Civil Service Leader, 1951 June 5

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EADER

America’s Largest Weekly for Public Employees

Vol. XII — No, 37 Tuesday, June 5, 1951

Price Five Cents

Decision Expected
In One Month

On Public Works Pay

See Page 3

Annual Harold J. Fisher Award Winners
Announced: Gilbert Dalldorf, M.D., Health;
And Everett Eliason, Conservation Dept.

Memorial Awerd.

EVERETT J. ELIASON

EVERETT J. ELIASON was selected as this year's winner of
the Harold J. Fisher Memorial Award for the following reasons:

His outstanding services and accomplishments as a civil ser-
vice employee have helped to improve and modernize tree nursery
practices and techniques. The resulting benefits of this service to
the State have been three-fold:

1, The elimination of the weed problem at the State tree nur-
series in seed beds containing over 99 million trees.

2. The expanded utilization of nursery areas to the point where
an annual production of 40 million trees has been made possible,

3, The reduction in the labor cost of producing three-year old |
seedling trees by 87¢ per thousand in 1950, which amounts to & |
total of $17,000 for this item alone,

Perry B. Duryea, State Conservation Commissioner, states: |
“These benefits have resulted through Mr. Eliason’s pioneer re-
search studies and the practical application of chemicals by him
in the control of weeds at the State nurser!

Through the studies
of chemicals that would kill weeds and still be harmless to coni-
ferous trees, Eliason finally narrowed the many chemical formulas
to one, a petroleum oil spray with a high specific aromatic content.
Without exact knowledge obtained through research, there was

extreme danger of destroying millions of trees where the main ob-
ject was to produce a chemical sensitive enough in its application
to destroy only weeds.”

Formerly, all weed control at the State nurseries was per- |
formed by hand which was inefficient, slow, and under present-
day costs, almost prohibitive, In the nurseries there is an inventory
of over 99 million trees of three different age classes, These trees

are grown in 43,000 seed beds that are four feet wide and twelve

| Association for immediate salary

GILBERT DALLDORF, M. D.

DR. GILBERT DALLDORF was selected as this year's win-
ner of the Harold J. Fisher Memorial Award for the following
reasons:

He isolated and identified a hitherto undiscovered virus, This
virus produces a disease so similar to poliomyelitis that frequent-
ly the two diseases cannot be differentiated. Unlike the virus of
polio, which attacks the nerves, the virus. isolated by Dr. Dalldorf
attacks the skeletal muscles, the nervous system being unaffected.
Dr. Dalldorf gave to this virus the name “Coxsackie,” because the
pationts from whom it was first isolated being residents of that
village.

William A, Brumfield, M.D., First Deputy Commissioner of
the State Health Department, stat “One cannot overemphasize
the importance of this discovery to medical science. It makes it
possible to differentiate true poliomyelitis from the . Coxsackie
disease which so closely resembles it; and therefore it is of ex-
treme importance to research in polimyelitis itself since it elimin-
ates confusion of diagnosis.

Tt is also of great importance from the standpoint of treat-
ment, since treatment of the disease caused by the Coxsackie
virus where muscles are attacked directly may differ considerably
from the treatment of poliomyelitis in which the nerves are in-
volved, The disease caused by the Coxackie virus is generally
milder than pollo, and patients generally recover without lasting
paralysis. The early differential diagnosis between this disease
and polio is of obvious importance, since it can be told at an
early stage what the probable result will be.”

Isolation of the virus has been hailed the world over as a real
milestone in medical progress. Scientists in many parts of the world
are intrigued with the discovery and are intensifying efforts to ar-
rive at its real significance.

Dr. Dalidorf has contributed significantly to the prestige and
importance of public service.

3

White Plains Study Finds
Levels Lagging; Action Is
Begun to Bring Salaries Up

WHITE PLAINS, June 4 — A, Hendey is Chairman of the Per-
meeting among officers of the} sonnel Committee and Council-
White Piains Civil Service Em-| man,Druss, Chairman of the Fi-
ployees Association, White Plains | nance Committee, The aim of the
Mayor Edwin G. Michaelian, and| Association is to secure increases
Councilmen Richard 8, Hendey | effective as of July 1, Represent
and Louis Druss was held on May ing the White Plains Association
23 to consider a request by the | were President Harry J, Rodri-
guez, Public Works, and Directors
Eleanor Lowthian, Board of Edu-
cation, Vera Carpenter, Publle
Library, and Joseph Novario, Pub-
lic Works. The salary data was

increases

City.
The request was based upon a

salary survey comparing rates of

to employees of the

feet long. The length of these beds totals 98 miles.
use of oll sprays in weed control,
million trees in 1951 and 40 million in 1952 has been materially

reduced,

The oil spray method of weed control,

is now being employed in most of

Through the
the labor cost of producing 34

pioneered by Eliason,
the states and in Canada,
/

Dr. Dalldorf
A Pathologist
Of Renown

Gilbert Dalidorf, M. D., who ts
one of the two winners in this
Year's Harold J. Fisher Memorial
Award competition, has held his
Present position with New York
State for the past seven years.
His title is Director, Division of
Laboratories and Research, Health
Department.

