breeders
enc | One of the many couples who! Chinchilla Corporation says that

have recently suc ded at Chin-
chilla-raixing is Mr. é& Mrs.
liam Morgan of Brooklyn. Mr.
Morgan has been a postal worker
in the city of New York for the
past 9 years,

Three years ago he and Mrs
Morgan decided to look for some
sort of spare-time business that
would develop into a full-time ac-
tivity in the future. After talking
to Mr, Lavelll, head of Associated
!n | Breeders Chinchilla Corp,,
| largest suppliers of Chinchillas in
ihe Kast, they decided to invest in
it is not Likely that the supply will | Chinchilias. Although they could
ever equal the demand, and this|have purchased them on monthly
accounts in part for the five-fig-| payments, the Morgans preferred
jure price tags on Chinchilla gar-|to draw $005 out of their saving
ments, for one pair of quality Chinchillas

Tn the early twenties an enter-
jPrising American mining engineer
jbecame interested in Chinchillas
and had visions of a few suryi-
| Yors somewhere along the Andes
Range.

In 1923, with the aid of 2,
dian trappers, he finally-suce
in trapping one small herd and
was able to bring 11 of them to
California. It is from these 11 ani-
| mals that all of the Chinchitias
the United States descended.
As for the fabulous fur itself

|MR. CHINCHILLA himself, ond not « bit snobbish about
owning the most precious fur coat in the world.

the Morgan experience
means unusual,

| "I could quote you,” he said,
}vense after case in our files of
| People who have done substantial-
|ly better, but I prefer to be con-
servative with people who come
}to me with the intention of in-
vesting in Chinchillas. While it is
true that the beginning breeder of
quality Chinchillas will have no
difficulty selling a limited number
of offspring each year as breeding
stoc I feel that the long run
emphasis must be put on produc~
ing pelts,

“After all,” he continued, “the
end product with Chinchillas ie ne
different than with mink; the fur
garment itself,

“The one bi

is by no

difference between

ing Chinchillas and raising
| other fur be animal as
| Mink, for is that since
| Chinchilias require a minimum of
room and care, people can very
profitably raise home in
thelr spare time the ine
| that makes the Chinchilla ir ty
|so uniquely American,” concluded
| Mr. Layelli, “and it always thrills
me when 1 think that the fabulous

| wraps designed by Maximilian or
| Dior for the glamorouw of
| the wealthiest women in the world,
| for the most part originated in the
| basements and spi roo ri
eryday American

0 there you have it
story.

the Chine

DEPT.

af MATE BE
For Free Booklet; sausinnn
t
IN NEW YORK PHONE BO 9.2157. | Name
IN NEW JERSEY MA 4.1366 | —
OR MAIL THIS COUPON is

ERDERS CHINCHILLA
£T, NEWARK, NJ

co

eeeweewwonnnenneJ
Page Ton

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Correction Aides
Stymied in Bid For
Pay Assurances

ALBANY, Oct, 17 — State Cor-
rection Department delegates to

the annual meeting of the Civil |

Service Employees Association
were unsuccessful in their at-
tempt to include the words “with-
out loss in take-home pay,” in
CSEA's salary resolution.

The delegates had sought Asso-
ciation support for a 40-hour
work w for institutional em-
ployees at the same pay they now

receive for 48 hours work.

James L. Adams, who was re-
elected the following day as Cor-
rection represenetative on the

CSEA Board of Directors, presid-
ed at the departmental session
October 10,

The major portion of the mect~-
ng wax devoted to the salary-
hours question.

Other resolutions of espectal in~

G. R. Genung Honored

‘The Association of Public Hous-
Managers gave @ party to
director of
NYC Housing Au-
thority, at the Gramercy Park
Hotel, for 20 years of service.

Among those present were Phil-
ip J, Cruise, Authority Chairman;
Frank Crosswaithe and James
Pelt, Authority member Waren
Moscow, executive director, and
Harold Kiorfein, secretary.

Al Jay Schechter, association
president, paid tribute to Mr, Ge-

86 CSEA
Chapters ‘Up’
Membership

ALBANY, Oct, 17,—Certificates
were presented at the 45th annual
meeting, Civil Service Association,

management,

ae to 65 chapters in the State Divi-

terest to the Correction aides
were those necking equal pay for
employees at Albion State School
and Westfield State Parms; 25-
year retirement for custodial em-
ployees of the department, and
|the setting of an, effective date
lof April 1, 1956 for the payment
jof accrued Vacation and overtime
credits,

ty Division who have increased
membership over last year.

Alex Greenberg and Norma
Scott, co-chairmen of the CSEA|
membership committee, reported
a total membership increase of |
2,177 over the previous year, or a
total of 62.454 members.

There are 50.682 in the State
Division, an increase of 1,488: |

* Shoppers Service Guide -

11,234 in the County Division, an |
increase of 618; and 438 associate |
members, an increase of 71 |

“Our committee,” the co-chair-
men said, “can not stress too|
strongly the appointment of ac- |

Learn to Drive Now

AMERICAN AUTO ACADEMY
‘entral Avenue, Albany 2.6150

r)

ELECTRIC SHAVERS
All makes of Electric Shavers, &
William St, Albany. Back of 23

S Pearl St. Phone 3-8553 for
Sales and Service Information,

Mong and Storage
LOADS part jude uN over USA iy
Call aod Klornia Bpeem rau to Civ

Bernice Worknre Doughboy Wa 7.0000

Pets

Purebred KERRY BI
ER. Male Pup, 10 weeks old. Phone
ALBANY 3-2475 after 10 A.M

“BUSINESS OPPORTUNIT
CHINCHILLAS
$1,000 investment Get started

in business for yourself. Invest-
ment canbe financed. Time Pay~

ment Plan avallable. See story in
September 13th issue of Civil
Leader. Write to Dept.

Service
“C." Assoctated Breeders Chinchil-
fa Corp.
NJ.

995 Broad St., Newark.

=|
JE TERRI-

tive membership committees with
representation in every depart-|
ment, unit and agency of the |
chapter."

Members of the committee con-
tacted leaders of inactive chap-
ters and were successful in assist-

AGENTS WANTED

| AGENTS, men or women, to sell
|direct to consumers, WO 4-6184.

SOUND EQUIPMENT

ort

SONDE, Inc, Hi-Fi, Industri-
al, P.A., é Intercoms. 380 Clinton | !N& these chapters to more active
Ave., Albany, N.Y. 62-0312, efforts. The committee promoted

and arranged meetings of chap-
ter presidents and membership |
Committee chairmen to determine
of recruiting |

LAUNDERMATS

| Robin Laundermat, 87 Robin St,

| ways and means
Albany, 3-4865, Run by Aunt Liz! membership
| Poulos. formerly owner Edison) qining Program Ureed
Restaurant.
fe __| ‘The statewide membership
committee has recommende
ROOFING sees hs

training program for all officers

Don't Shop Around Town, © and prospective officers of chap-

RODENTFX
STOPS "EM DEAD IN
THEIR TRACKS
dice, t9 Wt fait: oH apaclal| pads,
rari 1 Wark wh
wi pi Be

PICTURE FRAMING

J ABLENDELL & SON, 10 Sieu-
ben St., Albany 7, N.Y, 3-8604

7 BOOK:

BETTY KELLY BOOK SHOP, 534
Broadway, Albany New &
Used. Open Eves.