But his services with public
health go back long before 1945,
when he was appointed to his
State post. Before that, he had
held 4 position of similar title
for Westchester County, And be-
fore assuming the directorship of
Laboratories and Research for

that county, he had been, from
1929 to 1943, Pathologist at Grass-
lands Hospital, a Westchester in-
stitution,

Between 1926 and 1932, he had
been Assistant Pathologist and/
later Pathologist at New York
Hospital; and instructor in path-
ologic anatomy at Cornell Medical
College.

He has made numerous contri-
butions in the fields of virology
and nutrition, and is a member of
& long list of professional societies
in science, medicine, and public
health,

Born in Davenport, Iowa, he
took his B. S, at the University of
Towa, and then came east to study
at New York University and Belle-
vue Hospital Medical School,
where he took his M. D, in 1924,
He then spent two years of study
abroad, He is a Diplomate of the
American Board of Pathology, &
high honor in his field.

pay for some 57 comparable titles |

in White Plains, the County of

Westchester and the State of New |
York. This survey indicated that

the salaries of White Plains em-
ployees are lagging considerably
behind those of other jurisdic-
tions, This fact was substantiated
by spot comparisons with salaries
of public employees in the cities
of Mt, Vernon and New Rochelle.
The request presented by the
White Plains group was to have
the City close this gap in salaries
and help the employees meet the

steadily increasing cost of living. |

Full Council Meeting Expected

A meeting of Association rep-
resentatives with the full White
Plains Common Council is expected

|to be held shortly. Councilman

prepared by Westchester Chapter
| of the Civil Service Employees As-
sociation, of which the White
Plains organization is a Unit,

EXAM STUDY BOOKS

Excellent study books by Arco,
in preparation for current and
coming N¥C exams, are on sale at
the LEADER Bookstore, 97 Duane
Street, two blocks north of City
Hall, just west of, Broadway, op-
posite the NYC application bureau,

The books include ones for
Bridge and Tunnel, Telephone
Operator, Assistant Gardener. As-
sistant Foreman (Sanitation),
Elevator Operator, Clerk, Grades
3, 4 and 5, Police Lieutenant and
Fire Lieutenant, See advertise
ment, P. 15,

>

Association, left

Officers of tae Rochester State Hospital chapter, Civil Service &:
Claude E. Rowell, sident;

secretary; Merion Pro treasurer; Howerd Ferasworth,

pre:

tee
ident

ALBANY, June 4— Selections
of the Civil Service LEADER'S an-~
nual Harold Fisher Memorial
Award winners were revealed this
week,

The successful candidates, out
of @ field covering nominees from
all parts of the State, are:

Gilbert Dalidorf, M. Director
of the Division of Laboratories
and Research, State Department
of Health.

E. J. Eliason, Assistant Super-
intendent of Tree Nurseries, Di-
vision of Lands and Forest, State
Conservation Department. :

Equal Awards

The two awards are equal in
stature, The judges are not con-
fined to any partiCular number
of awards; in some years there
have been single winners; in 1950
five State employees won awards,

Judges in the award were three
officials of the Civil Service Re-
form Association: Charles Burl-
ingham, president; Howard Kelly,
chairman of the executive board;
and James A. Watson, executive

secretary.

The Standards

The awards are made annually
to those State employees who, in
the opinion of the judges, best
exemplify the ideals of civil ser-
vice and who have made substan-
tial contributions to the advance
of public service. The awards have
been given by The LEADER since
1945, in memory of Harold J.
Fisher, who died in 1944 while
president of the Civil Service Em-
Ployees Association, and who in
himself embodied in high measure
the standards which govern the
awards bearing his name.

The Presentation

Presentation of the awards is
scheduled to be made today
(Tuesday, June 5,) by Maxwell
Lehman, editor of The LEADER,
at the annual meeting of the Civil
Service Reform Association at the
Downtown Association, 60 Pine
Street, NYC.

Reasons for the choices of Dr,
Dalidorf and Mr. Eliason appear
in other icles in this issue,

Eliason
A Long-Time
State Aide

Everett J. Eliason, one of the
two winners of this year’s Harold
J. Fisher Memorial Award for ex-
ceptional public service, is a long-
time State employee. He went te
work for the Conservation De-
partment on October 1, 1929,

He was granted military leave
from that position on December
29, 1940, to serve in the Army,
where he attained the rank of
major, On November 26, 1945, he
returned to State service, with the
title of Assistant Forest Patholo-
gist.