BLUE KITCHEN

RESTAURANT
Mon Fel. Tam, to 6:00 wm
RE 2-4568
Delivery
Service

SODA FOUNTAIN

| ROUND TOWN ROOFERE ters, sponsored by the Association
a KECAIES OUR BFHCALTY. | with the cooperation of the field
| Leaders, en oe Siding representatives in their respective
| Ne Down Bi areas. |
| GEdney 8-6158 “Please remember," the co-
_ —— chairman warned, “that any or- |
HELP WANTED ganization ts just as strong as its |
Male & Female _ | membership, and without mem-
ATTENTION — PART TIME | bership there is no organization.”
Start own business from home.| The committece expressed its
Immed returns plus special Iife-|appreciation of the assistance
ctirement income 0
Tee Tae tesband wna [rendered in all of its activities by
Wife teams. UNiversity 4-0850 or |JePh Lochner, whose advice
| ACademy 2-93 and counsel have been most help-
ful in building membership, and
TYPEWRE to all members of the headquar-

or Civil Service

xame ters staff for their substantial
WE ORLIVER TO THR EXAM BOON

7, | contribution to the success h
All Makes — Easy Terma |° ; oes 8 ee
MIMEOGHAIHS, aDbINd MacHINeS | Committee's work. |
ENTER NATIONAL gt ee so 60. | Other committee members are

240 E, 86th St. | Katherine Lawlor, Helen Longer-

|gan, Emmett J. Durr, Helen Mc-
|Graw, Vito J. Perro, Patricia Pre-
| mo, Harry Joyce, Robert Selleck,

acl Leonard Charles Str

Open ti 6:30 p.m.

| Mic s.|
Richard Flinn, Glenn Miller, Ray
| Goodridge, Byron Robbins and
| Helen R, Kientsch.

(Continued on Page 15)

_REAL ESTATE

FOR SALE
STORE — 2 APTS

Hardware and Paint Store of
Solid brick with 2 apts, 55x100,
plot, store fully stocked, storage
house 25 x 100, oi] heat. Bar-

ters

Typewri
Adding Machines

Pew

gain all offers considered.

TREFFLICH’S PET SHOP crane Keene situated in Ja-
228 Pulton St., N.¥.C, CO 7-4060
BREEDS OF PEDIGREED

PIES & A PULL LINE Ov || LA 5-0033 — JA 6-4592

ACCESSORIES

sion and 21 chapters of the Coun-/|

| the

| religious observance be established, |

| ployees who work regularly the

Some one is going to be selected for an achievement award,
Governor Averell Harriman's Committee on Employ the
Handicapped is going to make the selection. The comm
is shown at its most recent meeting. From left, seated, Alfre:
J. Callahan, assistant counsel to the Governor; Dr. Anne M.
Bahike, director, Bureau of Rehabilitation; Department of
Health; Estelle Johnson, employment consultant, Seective
Placement Division of Employment. Standing, Herbert Brown,
director of Vocational Rehabilitation for the Blind, Commis-
sion for the Blind, and Karl G. Katfenberger, director of
Vocational bilitation, Department of Education.

Attendance Plan On Way

(Continued from Page 5) penalization of aides for tradiness
that this requirement is unfair! for the purpose of effecting a
and indefinable in many ways, discontinuance of such systems

2. That the Attendance Rules | which result in over-drastic pena-
provide for payment in a lump) lzations for tardiness.
sum of accrued vacation, overtime | Tt was also recommended to the
and sick leave on retirement or) Board of Directors that careful
separation from service, and that) consideration be given of the pos-
this payment be made to the Re- sivility of the Attendance Rules
tirement Pund beneficiary in case | being amended to provide ® “per-
the employee becomes deceased | sonal business leave” with pay to

while in service, It is felt that this reniace time off now granted for

| Would encourage a better attend-) various reasons including sickness

ance record of employees general-| or death in immediate family,

ly and would result in more just | dental and medical visits, and re~
and uniform treatment of all em- | ligious observance,

ployees. Tt has also been recommended
37's Hrs. in Offices that consideration be given to a
3. That the Attendance Rules more favorable and equitable rule

be amended to prohibit the “split | relative to closing of state offices
shift" in State service. during periods of intolerable heat,
4. That the Attendance Rules | Suggestion was also made that
provide a uniform 3744 hour week | consideration be given to the pos-
for all office employees in both | sibility of changing the year in
administrative departments | which vacation leave credits are
and State institutions. | accumulated. Suggestion has been
5. Amend the Attendance Rules | made that if this year was chang-
relative to time off for sickness or|ed to end on September 30 each
death In immediate family to in-| year, instead of March 31, it might
clude brother-in-law and aister-| enable employees to more readily
in-law of married, as well as un-|use accumulated vacation and
married employees, The present overtime credits,
rules cover only unmarried me
ployees in this respect

Letters covering the above have
| been forwarded to Alexander A.

6. All legal holidays with pay President, State Civil Serve
for perdiem and seasonal em-) ice Commission, with a request
ployees for necessary atendance that Association representatives
at their naturalization ceremonies. | he given an opportunity to meet

§. That a uniform allowance for) with the Commission to discuss
these changes.

9. That credit for time 5
traveling on official
allowed,

10. That employees who regu-
larly work on a five-day a week or
five and a half day a week basis
be given same guarantee in At-
tendance Rules as to number of
days off duty with pay each year
as ls accorded institutional em-

ent in |

business be William J, Murray, administra-

tive director of the State Depart-

| ment of Civil Service, has advised
| the Association that the division
| of personel services of the depart-
| ment has been working on a re-
vision of the Attendance Rules for
some months, and the department
is hopeful that within the next
month or two a proposed draft of
| the revised rules will be made
available lo the Association, It is
hoped that the new draft of the
revised rules, when available, will
solve many of the chronic prob-
Jems involved.

six-day week, so that department-
al employees do not lose time off
by reason of holidays falling on
Saturdays
“Tardiness’ Penalties
It was also recommended that)
the State Civil Service Commis- | a

|
sion survey the various State de-
partments to determing the vari- || PART-TIME POSITIONS
For GS 11 & Up

Comfortably Air Conditioned
Kalorie Kounter Menu
115 WORTH STREET
Cor, Latayette & Worth st
UELP WANTED
WOMEN. Barn part-time money
at home, addressing envelopes

(typing or longhand) for advertis-

ers, Mail $1 for Instructicn Man-
us! telling how (Money-back
guarantee’ Sterling, Dept. 707.
Great Nock, N, ¥.

jcanoe

Fiat & Price $2.50 Mrement date. teleg
wa boom ane" setk trphetie, We wis
PANTS range & perannal ow a Coe
BR ing oy eta Seethal erie:
firkee salad wearin on To LEADER BOOK STORE BOX 520
} Rignt" wot on ane sd 97 Duane St., New York 7, N. Y. </o Civil Service Leader

GET THE STUDY BOOK
PARKING METER COLLECTOR

Study Material, Exam Questions and Answers to help
you pass the test. Exam to open

ous systems in effect regarding
'] Leading te @ ©
H

the fall,

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

+ REAL ESTATE .

HOUSES — HOMES — PROPERTIES
THE BEST GIFT OF ALL— YOUR OWN HOME

Page Fleven

LONG ISLAND LONG ISLAND LONG ISLAND LONG ISLAND

iwwvwvvvvvvVvvVvv*
‘D> Lowest Gash — Biggest Values!

SPRINGFIELD GONS.
$11,500

S. & $250 Cash

HOLLIS $12,490

INTER-RACIAL
Detached ‘Dream’
10% DOWN

LOOK THESE UP

SMALL CASH FOR VETS
SPRINGFIELD GARDENS ST. ALBANS

7 rooms. Brick and shingle. 5 room brick bungalow. Fin-
4 years old. Corner plot 60 ished basement with bar; oil

SO. OZONE PARK
$10,500

$1,000. CASH TO ALL
VACANT POSNESSION 2 NOERI®

|
‘ s heat; l-car garage; beauti~ >. Lovely, fully ditivteed, rooms,
Newded bey Rileite Gt E Bootckcd orc origin fh ate ful, modern kitehens and |f}|
ONLY $66.42 PER MO. (stall shower); oil heat; baths. Plot 30x100. GI $1,000 > ie
car garnge. GI $1,000. ) eee 500 Gana

wan I
von Bs

BAISLEY PARK

Price .......... $12,500 ane

HOLLIS

2 family brick, Corner plot.
5 and 4 rooms, Finished
knotty pine basement with
playroom; modern baths and
kitchens; of] heat; 2-car ga-
rage. GI $1,200,

Price ......-.. $12,800

LOWEST CASH DOWN FOR CIVILIA)
WE SPECIALIZE IN G. I. & FLA. MORTGAGES

ARTHUR WATTS, «r.

112-52 175 Place, St. Albans

JA 6-8269
8 A.M. to 7 P.M. — SUN, 11-6 P.M.

ADDLESLEIGH PARK
Beautiful 6 room semi-ranch
home with attached garage,
Ol heat; finished oak-pine
basement with a beautiful
bar; playroom and laundry
room, Pilot 40 x 100, with
barbecue pit and children’s
swimming pool in back. GI

» $13,500

b ST. ALBANS $12,900
Cash G. |. $300

Pe eon

$9,900
G. |. $200 Down

Notts wood ty
Beautify

WACK to super
Super BUIOOEN &
TRANSIT facilities,

National Real Estate Co.
10 MELLAEDIE AVE, IAMAION
+ Sutweday A Sumday OD

OLympia 7-6600

“E-S-S-E-X

143-01 Hillside Ave.

JAMAICA, LL
Call for Detail Driving Directions — Open Every Day

MAAAAAAAAAAS

nous FRR

‘SHRI Je ab Re OE SR eae

COTE REALTY

189-30 Linden. mae

STU HTTLLUTTLLUIULLRLLIL LLL. LLL LULL LL

ST. ALBANS

118-09 Sutphin Blvd,

CUSTOM BUILT
2-FAMILY BRICK

BOTH APTS. VACANT
5 large m . each floor
jowers, dob! e. finished bi

: HOLLIS i | Me Be Ae Oe 44K. 7-7900 0 de a eM
: =e
*
= .
3 . ‘$COTE SPECIALS EXCLUSIVE HOMES in NASSAU& QUEENS
"$13, 125 t e>= ST. ALBANS: 6 room detached; beautiful interior; of) steam
* SO. OZONE PK. heat; garage; nice sixe plat; excel 12 600
Bellerose z JAMAICA Price s+ evaE eee acs $12,
e@ @y nous: Meauliful brick and stuceo: large, nicely decorated
¢ ty te rooms; 4 bedrooms on second floor; 1 large finished room in
we ile 4 © @iP expansion attic; 24+ baths; oil heat; 2-car surace: 7, 850
° | €1 CIVILIAN e lovely location, Price ; sar ’
3 is . aie 3@ G.I. $500 site ST, AOLBANS: Legal 2 family; 1015 rooms; all private bed-
$17, 850 * CIV. $1,500 Lo-Dow: Payment Ss Feonee; ofl heat; garage; good location. $15, 750
3 AEG cs 6c ;
¢ eo” ST. ALBANS. BAISLEY F PK. on e 8, OZONE PARK: Corner brick, detached: legal 2 family; 13
z : 2 Eason, soenons. . rooms; |B eovpag finished basement; oil; 2-car $18 900
* Other 1 & 2 fa Pat garage, Reios : iJ
$ Priced from $8,000 up <\@
: le & ALLEN & EDWARDS
LEE ROY SMITH tie vent si @ Prompt Personal Service — Open Sundays and Evenings
192-11 Linden Blvd | G.I. $2,000 Gl. - CIVILIAN @| OLympia &-2014 - 8-2015
* S. Albans '@ CIV. $3,500 ie | Lois J. Allen Licensed Real Evtate Andrew Edwards
< LA 5-0033 JAG ‘le _ Le-Down-Paymen @ fo 168-18 viverty ave Brokers Jamaica. N.Y.
: sl e e@
e 6
: e

ST ALBANS
NEW HOME
tt '

tarde, “

Move jes it
bath:

Hollywood
This

HOLLIS PK. $14,990

be autitul: se s In excellent condition. Price
rye BRANCH OFFICE $990 CASH ‘ARE OVER LARGE MORTGA
HARMAN CAMPESRL SPECIALS To G. 1. MANY OTHER GOOD BUYS IN 1 & 2 FAMILY HOMES

SOLID BRICK
5 YEARS OLD
LARGE LANDSCAPED
PLOT

6 Kms,, 3 Bdrms,,
1's Baths
Knotty Pine Fin, Bsmt.
Pully equipped with refrig-
erator, washing machine,
screens and storm windows.
This immaculate brick home
will delight the most dis-
eriminating buyer, We'll
guarantee a shout of joy at
the exquisite knotty pine

TOWN REALTY
G-21 Merrick Blvd. Springfield Gardens.
LAurelton 7-2500 — 2501

STULL LULL LL LLL LLL LULL LCL

D071 dunetion Blvd,
MA GiB

dackion Bie

m1 69637 LL

 dshshehabslihehshehelahs’ dehodedehtakholel

~ BROOKLYN'S

: BEST BUYS ;
DIRECT FROM OWNERS |
ALL VACANT %

LINCOLN PL—3 family, $16,
500.

BROOKLYN

BROOKLYN

WHY PAY RENT?

MONKOE ST.—1 family

EER SESERESESSOSHMESEESSERESEEESHRE SHH

deta hed, Garage. Price $11,000, c

Cash $600. APARTMENTS = = pe ogtr

sey SecTatY aranaite we ole 3 FOR RENT FURNISHED APTS. MR. WILLIAMS
CUMMINS REALTY) | or in pte bosutifulty fursiatied: bites: GL 5.4600
ha Gateseg sr eenare Cemnine , pA. fl Saree ecru werner ie OPEN SUNDAY — 10 A.M. to 4 P.M.

PR. 4-641) CALy mer St, between Bedford and Now _—
re a GL 5-4600 Jirand, hear 8th Ave, aud Brixton | | Aig Rg I I ST
waa es,

srml=

HERKIMER ST. (Nostrand) beant,, sparkling ranch styled

3 and basement, $17,000, kitchen and carefully tended

ERPS : lawns and gardens. Oversized

geome Casts required ve0u) surave SMALL CASH DOWN PAYMENT
PARK FL — 8 fami) be MANY OTHERS TO ChOOsE FKOM MANY GOOD 4.

PARK rh fant, aot Tee COLM BROKERAGE ||{| Sess atsse ee corm ro WILL BUY ANY ONE OF TEN
SULLAVAN PL. (Rogers) — 3 100-57 New York Riva CALL JA 6.0250 ONE & TWO FAMILY HOUSES
stor sem etached. urage." Ja jem 5 r

Modcrn, Bar. Porcls $10.50. aE. 90045 — JA. 3-2726 The Senda) Rely. Gos IN THE MOST DESIRABLE PART

OF BROOKLYN

Page Twelve CIVIL SERVICE LEADER Tuceday, Ovtober 18, 1955

twaat Norton CITIZENSHIP REQUIREMENT | Groundwork on Pa

3e|otitMtto emacs "ee| Revolution Was Laid (BY-LAW IS Re-Amended

\ ot Kew

ily day of October tt

An ML eee Gel sce eae ties pesproren ce By Salary Committee | aisany, oct 17—Lone amend) Albert C, Killian is chairman,
Yeoman work on Resolution No. | ment to the CSEA Constitution or assisted by Richard Davis, Ana-

ot | thologist, Binghamton City Labor-
von day of | LRGAL NOTHOR of one phrase in section 3(b), Ar- ard J. St, Clair, George Stems and
Fore’ Conmy ot {HON It submitted for delegates’) ane phrase—which had been in-
SAMFOND Mt. 60:lof the salary question, reimbursing traveling expenses of TO Hear Dr. Black
coran, Stephen C. Davis, Pauline| Ment applied only to a date now speak on “The Mississipp! Story,”
rowitinag
TMA SMALLWOOD, vesitil the 100) Oreos Max Weinstein and Mar- Faspages the deletion, and the dele- | October 20, at 8:30 P.M, at 20

HANRY GEORAK wy
Reqibeinber, IRB, ti

HOM

CHARLIE

me | tory 1 was performed by the CSEA sal-| By-Laws, at lust week's annual|tole Dolan, Frank C, Maher, John
TNE he ary committee, which iasued a de-| Meeting here, concerned deletion |L. Murphy, James Navarette, How-
f resolu:
i reer [One Cnn emrere ene ticle TTt, By-Laws. John K. Wolff,
approval, Davis L. Shultes, chair-|serted by delegates to the special | pe *
oe"et| man, presided during discussion| meeting July 28—hed called for| © OGt B'rith Lodge
‘The committee also cothprised | delegates to that meeting. Dr. Algernon Binck, of the
Perry Bendricksen, Harold Cor-| Inasmuch as the July amend-|NAACP board of directors, will
Fitchpatrick, John J, Kehiringer, | P&5t—and reimbursement has been |at the next meeting of Excelsior
and Mine be petition Mildred M.+ Lauder, Dennis J,|™made—the committee recom-|Lodge, Binal B'rith, on Thursday,
taoaner the, Chaxhices Aue | garet J. Will, es approved, West 40th Street, NYC.