A year later he was appointed
to the position of Supervising
Forester in the Bureau of Nure-
eries,

On April 1, 1949, his position
was reclassified to the title of As-
sistant Superintendent of Tree
Nurseries, and on August 1, 1950,
he received permanent promotion
to that title. The post is in the
Division of Lands and Forests, a
unit of the Conservation Depart:
ment,

He resides at the Saratoga Tree
Nursery, in Saratoga,
Page Two

ae a hee

‘CIVIE SERVICE LEADER

PS

ere es are

eer gee a

Report on Recent State Pay Appeals

State Civil Service Department,
listed 32 titles that had been re-
allocated upward. Heading the oa

ep June 4 — Reporting
the results of salary reallocation
appeals, J. Earl Kelly, director of
Classification and Compensation, is the title of Administrative

CT FROM MAWUFACTURER TO YOU

Academy of
Designing
1951
Gold Medol

Award

TROFICALS
FROM 28.95
SPORTS COATS
2495
SLACKS 6.95
TO 14.95
Alterotions
Free

4, | Statistics, G-34, $7,225-$8,800.

“tp
a.”

Ley

It takes but a moment to open a Ripley budget ac-
count — no fuss, no bother of ony kind. All you
need do is mail in the application form below and
start almost at once to enjoy the kind of clothes that
won the award — paying as you choose — monthly,
semi-monthly, in 10 weeks or 3 months — at no extra
cost! Your account is good at any of Ripley's con-
veniently located stores listed in your phone book.

RIPLEY CLOTWES 80 WEST END AVE, NEW YORK 23, HY.
wae WES Finst NAME
Woon

tanovio Ww ROORESS OF EMPLOYER

BOW TONG CPOVED POSITION

ara OK TOOK OF CK

TINE CHAE ACCOUNTS WHT

TiGHATORE
A a eH A

rector of Civil Service

ek to $12,475, to” oso, Sie.
ae ae Dene Se oe

Service Department and is held

by Charles L. Campbell,

Less fortunate were the Direc.
tor of Civil Service Examinations
and the Director of Municipal Civil
Service, in the same department.
|Mr. Kelly recommended that both
| be reallocated upward, but the
|Budget Director refused to ap-

$8,538 to $10,113, and the title
was recommended for G-42, at $9,-
325. to $10,900,

vice title, held by Henry J. Mc-
| Farland, is in G-36, $7,750 to $9,-
|325, recommended for G-39.

| 18 New Titles Listed
| Mr. Kelly's report listed 18 new

titles:
Associate Economic Research
Editor, G-25, $5,232-$6 407.

Chief Aircraft Pilot, G-25, $5,-|
232-$6 407,
| Chief Rent Examiner, G-32, $6,-
100-$8,145.
Civil Service District Represen-
| tative, G-14, $3,451-$4.176.
| | Director of Housing Project
G-42, $9,325-$10, 900,
| Manager ot Allegany
$5,650-$6,9

¥ Tehnician, Gs, $2,-
G-9,

velopme
General

Rent
$2,760-$3,450.

Examiner,

Printing shop Assistant Super-
Intesdent, G-18, $3,978-$4,808,

| "Printing Shop Superintendent, |
| G-22, $4.638-$5,628,

| Regents Printer, G-14, $3,451-
| $4.176.

|. Rent Examiner, G-14, $3,451-
| $4,176
G-10,

|. Rent Inspetor,
| $3,588.

prove. Motor Vehicle Referee, G-23,
The Director of Civil Service | $4,836-$5,826, to G.

| Examinations, title, held by| Painter, G-6, $2,622-$3,312. to

Thomas L. Bransford, is in G-39, | G-9.

The Director of Municipal Ser- | G-

low

}

Erineipal Rent Examiner, G-25,|Dining Room at Jones Beach on
$5. $641 | Saturday, June 30.

$2,898-

Senior Mehanical Engineer, |
G-25, $5,232-$6,407.
Senior Pharmacy Inspector,

G-19, $4,110-$5,100.

Senior Rent | Examiner, G-18,
$3,978-$4,803.

Senior Rent Inspetor, G-14, 83,-
451-$4,176.

Assistant Tax Valuation Engi-
|neer, G-20, $4.242-$5,232.

Assistant Underwriter,
$3,174-$3,864.

Associate Compensation Claims
Examiner, G-22, $4,638-$5,628,

Director of Housing Research
jand Statistics, G-34,  $7,225-$8

G-12,

Director of Tax Research and

 Eitchenkeeper, G-15, $3,583.
308.