ALLEN KVANS,

) CHAMLES ALLEN EVANS js am infant
wer the uae of 14 years, t

ESTEE SILC, Jiuhon of City Gaunt } ee

PLUAAMEVH MARY ANNE

ORNEY GENERAL OF |
i we Alina |
tur No. |

Tid Wa

e Ujork of vile Court,
& copy et Hsia ander shall within
+ From. Uh hereok be
Leader
cay
New

Alpem | thereat wliall the Aled Ww

ly "hurt or the tus ot sow Yorn [Se Earl Kelly, Director of Classification and Compensation, and a former president of New
"oly of New York. aud York City chapter, Civil Service Employees Association, “sits in" with that chapter's del-
aioe ot | @gation to the CSEA annual meeting. Around the table, clockwise, are Joseph J. Byrnes,
suc iea | treasurer; Mr. Kelly; Sol Bendet, president; Sam Emmett, 3rd vice president; Frank New-
one. the: 20m day of tee. 186 | id Seymour Shapiro, delegates; Max Lieberman, Ist vice president, and Edward S.
ne hakown hy. the amen of CHAIN Bs | ARPT fimencial secretary. Joe and. Mrs. Byrnes, incidentally, aré celebrating their 44th
ESATO Ee Se) Oe wedding anniversary this month.

aaeunn  eliaeeeainbbbbiasiddseiisbidiabiahicieieniiitethieiiiiis rrerrerrr Trt Tr rer TTT |

NO STRAIN | NO STRAIN |

NOTION
Sealed peape:

ee a \ on r. on
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f F A with the with the
fs : } TOP LOW LOW
2 H yal TUNING PRICES
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Wall. Strert, Bocough of | ihn

Ui caleese: oh [anton

Admiral | - Gcrwete

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Remember: * Optic Filter Screen

Kautenunn, | Gera will ee
Fox Chapa, | 4rre wilt

sed materialmen,
» vom of 100% of the
act, Denwings and
examined tne of

Gringer is a * Super Cascode Power Plant
very reaso: * 3-Dimensional Picture Frame
able man! J *& Inclined Tuning Dial

139.95 FREE

toble with sew Admiral

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¥
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to. contribute |
a The Governor Alfred ®,
OMe Muthling, Albany,

100. Getewne mt.

sian of tye Limited partner
Ahn tenes | Dietrick Moginese, S01 B Water at, fy.
ne ham feew Dilledd ta said | Distrhet Mie

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Oor¥ A hehiisleteheiaheiehetidehshebeheteheiaheiaheRehehe heheheh hehe tetsietaehehehahsheheiabshsheheh Aeheieheheheiahahehabsteiehateheiaiahehaheteh

Wiens Kavirde Marob AX LOOT DATION: Qe & 1008
__ Teceday, October 18, 1955

CIVIL SERVICE

LEADER

PUTT TTT ETT VET TTY TTT TY

MODERN PUBLIE
ADMINISTRATION

as rrr AARAAABAAAABAAAAALS

Recognition Given to NYC Employee-Authors

NEW YORK CITY employees who have written articies, book | 41" D

reviews, or even books themselves now get mention in @ special
Pamphlet put out by the Municipal Reference Library and sent to
Officials and other employees of the City,

The pamphiet lists the names of those local employees “who,
during the year, have been quietly adding to the store of professional
knowledge about New York by their wrilten contributions.” The title
and publisher of the writings are also listed,

The idea of the pamphict is to extend recognition to the writers
beyond the limits of the particular departments in which they serve
and also to stimulate creative efforts in others,

In the back of the pamphiect appear reviews of books that are
considered by the library staff to be vf interest or use to employees
in the City’s departments and agencies.

ONE OF AMERICAS

GREATEST PHILOSOPHERS,
PRESENTED HIS "ALBANY
PLAN OF UNION” TO THE
ALBANY CONGRESS ON

ALTHOUGH HIS PROPOSAL WAS NOT
‘ADOPTED, IT STARTED THE COLONISTS THINKING ABOUT

THE NEED FOR UNION.....THE STAMP ACT CONGRESS OF
1765 AND THE CONTINENTAL CONGRESS OF 1774. WERE

FOLLOWING THE PRECEDENT
SET BY THE ALBANY CONGRESS
(ELD IN 1754, AND IT IS FOR
THIS REASON THAT ALBANY, N.Y,
\THE CAPITOL OF OUR EMPIRE
STATE, 1S TODAY CONSIDERED
AS THE BIRTHPLACE OF
AMERICAN UNION... THIS 15
JUST ONE OF MANY REASONS
FOR BEING PROUD OF OUR STATE...

(JUNE (9, 1754......

THE NATIONAL COMMERCIAL BANK
AND TRUST COMPANY
ALBANY 1, W. Y.

“17 Offices Serving Northeastern New York State”

Member Federal Deposit Insucance Corporation

The news that's
happening to you!

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

Make sure you don't miss a single issue. Enter your sub-
scription now,

And you can do a favor for someone else too!

Have you a relative or a friend who would like to work for
the State, the Federal government, or some loca) unit of govern-
ment?

Why not enter a subscription to the Civil Service Leader for
him? He will Ond ful) job listings, and learn a lot about civil
service.

The price ts $3 — That brings him 52 issues of the Civil
Service Leader, filled with the government job news he wants.
ye on the coupon below:

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
97 Duane Sireet
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T enclone $3.50 ‘check or money order) for a year’s subscrip-
tion to the Civil Service Leader. Pleane enter the name lated

Key A Answers

MAINTAINERS HELPER, E
Following are the officia) tenta-
tive key answers in the NYC teat
for maintainer's helper, group E,
fe open-competitive and promo-

A; 3,

B; 10, B

|, A; 15, B;

19, A; 20, A;

24, B: 25, D;

29, 8; 40, D:

; 34, L; 36, PB;

+ 99, C; 40, C;

+ 44, A; 45, B:

49, A; 50, B;

54, C; 55, D;

59, C; 60, C;

; 64, B; 65, B;

69, D; 70, D;

14, A; 15, B;

74, A; 75, B:

8, D; 79, A; 80, B;
83, A; 84, C; 85, D; 86, C;
88, B; 89, C; 90, C; 81, A;
9: ; 04, P; 95, J; 96, 8;

; 99, B; 100, D.
‘itten test wan held on

Protests may be filed submitted
in writing to the Personnel De-
partment, 299 Broadway, New
York 7, N, Y¥., with citations of
authorities,

WHAT WAS REALLY WRONG
The Hoover Commission, head-
ed by former President Herbert
Hoover, wound up ite work of de-
vising ways for the government to
economize, by returning to the
‘Treasury $83,000 in unspent funds.
We always suspected there was
something wrong with that Com~-
mission,

TRAIN FOR HIGH-PAY JOBSI
Satnrine from 33.540 te 958,000
HEARING REPORTER
CONVENTION REPORTER
COURT REPORTER
LEGAL STENOGRAPHER

Alea Courses tht
Business Administration
Accounting @ Medical Becretartal

coed
Come in—ehene or write 1

Interboro Institute

Res. by Buard of Regents, VA Appr.
24 W. 74 St. Tine

‘Only Benest in MVC. Asnraved by
Mationad Sharthand Mepertars Aun.

© KEY PUNCH (Heeinners)
ALSO: Many Vedernt Jobe §
Vint awe Chasers
Yunte "Viacement — YHRE

MACHINE
ACCOUNTING
SCHOOL

196 W. tnd St, N.Y, (Alr-Cond.)
re 64078

HANDS TIED?

er

Because You Lack A
HIGH SCHOOL

DIPLOMA
You can get one at HOME in

your spare time. If you are 17
or over and have lef school, write

you how!

AMERICAN SCHOOL, Eas'are Offce
130 W. 42od St. N.Y. 36, N.Y.
Send me your free High Schoo! bootie

“HOUSE HUNTING?
SEE PAGE 11

For an m analysis @ of etvil service

Approved for All Veterons Eastern School AL 4.5029
Clannes Dare, Rye. start aay Monday 133 2nd Ave., H.Y. 3 (ot 8th St)
Pirnve wite wie roe abit. the

:|MONDELL INSTITUTE oul "inveatieator | couse

for interesting booklet — tells|

ASST CIVIL ENGR

Chasers ‘Tiee,, "Theirs. se O16
Saturday O16 “) 26
JR. ELECTRICAL ENGINEER
Pri. O46 te & Sat, O16 we 19:15
JR. CIVIL ENGINEER bai Theron) ann Wha |
Toe, & Thor, G15 w 86 Pe SOCIAL

Civil Rnwtncer rom, NWS
CUE Ringineer- Prom,
A

Moneine | &
Ane

INVESTIGATOR

$4,000 te $5,080
Filing Oct, 4 to Oct, 26

INTENSIVE COURSE
COMPLETE PREPARATION

Kleq Ener Dew

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Cut

Geom, "Trie,
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cule, Pigeon, Dratiin
Mech. Stricturul Steet,
Bile Conete Retimatingturrering

200 W. 41 St, Her. THM. Bide. WET-2O80 |] Mame
Branches Bronx, Mrowliya & Jamalea

Over 40 Yeura prepacine Thouratle Adieom

fer Civil thervice Knciverriie Naame

Prepare for ]
Patrolman Chy Exam Coming For
Physical Exams | CHEMIST

— All Equipment
— Expert Instruction
— Evening Sessions
— Full Membership |
wae |

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Where LIRR and oll subwoys meet
STerling 3-700

$5,750 - $7,190
| Open Filing Oct. 4-26

INTENSIVE COURSE
COMPLETE PREPARATION

Toes, and Thure, 015-048
beginning O11, 3

Write of Phone for tut

AL 4.5029
N.S (at 8 SH)

me free about the

PRP OPERA OA AF
IBM AT BMI
KEY PUNCH AND TAB
Prepare For Civil Service

and CIVILIANS
NOW In the fime fo prepare for
EXCELLENT JOBS
Free Placement Service
DAY AND EVENING

BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAL

Positions with High Pay
TESTS IN OCT. & NOV.
40 HOUR COURSE

LOW TUITION
Pree Piacement Service |

ssinisowe 119 BUSINESS MACHINE
watso— INSTITUTE
HIGH SCHOOL Hotel Woodward, 55 St, B'way,
EQUIVALENCY DIPLOMA JU 2-5a11

PPV PV LP De Dr IO

Readers have their say in The
LEADER ’s Comment column. Sen
letters to Editor, The LEADER,
7D Duane Street w York 7,N. -¥.

HOUSE HUNTING?
SEE PAGE 11

COLLEGIATE

BUSINESS INSTITUTE

801 Madson Ave. (07 ML) CL Bint

SOCIAL SECURITY for public
employces, Follow the news on this
Pn geberes subject in The LEAD-
weekly.

PATROLMAN

ORK CULY POLICE DEPARTMENT
iL and PHYSICAL CLASSES

Enroll Now!
e atte EVENING SESSIONS
Al

.
ME! DICAL EXAMINATION
MEMBERSHIP PRIVILEGES

Bronx Union YMCA

470 E. 1Gist St, — ME 5-7800

YMCA Schools

15 West 63rd St. — EN 2-8117

SCHOOL DIRECTORY

— Cullege Prepan

SOKO TALL ACADEN.

Vultee, Ghiza, legoula & Gl Approved,
Oy weer,

Bustnces Sehoote

WASHINGTON BUSINES
fend etvid wervices training

THM. Meyvunch; ABM Blob
Ktenugraphy, Vetnt
Bons Kit

OF BLNINRA,
fin
Serving Preparation, Kast

or IBM Key Panch & TAS Training
“) Chanson, Lote 1A tory Leeson 8h, Heoe ft
"RODAY. Conibinatioa 1201s Bi

by
ERIVOLL
S087, No Age Limit No educational rm quiremenis,

een Hehoul, 180 W

ecretarias
ORAREA, 154 NANGAU STARRY, NYC. Secretarial Accounll

Drafting, Jowrnalam,

ran in the forefront of the
column, “Look! Bee
Page 2,

Day Might, Write for Catalog BH 34840

ATION, SMALL (IKOUPR, Ghortianl writers weloome
only, OH PM, The Dienvype Workwiop, 100 M. Gain 31.,

Avni Wee
re eT
Page Fourteen CIVIL SERVICE LEADER Tuesday, October 18, 1955

%
s
cons x
i

Delegates to the 45th annual meeting of the Civil across-the-board increase of base salary, and a sion was devoted to discussing and voting on
Service Employees Association are seen as they mandatory, maximum five-day, 40-hour work a total of 126 resolutions, of which 67 were ap-
pondered the resolution calling for a 20 percent week, for all State employees. A day-long ses- proved.

a

: CSEA Names Officers | Delegates Approve 67 Resolutions

( Continued from Page 1) — ,cocds Mildred M. Lauder, who did (Continued from Page 1) tal Hygiene, Social Welfare and hours, of tess duration—Resolved,
seek re-election, contribution toward retirement |Health Departments supported |that the Association draft and
* : le ees S Baait .4 (Sponsor legisiation requiring the

roted departmental represen- | Allowances; the resolution as finally adopted. state of New York to guarantee
4 An insurance program to| Correction delegates unsucc payment of minimum of four
provide for medical, surgical and | fully urged the Association to ad-|hours overtime at straight pay to
voonte, explicitly as well as im-|institutional employ called
| back to work alter their regular

abilities of our Joyal members, | 20t

which will give us streng | 2
tatives were

Agriculture and Markets—Wil-
my hospital expenses

liam P, Kuehn
5. A mandatory maximum flve-| plicitly, a maximum 40-hour week

I will, through constant sery

mn ad Co Zdwa tour of duty (eight hours) Is com-
poe | _ Audit and Control—Edward G.) aay 40-hour work week for ail| with no loss in present take-home | pleted, whether he work one, two
} Borenson. Stale employoes bo instituted.” | pay jor three hours after he is called
There 14,681 ballots ast Bank k C. Mab on I jut | bac!
; van anking ank Maher ne original pay resolution, as! There wa ‘otal ¢ esolu- | 28°
in the ¢ n, Voters retur There was a total of 67 resolu- | Change of title—Rexolved, that

R. Qebes. | proposed by the CSEA salary and! tions appr
tions committees, had called

Civil Service

oved by the dek
ught improveme
of all State agencies | suard and attendant
nged legisiatively to correction
officer and criminal hospital cor-
rection officer, respectively
Reapeal of the Condon Wadtin

Bates, | the Civil

a H, Hilton, in- | F
f for 10 percent across-the-board
No men.
40-hour

es of prison

in wh
cumber

ease in base salar
of

inc

s of local government

the final Commerce—Mildred O, Meskil.

}tion was

others sought im

Conservation—George H. ms.

for specific departments or

Othe Serene ne zaae uesinaa on was amended | tutions, such as pay for custodial | Act Resolved, that the Civil
iste Education ated dis-| sides ut Westfield Stat |Service Employees »Association
ep |. ; aN eS ta vi » prese ‘ondon=
dent, wh | Executive what age ralse/and Albion ‘Training School, | qahrxc, Te Present Condon
dent, w = seg ike hool. | Wad ot
Lawren Bes ought, And’ the inc qual to that of other custodial| Ineremeni upon promotion in
Rot I resi. (ere & sion and wording of the 40-hour | aides, and free toll privileges for |all cases—Resolved, that if an
way Pees | O' Morrissey. week provision, at Manhattan State |¢™ployee Is promoted or appoint-
dent, who defeated Claude Jed to @ higher grade and the

1 aides of the Men-

Hy | Institution

mett J, Durr
Eugene J. Calahan, — == a

— Solomon Bendet.