451-$4,171

Pri va) Compensation Claims |
| Seamer, G-27, $5,650-$6,910.

Senior ' Clerk’ (Underwriting),
G-6, $2,346-$3,036.

Senior aia G-18, $3,-
978-$4,80:

Special, “Agent, Department ' of
Mental Hygiene, G-17, $3,847-
4,572.

Supervising
G-20, $4,242-$5,232.

Partment of Mental
G-20, $4,242-$5,232.

Budget Disapprovals Office

the following salary reallocations
which were disapproved by the
Director of the Budget.
Asbestos Worker,
agree to G.9.
stant Locomotive InsI rr,
G7, $2,484-§3.174, to Glo
tonacksmlth, G-

acemaker Foreman,
$3,036-$3,726, to G~12.
Carpenter, G- 8,

G-11,
$2,622.$3,312,

036-$3,726, to G-1:

aminations, G-39,

538-$10,1
to G42 $8. $10,113,

Carpenter Foreman, G-11, $3,-
12,
Director of Civil Service Bx-

Director ot Municipal Service!

“Pharmacy Inspector, G-14, $3,- &

|
iF
|

License Inspector, | Siicr"
Supervising Special Agent, De- | *#te¢

The Director of Classification | ¥
and Compensation recommended | i:

Ie

G-8, $2,622- | tece

$2 622-$3,12 i

Ae APP G-26, $7,750-$9,-

126, to G-3!
oA oeksmnth, G-8, $2,622-$3,312,
to G-9.
@-11,

Maintenance

$3,036-$3,726, to G-12.
Motor Carrier Referee, G-22,

$4,638-$5,628, to G-25,

Motor ' Equipment ‘Repairman,
G-8, $2,622-$3,312, to G

Motor Vehicle Operator, G-4,
$2,070-$2,760, to G-5.

Painter Foreman, G-11, $3,036-
$3,726, to G-12,
ened G-8, $2,622-$3,312, to

Roofer and Tinsmith, G-8, $2,-
622-$3,312, to G-9.
Sheet Metal Worker, G-8, $2,-
622-$3,312, to G-9.

Supervising Motor Vehicle Re-
feree, G-26, $5,430-$6,605, to G-28.
G-8, $2,622-$3,312, to

‘Metropolitan

‘Conferenceto
‘Meet June 30

‘The Metropolitan Conference of
|the Civil Service Employees As-
|soclation will hold its annual
election meeting in the Marine

The business
|meeting will start at*ll a.m. and
|iuncheon will be served at 1 p.m.

Sidney Alexander of Psychiatric
| mstitute is chairman of the con-
ference. He has appointed a nomi-
nating committee which will re-
port at the meeting.

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
America’s Leading Newsmag-
azine for Public Employees
LEADER ENTERPRISES, INC.
97 Duane St., New York 7, N. ¥.
Telephone: BEckman 3-6010
Entered as second-class matter
October 2, 1939, at the post of-
flee at New York, N. Y., under
the Act of March 3, 1879.
Members of Audit Bureau of

Circulations,

Subscription Price $2.50 Per
Year. Individual copies, 5c.

CRGAL NOTICE

by the petitioner
‘ein ot “George D, Pape
iso Known as George D.
‘and George Pappas.

a Post Office

and the next

diamantopoulos,

Papadimantopoul

deceased. whose

inquiry be asee
Litioner berein, bei

D, Panadia

reo BD.

Pappas

the Rood, a Of said

horeby cited

oof that day. wh;
nga of The Pubilo
ot New York

caused
Court of the
to be hereunto

In Testimony Whereot,
the seat of the Surrog
ty of New ¥:

Honorable GKORGE YRANK-

i ay
thousand nine buadred
PHU DONAHUE,

__Clork of the Surrogate’

Do YOU know that olaeen in leading

MUTUAL FUNDS

may be purchased in amounts of $100 or more. Monthly
purchases may be as little as $25.00

voluntary fed
'e secure Istormation about o
Mell this advertisement with your some @

KUHNER, VOLLEBREGT & GERALD
= hstharer STREET, N.Y. C. or

Distributors ef Leading Mutual Funds

e sonvoniant

ne BO 9-1972

Unified DPUI
Titles Asked
To Cut Firings

ALBANY, June 4—A proposal
for new tities in the Division of
Placement and Unemployment In-
surance, State Department of La-
bor, to avoid the large loss of jobs
that result with shifts in national
economic conditions, was made at
& meeting of the special DPUI
committee of the Civil Service
Employees Association.

Harry Spodak, chairman of the
committee, solicited views from
both sides. His committee is ate
tempting to find a cure for the
recurrent job difficulties in the
DPUL

William FP. McDonough, execu-
tive assistant to Jesse B. McFar-
land, Association president, and
John J. Kelly, Jr., assistant coun-
sel to the Association, joined in
the discussion.

The object was to develop some
fong-range plan whereby employ-
ment in the DPUI would be sta-
bilized.

VA Hospital in Bronx
Needs Carpenters
And Laundry Workers

The Executive Secretary, Board
of U. 8. Civil Service Examiners,
Veterans Administration Hospl-
tal, 130 West Kingsbridge Road,
Bronx 68, N. Y., will receive until
Monday, June 11, applications for
the following jobs:

Carpenter, $2,674.

Laundry Worker, $2,120,
Stationary Boiler Fireman (Oil
Burning), $2,252 and $2,674,

Age limits are 18 to 62.

The incumbents, said the VA,
will assist in the national emer-
gency. Vacancies are in the Vet-
erans Hospital, Bronx.
Applications may be obtained
at any first or second-class post
office in Brooklyn and Queens;
from the Director, Second U. 8,
Civil Service Region, 641 Wash-
ington Street, New York 14, N. ¥.,
or frony the Executive Secretary,
address above.
‘The exam is No

2-66-3 (50),

PAY CHECKS

~ elgrant

INDUSTRIAL ~7

SAVINGS-BANK

You'll find Emigront's Male
Office
soln the Municipal Center,
near Federal, Stote ond
City offices and cowts,

51 CHAMBERS ST.

Just Eost of Broadwoy

GRAND CENTRAL OFFICE
5 East 42nd Sweet
Just off Filth Avene

V0

Interest from DAY of deposit
Member Federal Deposit

pol

Current
dividend

Tuesday, June 5, 1951

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Page Three

Herold Litzenberger (left), Coptoi
League Championship
the American Bowl
Leonard C. Lang, President of the

Center in

of the Outside team, whe won the
at Buffalo State Hospital, receives

1g Congress certificate of Championship from Dr.

Hospital League. The tation
jet held at t Ami

Buffalo.

Armory Employees Meet
In Largest Conference

|Decision Expected in Month

On Public Works Pay Raises

Salary Appeal
Deemed Among
Most Brilliant

ALBANY, June 4—Decision on
upward reallocation of salaries
and grades for more than 2,000
engineering titles in the State
Department of Public Works is
expected “in about a month,” J.
Earl Kelly, Director of Classifica-
tion and Compensation, announ-
ced at the close of the three hour

|hearing on the appeal in Albany

last week.

Following a brillant presenta-
tion of the case for upgrading,
under the direction of John J.
Kelly Jr., assistant counsel for the
Civil Service Employees Associa-
tion, and the New York State
Association of Highway Engineers,
both backers of the demand for
higher salaries in 12 categories,
J. Earl Kelly, stated:

“I wish to congratulate you on
your presentation, and assure you
I will give every consideration to
this very large matter, You must
realize that this appeal has great

STER, June 4 — New for 1951-52. These are: President, | nancial implications, and that it
te Armory employees, | Clifford Asmuth; vice-president, | will have a definite effect upon
one of the closest-knit graups of | pen Atuis; secretary, Prank E, |other professional groups in state
State aide: or a conference service
State aides May 24 and. 26.| Wallace: treasurer, Randal} |*¢°¥! dirkay. 64 (Witnennes’

g Representatives of the men, com- | Vaugt | Top State officials, an engineer-
ing from all parts of the State,| Delegates to the event included: | 11, college placement officer, the
were given an analysis of the| Genesee: Lloyd Huhn, Michael |)16 (Or 'e° nationally famous. pri-
Becker bill, passed by the 1951] Murtha, William Smith vate. cnaineeting tis, And ati
legislature, which increased their] Western Chapter: John Kar-| \mcial of the New York State So-
protections as public workers. |nath, George Lund. Ciety of Professional Engineers

The Armory group, consisting) Mid-State Chapter: Peter E.|{0. among the speakers pre-
of delegates from seven chapters, |Smith, Clarence Goode, Bernard | "t.q' by Counsel Kelly to Di-
met as the State Conference of |Lawrence. err Elly, and Ol eonewrred,
Armory Employees, in the Naval) Hudson Valley: Ben Aluis, Al-|{-° their various approaches to
Militia Armory, Rochester. They | fred W. Aldridge ie problem, that the difficulties of
were welcomed by Clifford As-| Capitol District: Randall Vaug- | te Proniem, al tan Ce tions
muth, Conference chairman, The |han, Fred Allison, John E. Croke, |'°4 ‘mounting annual turnover in
Genesee chapter was host to the | William Armstrong. the vee treckes tities in eonte
visiting delegates at a dinner. Metropolitan Chapter: William | \¢tring positions in the Depart-