Rowell, 7.470 to 6,351
William J. Connally, opposed by

(Continued on Page 16)

approved, without

the following items which

two member third
presidency 5.926 vot The incumbent defeated Stephen appeared in The LEADER of Oc
He defeated J. Cocoaro, | J. Bank |tober 4: Nos, 2 through 32, 24
who had 4,899 votes, and John J Labor—Grace T. Nulty, Her op- | through 47, and 50 |
Cox who had a total of 3,696] ponents were Edmund J, Bozek Numbers 34 and 49 were de
votes and Iarael leted, Number 48 was amended,
Vernon A. ‘Tapper, 4th vice] Law |G Btate | to provide that the coming Spring
president, had 7,253 votes to the} srental Hygiene John 2| | meeting of delegates be designed
5.486 of opponent, John PL) eine jas “Bill McDonough Day.” Last
Quins, Charlotte M. Clapper was | week's meeting had originally |
returned to the office of secretary | _Peblie Service — Margaret A. | | been proposed as the time to hon-

| Mahoney, The incumbe)
ed Anthony A, Bergamini.

defeat-

Jor the long-time Association off
| clal,

votes to the 4,~
her opponent

by scoring 9
446° gathered

veqilgeaeiags’ Public Works—Charies J, Hall | Other resolutions which won

Harry G. Pox got the most sub Social Welfare—Charlos Davis. | delegates’ affirmative votes, and
stantial ction when| State—Edward L. Gilchrist. | not previo printed in ‘The
he was returned to the office of| Tax Paul F. | LEADER
treasurer by a vote 10,020 to | Powers. Jeannette “ Social Security for all Employ
9.462, His opponent was Kenneth | M. Finn, Francis X. Maloney and “ | |ees without reduction of Retire
L. Reixinge Sam Emmett, Mr, Emmett was @ me 7 a jmeny 8 oflta Resolved,

esraigisspect ane BaP eedin ih eanminah 4 | that’ Social ity coverage be

iy aay P 3 v> #. jextended to all ves not 50

of fifth vice president for thy Judiciary—William P. Sulli a] red without interference or
time, The winner was € ‘ Lesisiative—William §, King. | ISABELLE O'HAGAN detrac benetfis now re-| JAMES V. KAVANAUGH
Lamb, who totaled 7,644 v to| Jesse MacParland, tmmediate | Of the CSEA Board of Canvas- | cured by membership in the Em- | Presiding, for the last time,

the 5.069 recelved by contender | past president of the CSEA, in-| sers, as she rend election re- | Mayra) Reliroment System. | over delegates’ discussion of

Noel FP, McDonald. Mr, Lamb suc- ' stalled the new officers. sults, be pald for work, beyond normal resolutions,

_Tessdey, October 18, 1955

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Page Fifteen

Lists Certified to NYC Depts.

tear

eta

2.
Assistant eivil engineer, Bani-
tation; 42,
Assistant gardener, Parks; 470.
Assistant mechanical engineer,
Sanitation; 17.
Associate

city planner (social
bea hina City Planning Commis-

rag pg Marine and

aviation:

Hi
617; ‘Water | Supply, Gas and Blec-
tricity, 166,

Bookkeeper Transit; 166.

Chemist, Health, ‘Tre
Queens Borough President,
chase; 34.

Chief marine engineer (diesel,
Public Works; 1.

Civil engineer (sanitary), Sanl-
tation; 13,

Clerk, grade 2, Education, 1,088;
byl id Supply, 1,110; Hospl
1,197,

College office assistant A, Queens
and Hunter Colleges; 1,187,
College; 15,

Dental hygienist, Health; 9.

HERE IS A LISTING OF ARCO

— ee

INQUIRE ABOUT
C1 Administrative

Asst, —.$2.50
C) Accountant &
Ae $3.00
Tere 4
Auto Machinist
} Mate Machenle ————$2.50
} Proclice Tests —..-$2.00
o Foreman
q (Sanitation) $2.50
C) Attondont
Attorney $2.50
’ sper $2.50
Bridge & Tesnel Oticer $2.68
Coptein (P.0.) 53.
, Car $2.50
Chemist ...... $3.00
Clvit $2.50

aa
sy
——-$2.50

FF
i
;
$
1

low to Pass Coll fn
trance Tests seats

and Annapolis Entrance
oe $3.50
Insurance Agent —....$3.00
Interacl Revenue Agent $2.50
Investigator

(Leyalty Review) —....$2.50
Investigator

(Civil end Low
Enforcement)...

o05 OD
sss

COURSES for PENDING EXAMINATIONS

OTHER COURSES

Hons $3.00
Steno —.$3.00
DV mernene $300

Malntainer's Helper () $2.50

Messenger (Fed.) —..$2.00

Messenger, Grade 1 $2.00
$2.50

oopoeo cooood

Potroimon ...

Patroiman Tests =e ae

~
e

3

Priso ard $2.)

Probation OM: me

Public Health Murse .....$2.50
Bailrood Clerk —.........$2.00
Railroad Porter —...........$2.00
Real Estate Broker .......$3,00
Retri License ..$3.00
Rural Meil Cerrier ........$3.00
Senitationman $2.00
School Lary re}

0 Wer Service Scholer-

ships .. ~: $3.00
With Every N. Y. C. Arco Book—
You Will Receive an Invaluable
New Arco
@ New York City Government,”

“Outline Chart of

ORDER DIRECT—MAIL COUPON

LEADER BOOK STORE

Please vend me ©

Name .

Address

3S< for 24 hour special di
. D's We extra

I enclote check oe money order for $..

97 Duane St., New York 7, N. Y.

epies of books checked share.

State. ..sserers

oats Health; 21,
Electrician's helper, Sanitation,
Housing Authority; 52.
Elevator operator,
College; 5.
First assistant marine engineer
(diesel), Public Works; 2,
Foroman (custodial), grade 2,
Queena College; 48,
Housing assistant, Housing Au-

bacteriologist, Health;

Junior chemist, Health; 31,
Laboratory assistant ‘chemis-

tals, | try), Brooklyn Borough President,

36; Health, 66.

Maintainer's helper, group
Trasit; 132,

Maintainer's helper,
‘Transit; 112.

Maintainer’s helper, group D,
‘Transit; 206,

Maintenance man, Brooklyn
College, 512; Hoftsing Authority,
536; Queens College, 579.

Murine oiler, Public Works,
Marine and Aviation; 168,

group ©,

Mortuary caretaker, grade 1,
Hospitals; 52,

Occupational therapist, Health,
Hospitals; 8

Oiler, Correction, 156; Hospitals,
175; Public Works, Markets, >77.

Psychiatric socia) worker Hos-
pitals, Welfare, City Magistrates,
Special Seasions, Domestic Rela~
tions; 41.4,

Rajlroad clerk, Transit; 1.212.

Rehabilitation counselor,
Health; 4.
— man B. Sanitation;

Senior physical therapist, Hos-
pitais; 2.
Social investigator, 1,
Welfare; 1,234.
Stationary fireman, Police; 118.
Stenographer, grade 2, Marine
and Aviation, Purchase; 526,
Stock assistant (men), Housing
Authority, 50; Purcha: Welfare,

60: Correction, Hospitals, 70.
Surface line operator, Transit;

erade

Typist, grade 2, Hospitals; 674

» Water tender, Marine and Avia-
tion: 64

PROMOTION

Assistant bacteriologist, Hospi-
tals, 9; Health, 90.

Chief marine engineer,
and Aviation; 3.