Progress Reviewed Mahar, George Fisher, Frank E er Public Works, are pri-

‘The Conference was the largest | Wallace, James Gardner | due to the low salaries
in history. Progress made was re-| The guest list included: Ray-| "trentiy paid
viewed, and aspirations for fur-|mond L. Munroe, 2nd vice presi-
ther advances were expressed. The |dent, Civil Service Employees | Jobs Given to Outsiders
long campaig: for the securities | Association: Commander Berry,| Holden Edwards, Director of the
contained in the Becker act was|NYNM; Col. Edward Thompson. ‘Thruway Authority, first
reviewed. The de’ thanked | Culver Rd Major Mid-| speaker following the statement
those who pioneered for the im-|diebrook, AC Warren Ran-|of general conclusions in behalf
provements, lauding The LEADER | dolph, Charles AGO. Pres-|of the engineers by Counsel Kelly,

t for its long support of thejent and past chapter presidents | stated emphatically that the DPW
Armory employees in their battle | were introduced “should be staffed by personnel
for better working conditions The Hudson Valley chapter ex- | equipped to do basic design, not

Officers Elected tended an invitation to hold the |by consultants” and that due to

The Conference elected officers/next meeting in Newburgh. |present vacancies in the depart-

other group of outstanding |during the preceding twelve; Frank J. Miller; :
pide act y York | months, (This is not to be con arle Griffen, Yonkers engineer;
men and women of the New York /fved with the Harold Fisher| Leo Barry, fire-fighting expert,
: used wii e He she . fire- ;

City and Stale. comin ee Award, which goes to State em- | Utiea;
concerned with the betterment of Jnones B. Eveline:
the public service, were nominated nominees include Herman Braloff, Caldwell Win-

his week for the first annual Woodcock, Rockville | gate =

terles “of Public’ Service Awards | Center refuse expert; ; "Charles B. Fahs, Rockefeller
of Merit, to be presented by the| James A. Watson, Civil Service | Foundation; a

Civil Service LEADER Reform Assn.; cae | , Marion Folsom, Eastman Ko-

From those nominated will be David A. Sarnoff, Radio Corpor- | dak Co,
chosen the twenty-five outstand-| ation of America; : Readers of The LEADER are
ing private citizens who have| Frapk Pierce, Standard Oil; | urged to submit their own nomi-
done most for the public service| Phil arris, 8. Klein's; nations,

1

,

i x

.

Larry ve of the Civil Service Employees Association, Is shown answering ques-

Hollister, field representati
tions of employees at @
secretary, ond Howard

Otseg: iter, Lorry
CA, pM of the chapter, Mr. Hollister has been berastorming

the State recently, helplag employees in many choptere with their

Is at the

for . With him are Mrs, Ver

i

ment “it is very likely that 80
consulant contracts on design
alone, for 460 structures on the
Thruway mus be placed outside
the department.

“There is 350 millions of de-
sign work to be done in two
sign staff of any kind, and 400
vacancies in the department. We
ourselves are not able to hire
qualified engineers at the sala-
ries now being paid under State
jcivil service.”

Insufficient Force

Henry Ten Hagen, Deputy Chief
Engineer of the department, out-
lined highway needs in projects
covering the next five years. He

in personnel would be needed to
complete the jobs and that cur-
rently they were faced with va-
cancies. “Lack of engineers is our
real problem, and we must have
apitcants in the lower grades,”
| he said

| “We have insufficient forces to
man our staff, and no prospect of
obtaining men from the colleges,”
He cited canv: ing Cornell, R.P.I.,
Clarkson, a Syracuse engineering

| school—to no avail.
| Herbert P. Catlin, director of
placement at R.PI, in Troy, stat-

ed that of the approximately 800
men graduating as engineers next
| week all but 25 had been placed,
| and those were only ma
cision as to which job to take. “If
they can spell engineers they have
a job” he said.

Comparison With Industry

P. H. Franklin, a consulting en-
gineer, outlined salary and pros-
ects offered by private industry

stated that a ten percent increase |

king a de- |

as compared to State service, and
declared present salaries paid by
governments for engineers were
“a direct invitation to private in-
dustry to increase their raids to
| All the. dwindling ranks of new
engineers.”
61% Below

E. J. Raymer, Associate design
engineer of the DPW, and a mem~-
ber of the Salary Committee of
the CSEA, declared his depart-
ment was 67 percent below its per=
sonnel needs in the four lower
grades of positions, and offered
as a solution a raise in salaries
instead of private contracts for
design, which would mean no
dislocation in budget allowances
|of the division.