Civil engineer: Bronx Borough
President, 2; Education, 7,

Civil engineer( construction di-
vision), Transit; 13.
Clerk, grade 4,

Comptroller; 41.
Pirst assistant marine engineer

(diesel), Public Works: 3.
Foreman of asphalt

Marine

excise taxes,

workers,

Queens Borough President: 6.
Foreman electrical power),
Transit; 54,
Foreman of apinters, Housing
Authority; 19,
Lieutenant, Police; 518,
Photographer, Marine and Avi-
ation; 1,

Power distributions maintainer,

subway and elevated, Transit, 95.
Power maintainer, group A,
‘Transit; 45,
Power maintainer, group C,
Transit; 39.
Railroad stockman, Transit; 24
Road car inspector, Transit; 43
Section stockman, Hospitals,

Marine and Aviation; 33,
Senior chemist, Transit;

Lists Issued |86 Units Have

ALBANY, Oct, 17—The farens More Members

Civil Service Department
1 (Continued from Page 10)
8 open-competitive and 12 pro- The ¢ acs Wicd Bidive tas

| Motion lists in September, with a
total of 945 eligib! creased membership are:
otal eligibles, The rosters Capital Divides Conterente <=

are now available for use by ver]

sonnel officers in the various State | Hpeen pares che ae
departments to fill vacancies in| quor Authority, Motor Vehicle,
these titles and others which may |Public Service, Public Works Dis=
be “appropriate. trict, State,

The number of eligibles on each tenet some caratainten
lists

Broadacres, Dannemora State
Hospital, Elmira, Elmira Reform-
atory, Onondaga Sanatorium, Os-
wego State Teachers College, Ot-
7. \seeo County Public Works, Ox-

| ford, Public Works District 2, Ray

OPEN-c UMPETITIVE |
Aquatic biologist, 6.
Asociate landscape architect,
Biochemist,

” St '.
Compensation claims investi |Rrco gate ovpital St Lavr.
jtor and compensation investigator, | State School, Utica.
18, Metropolitan Conference

Central Islip
| Kings Park State Hospital.
Agricultural and Technical

Damages evaluator, 10,

Deputy clerk, also acting as
court stenographer, 56.

Elevator operator,

Junior forester, 6

Junior pharmac:

In-
stitute, L, IT, State Park Commis-
-|sion, New York Parole District,
|New York City, Metropolitan Di-

|vision of Employment, Pilgrim
iat —pharmacy | State Hospital, Psychiatric Insti-

apprentice, 16. tute, State Insurance Fund, Wil-
Laundry supervisor, 24 lowbrook State School
Law stenographer, Supreme patency ce p Derm
Court, First Judicial District, 8 'Dictectors, Marlen Valley State

tectors,
Law stenographer, Supreme | Hoepital,

Court, Second Judicial District, 7.| Hospital, Hudson Valley Armor-

Si jes, Matteawan State Hospital,
enior bullding electrical ensi-| prinadex State Park Commission,

Harlem Valley State
Hudson River State

neer, 8.

Public Works District 8, Reha-

Senior hardware specifications pilitation Hospital, Sing Sing

writer, 5. [Wasa Warwick State School,

anid “hhattod ind: ¥ ting |Wassaic State School, Wood-
Irae 2 ing and ventilating | titne State Prison,

Shit Western Conference — Attica

Social worker, 16.

State Prison, Barge Canal, Buf-

Social worker, 16. falo State Hospital, Chautauqua
Social worker (medical), 10, {County Publle Works, Craig Col-

, jony, Gowanda State Hospital,

Youth parole worker, €, |Gratwick, Hamburg, Hornell,
Newark "State. School Orleans

PROMOTION County Publié Works, Publie
Conservation | Works District 4, Rochestor State

Park | Hospital, State School at Indus-
try, Western New York Armories,
County Division—Broome, Cat-

Secretary to LL
Commission, 5,
Division of Employment

State

|

taraugus, — Cortlan Dutchess,

| Assistant employment security PrankUn, Pulton, Herkimer, Jef-
manager, 209, {ferson, “Monroe, Montgomery,
i 4 ser. | Nassau, Onondaga, Orange, Orle-
Employment security manager, ans, Otsego, Rockiand, St. Lawr-
105. Seneca, Steuben, Suffolk,

Senior unemployment insurance | Ulster,
claims examiner, 181. }
Unemployment insurance mana-

| fe ence,

areca J
ROFEH AFFILIATES

ger, 90, WITH JEWISH COUNCIL
Health Rofeh, an organization of Jew-
Head clerk (ocal health ree- ish employees of the NYC De-
cords), 4. partment of Hospitals, received
Principal stenographer (exclu- from Mayor Robert F, Wagner

sive of Labs and Research,
pitals), 23,
Public Works
Senior building electrical engi-

Hos- a certificate of aMilation with the
Council of Jewish Employees in
Civil Service. Helen Gross, presi-
dent of Rofeh, accepted the cer-

neer, 3. tifleate,
Senior heating and ventilating| Commissioner Basic C. Mac
engineer, 3. Lean, Deputy Commissioners Mau-
State rice Matukin and Morrix A. Ja-
Senior editorial clerk, 3 cobs; Mrs. Estelle S. Rodman,
State Insurance Fund |secretary of the department, and

Compensation claims | nventi-
gator, 17.

Workmen's Compensation |

Compensation reviewing exam-

iner, 14.

the executive board of Rofeh at-
attended the ceremony.

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Civil

SERVICE LEADER

Tuesday, October 18, 1955

Page Sixteen

Serious, Light

Notes Struck

At MHEA Jubilee Dinner

ALBANY, Oct. 17—T am in favor

of better working conditions and
higher pay for Mental Hygiene
employers, Dr. Paul H. Hoch told
the Mental Hygiene Employees
Awoclation, The State Mental Hy
giene Commissioner added, how-
ever, “L propose, but Budget and
Civil Service dispose.”

Salaries of certain groups in t
department are “inadequate,”
sald. Something wil be done about
them, but how much and
soon can not be determined now

Dr. Hoch, principal speaker at
the MHEA’s Golden Jubtiee Din-

how

ner, held here October 10, er-
ated his three-fold program for
the department: improved treat-

ment for patients, expanded train-
ing for every group of employees.
and 4 research into the
cau ta} Line

Careers in Mental Hygiene

Improved training programs,
noted, will help to reerult
personne! and create better morale

increa
es of m

he

of present employees. Service in
Mental Hygiene should be a trae
carcer, and I hope to see it as
such. It will benefit not only the

mployee himself, but the patients
who will get the benefits of his
added training,

Serious note 4 ehter mom
ents, too, were struck at the as
sociation celebration marking tts

50th anniversary

Pred J. Krumman, MHEA prest
dent, introduced Leo Gurry, past
president, who was toastmaster of
the evening. Mr. Curry, and other
speakers, reminisced over some of
the difficult battles which MHEA
had ow ly waged in tl it

|
50 years, He and past presidents |
John MeDonald and Pred Walters
encouraged the group to press
vigorously for the 40-hour week
with no reduction in present take-
home pay.

“Today, the 40-hour week is as |
important as the eight-hour day |
Mental Hygiene em-
ployees were working 12 hours al

was when

day,” said Mr. McDonald.
“Part of History’
Paul Kyer, associate editor of

The LEADER, pointed to the par-
allel between the recent history
of the battle against infantile
paralysis and the present history

of the battle to find the pre’ -
tion and cure of mental flness.

In a short 30 years, we've
nearly conquered polio,” he said,
reminding his audience that the
disease has afflicted mankind
since al t the time of the
Pharoah

“1 believe,” he said, “that the

present Mental Hygiene: workers
will be part of the history of vic-
y over another scourge.”
John D, O'Brien, MHEA vice
president, and John E. Graveline
who represents department em-

ployees on the Board of Directors
Civil Service Employees Associa-
tion, also addressed the gathering,
as did John F. Powers, CSEA
pre

Granvill Hills, the department's
perso ctor, agreed. the
diner re told, te sit on the
daly on the condit he

would not have to n
When introduced,
his

head.