Tallamny Favors Raises

Other speakers supporting the
raise were Frederick Mardus,
chairman of the salary commit-
jtee of the New York State So-
ciety of Professional Engineers;
Joseph Ronan, executive assist-
ant of the DPUI, who spoke for
Superintendent Tallamny, sup-
porting the requests for raises in
the first seven grades from G-4
through G-25, with no comment
on the higher grades, and placed
the vacancies at 500; Leslie 3S,
Uphoff, head of the engineering
chapter, CSEA, Arthur Moon,
president and Milton H. Bingham,
secretary of the Highway Asso-
ciation, both senior civil engineers
jin the DPW. Charts, studies and
authorities supporting the general
arguments for a two-to-four grade
increase, as a “modest” demand
were also filed with Director Kelly
at the conclusion of the hearing.

ITHACA, June 4—A joint meet-
ing of two Civil Service Employees
Association chapters was held in
this City on Thursday, May 24,
for the primary purpose of helpin
to start a third, The two sponsor-
ing groups were the Cornell State
College chapter and the Biggs
Memorial Hospital chapter. They
are forming a Tompkins County
to include non-teaching
, in the county, in the City

| worker

of Ithaca, and in outlying towns. |

|,zaward Barron, ‘Tompkins
County Memorial Hospital engin-
eer, was elected temporary chair-

man of a steering committee to/

| investigate the formation of this
| chapter.
115 Atend

More than 100 persons attend-
ed. Laurence J. Hollister, field
representative of the Civil Service
Employees Association, acted as
moderator. Speakers were Stanley
C, Shaw, Mayor of Ithaca; Meade
P. Brown. director of public rela-
tions, Civil Service Employees As-
sociation; I. 8, Hungerford, assis-
tant director State Employees Re-
tirement System; Helen Musto,
past president, Cornell State Col-
lege chapter; Marie Bolger, presi~

dent Biggs Memorial Hospital
chapter; John Krupa, president
Cornell State College chapter.

Harvey Stevenson, Chairman of
the Tompkins County Board of
Supervisors, was also on the plat~

orm,
Hollister Describes Assn.

Laurence J, Hollister described
the growth of the Association in
its 41 years of existence, and the
| benefits derived by employees at
| Cornell and Biggs Memorial Hos-
pital, as well as by employees else-
where in the State. He stressed
that the Association gains its ends
through peaceful negotiation
rather than by threats. He ex-
plained the advantages of orm-
ing a Tompkins chapter,

Relation to Community

Mr, Brown explained the need
to acquaint taxpayers and the
| general public of the work of
public employees and the impor-
tant part the public employee
plays in service to his community.
Mr, Brown also discussed the fact
tha because of its size and in-
tegrity, the Association has a re-
sponsibility to the press. “This
means that press releases emani
ing from the Association or any
of its chapters have to reflect
favorably upon the Association
and and its membership. This also
means that the Association in its

‘Two Assn.
Get Together,
‘Start a Third

<= hapters

eases does not go off on
|some of the wild tangents that
jother less responsible organiza-
tions do,”

Mayor Endorses Assn,

Mayor Shaw spoke of his years
as mblyman from Tompkins
County, during the course of which
he had on many occasions been
made aware of the needs of civil
| service employees through the ef-
forts of the Association, and that
he had at all times found. the
Association very highly respected
by his associates in the Assembly,
He personally endorsed the Asso-
ciiation for the tremendous strides
it had made in bettering the work-
ing conditions of public employees,

Unanimous Vote

Mr, Hollister then asked those in
the audience about their desires
in forming a Tompkins chapter,
and @ hand vote was unanimous in
| favor of organizing this chapter,
| The following individuals were
then asked to serve on the Steer-
ing Committe

County: Arthur Broadhead,
Tompkins County Memorial Hos-
pital, Ithaca; Edward La Valley,
Health Department, Ithaca; Alex-
ander Yenei, Route 1, Newfield,
NY. (Hoghway Dept.); Betty Sim-
mers, Tompkins County Labora-
tory, Ithaca,

City: Edward Harris, R. D, 1,
Ithaca (Water Dept); Howard
aca (Library); William Ryan, 314
aca( Library); William Ryan, 314
W. Senaca St., Ithaca (Public
Works); Frank Monroe, Stewart
Park, Ithaca (Parks Dept.); Aud-
ley F. Bloom, Board of Education.

Mr. Hungerford explained in
detail! the benefits to be derived
from the 55-year retirement plan
which had been sponsored by the
Association, He answered ques-
tions from the floor.