MHEA Looks to Future

The Mental Hygiene Employees
Associat which last week cele
brated its Golden Jubilee with a
magnificent dinner in Albany, has

since its modest

Followin

come a long way

beginnings in 1905

the final instalment in the story

of MHEA’s accomplishments thus

far, and ix views to the future.
In t ar 1946, the MHEA
agenda included a request for unl-
form vacation period of 22 day
and an “in-service” training pro-
gram for ward employees, Notice:
adorned the bulletin boards in
every montal hygiene institution
Mr. Dorris Blu ppointed
wecrvtary-treasurer due to M
Baumg ver Fred Wa
of Mikidletown was elected
dont In 1947. In the year 1948
Walter Mannix of Craig Colony
lected president and M
Bedford was appointed

crotary, The wheels of progr
rolled on for the M.H. employe
wht { in 1949 Mr. Man

nix
ot Mar
named
Fred K

pa

10! ¢ top

which pre

Deeds Speak for

»plishment

Themaclyes
of MHEA
are t
t the

over th
numerous to mentic

past 50 you 0

Bulla spe

Menta
ary to ad

Today there a
employ
rking

advan

day w

50
work on the part
and

of the oMecr delegates of

olved. Your asseelation ls pledged
> work f yur benefits, Th
he only all-State all nial Hy
ne # n, The departmont
ment has more than 28,000 ex
i r je Sta
doparty
t 50 years, improve
ne L brought the salary of
he attendant (competitive cla
to a minimum of $2450 and a
maximum of $3,190, sick ¢
leave for serious tilness in the fam-
ily; better classifications, more
positions, larger and more wp-to-
date inwtl on. and = certain
Much Work Remains
However, the majority of em
ploy are still working 48 and
44-hours a week with straight
overtime beyond 40 hour
The t and private
1 this seem ike an
antiq A 25-year pension
ow work in Mental Hygiene
eems a "must." The new sala
ct as adopted on April 1
1944 i» not entirely satisfactory
me employees fc hele sw
ary axed only a few cent
w five years service
n » of pay rece!
me consideration. MHEA be-
loves that payment of sick leave
ipon termination of employment
would be fair and equitable to the
faithful employ
T ure still many improve
ments this association is continu
ously working to obtain, Publicity
MHEA activities and the
work of members brings to
the taxpayer the reallzation tha
a 40-hour wovk i]
SPECIAL NOTICE
In order to give full coverage
of the CSEA annual mesti
ome chapter news and depart~
mental columns have been with
held for a week, ‘They will ap
pear in the October 23 ksue,

CSEA Delegates Approve Resolutions

(Continued from Page 14)

tarting salary of such higher
grade is lower than the present
alary of the employee, then said
employee shall receive the next
salary step in the new tl

t higher than the
employee's present sala:
less of whether or not the eni-
ployee had received an increment
the previous April 1, or one full
increment of the new grade,

whichever

Withhold id unless sat-
isfactory pay scales set up —
Resolved, thut the Asweiation

and support the neces-
istation to the
§ withhold reimbursement
from State monies for all coun-
€ division or portion:
“of who fall to submit and
mt c comparable to
those w by the State N
York local agen w
inds are erimbur rom Sta
Survivors benefits under Retire-
System—Resolved, that the
jon respectifully request
that a study be made to
he possibility and
yviding survivors pay

ptiremen

lo the Social Se
members after their
ributions reach @

Reopen 55-year pension plan
Resol 4, that the Association
peal to the Legislature to reop
opportunity for joining the 55-
year retirement

Permit employees ured in
line of duty to retire ander acci
dental disability provinions—Re
olved, that the Association spon

oF support the nec

tion to pe perc

from physical or m
€ 4 incurred nth
thelr employment to re
he accidental disabilit
ona of the retirement law

CSEA promote recreational and

rest facili
Civil. Serv

tion appoi:

Ex

tles—Reso!

Empl

nt

of

program

d, t

& committee Lo
instituting

a

non-profit vacation
grounds or rest hom
2 that instituted by the
& Telephone Company
American Legion and
table
ak Now
a grant > Int

end to State University per-

sonnel same rights as other State
* Resolved, that the
Association seek to insure to the
State employees at the ox »
and schools now under th
diction of the State University
the rights and privileges now ac-
corded under the Civil Service
Law and Rules, and oth ale
aws, to civil service employ
the State as to tenure, pr
tions, pay, hours, overtime vaca
ons, holidays, sick leaves, clasat
feation, grievances, and other

lai

matters of employment. (Provi
employees at Geneva Experiment-
Station be considered State
employees and have ail civil serv-
ice rights of such status.)
Supervision of recreational ac-

Hvities deemed hazardous Re

d that the Association take
he necessary steps to have the
actual supervision of playground
and recreational activities classed
as a haeardous occupation under
the Workmen's Compensation

to
Re

lot Heart Progras

employees outside Albany

d, that the Avsocintion sup-
Uhe extension of the pilot
program to employees out-

Compensate employees for per-
sonal property loss in line of duty

tesalved, that
ponsor oF support
uthorize the St

its employees for le
to personal property w
in the ne of om

out fault of the emplo:

Overiime for Park patrolmen—

Re ) "1 > Association
tak ¢ necessary action to in
sure that park patrolmen in State
service receive either overtime or
compensatory time off for how

of work in excess of 40 hours a
week

Remove toll c

wees for Man-

hattan State Hospital employees
Resolved, that the Association
take all possible to secu
for the non-resident car ow
employees of Manhattan &
Hospital freedom — from
im travel to thelr work
Island
Reimbu
ees transferred Resolved, tha
tion take appropriate
ure that employee:
assigned to a given
geographical area, who were not
informed at tir of employ
ment that traveling assignments
were @ reqular part of his duties
cannot be required to undertake
traveling assignments without the
employee's consent
Restrict travel on official busi-
ness to regular hours Rese ved
that all travel of State emp 5

on official
practicable
lar working ho

business
confined
8 of th

fur
ta the ree

be Pt

e employe

concerned

CSEA annual award to newspa~
per that the Civil
Service Employees Association
make an annual award to a news
paper and reporter, that by It
articles and/or editoriala ha
done most to improve the welfare
of the public employ

State Pension credit for Federal

Service—Rewolved, that the Asso
tlon sponsor or ablon
to permit memb retire
ment system were in State

ployment at the time of fed
eralization to gain credit for time
pent in Federal service during
World War 1 by paying into the
retirement system ‘he contribu
tions they would have made |
their service been State
service,

Social Committee
"Does Itself Proud"

ALBANY, Oct. 17—The social
committee of the Civil Service
Employees Association “did itself
proud” at the 43th annual meet-
ig last week,

The two informal “after hours"
gatherings of delegates Sunday
and Monday evenings, at CSEA

headquarters, were sparked by the
ur Don Foucault Trio,

nt and ample refresh

ta, d the presence of the
oclal committee vainia. Lea-
them, chairman; William Baker,
Ma aret Dever Michael Doi-
ard, Pi c Drew, Rebella i~
tthew Fitzgerald, Ivan

1 Forter, Edith Pruch-

Joun Hanlon, Rita

Doris LeFever, Lea Le-
Isabelle

O'Hagar Bernard
Schmah: uhl Catt

erine Webb and Al Wehren,

The luncheon meetings of the
delegates and the final dinner
event also attested to the time
and tale « oled by committce
memb to mak the social
side of the annual event # genu-
Ine ou

(Continued from Page 3)
August 5, 1955 establishing the
When the Harriman Administ
ployees can be looked upon #
victory by tiv
ployees A
tion had per
grievance machinery as set up by
the previous administration ms
impracticable and unworkable
When the Harriman Adm
tion took office, the Association
made overtures for the establish-
ment of workable plan. Nego-
ations began between the Aaso-
clation and the Administration
last winter, Several plan were
wug ted by both the Adminis-
tration and the Associatio: but
for one reason or another, no plan
could be roduced which w d

the approval of all
parties interoxted in the ¢
ment of the machinery
as a result of a sumgestion
at & special meeting of t
utive Committee of this Associa-
tion on June 39, » grievance plan
}was formulated which 1 the
approval of the Adn ration
e eitablishment of t
ry The ¢€ has
ed to impleme Ex
Order as rapidly as p °
& program of operation
can be wotten tinder way
(Cantliwed Next Week

80 1AL BHC URITY

for public
allow the news on this
| Subject te the LEADER,

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