CSEA to Exhibit At Fair

ALBANY, June 4—Although fts
date is more than three months
distant, plans are now being
formulated for the exhibit of the
Civil Service Employees Associa-
tion at the annual State Pair ia
Syracuse, early in September,

The exhibit. by the CSEA, «
fixture for the past three yeara,
has been included in an advan-
tageous location in the center is-
land section of the State Exhibits
building, according to notification
by Herbert C Campbell, Director
of State Publicity,

| Press re

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Tuesday, June 5, 1951
—

Activities of Assn. Chapters

THE CIVIL SERVICE EMPLOYEES ASSOCIATION

Buffalo State Hospital

‘TSE REGULAR monthly meet-
ing of Buffalo State Hospital
chapter, CSEA, was held on
‘Thursday, May 17, in the social
rooms, Thomas Canty, a field man
ff Ter Bush & Powell, was
present, Mr, Canty will be at the
hospital for the next several
weeks contacting members and
non-members of the Association.
He pointed out that he was an
“ambassador of good will” and
was in hopes that anyone would
feel free to call upon him for
help in any of their group insur-
ance questions ....

Highlighting the business ses-
sion was a resolution adopted by
the Chapter asking that the De-
partment of Mental Hygiene re-
store to attendants and employees
on violent and untidy wards the
former extra pay of seven and
one-half per cent. This was dis-
continued several years ago and
many employees feel that
not fair since many attendants

on

violent and untidy wards who hnd |

reached their maximum pay now
receive as much as $300 per year
more than emplo’ s working
alongside doing as much wor
taking as much risk.

The Buffalo chapter will con-|

lon the employees working on
former extra pay wards...
Plans for a chapter family

it is]

k and |a

tact all State hospitals and State
schools seeking support in at-
tempting to restore the extra-
hazardous pay. It was pointed out
that the help gituation is becom-
ing short and that such shortage
puts more hazard and more work

picnic to be held some time in
August are going ahead under
the efforts of Harold Litzenberger
and his committee. The commit-
tee hopes tc hold the picnic at
Grand Island, where they will
have a beach for bathing, ball dia~
mond and other accommodations.
More complete details and the date
will be available for the chap-
ter's June meeting ...

A Membership Committee re-

‘homas Diina. The report showed
that 370 former members had re-
joined along with 165 new mem-

bers, bringing the chapter mem-|
hip to the all-time high of}
. With the addition of 165
new members, the Chapter now
78 per cent of the total per-

sonnel employees population.
From ations the percent-
age of m hip in the Buffalo
State tal chapter will be
among the highest in the state,

( Administrative Assistant
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chester chapter officers, Civil Service Employees A:

+ Lillian Wilson, 2nd vice-| sider
ort was read by Co-Chairman | jacibe Bien, preside beget

. Back row: John Walsh, delegate; C
treasurer; Eorl Struke, Ist vice-pres!

N. Y. S. Rehabilitation
Hospital

THE ANNUAL Spring Dinner
of the Rehabilitation Hospital
Chapter at West Haverstraw, was
held on Tuesday, May 15, in the
Green Room at the Lafayette
Hotel, Suffern,

Edward O'Keefe, recently elect«
ed president, was toastmaster.
Guests present were Mr. & Mrs,
Francis A. MacDonald, Dr, a
Mrs, A, J. Canning; Philip Ker-
ker, principal speaker in place of
William F. McDonough; Mary,
Elizabeth Baker, past president—
1943-1949; and Mrs, Imogene W.
~ | Margiotta, past president—1949<
jation, Front) 1951.
Marguerite Surridge, secretary;| In recognition of Mrs. Mar

les Rudolf, | giotta’s guidance as president,
gift was given to her by
Baker, who expressed the cl

It was decided to hold the next
chapter meeting on Thursday,
June 21, The nominating comm
tee for the fall election will be
named Resi election will be held
ber.

er issue to be voted upon
and decided at the June meeting
will be the “loan” of the meeting
rooms on the grounds to the Re-

creation Department. It was point-
ed out that increased activity in
the physical recreation depart-
ment brought about the sugges-
tion that the Social Club rooms
be loaned for daytime use only to
the Recreation Department. Sev-

eral motions were offered but a/*
final decision tabled for further | ¢

action until the regular meet-
ing, The majority of members
present at the May meeting felt it
was only fair that all members be
given a chance to voice an opin-
fon before definite action was
adopted, It was decided that a
30-day notice was sufficient to get
the opinions of the 535 membi

Albion

FROM THE ALBION chapter,
IEA, comes the following list o#
news items,

The Swan Library, one of Al-
most stately build-
is the new chapter meeting
place.

Rose Ann McCarthy, our
Chapter’s new President attended

the Conference of Delegates at

the Albany meeting of the Cor-

jrection Department on May 2%

At a Chapter me: on

B® she gave her rep on

this Conference, (The report that

Anna Kinnear attended as dele-|
gate was in error.)

Mrs. Ida Daum, Matron, has

returned to the home of her

daughter after being a patient at
the Arnold Gregory Hospital.

Cleon Whiting, a former presi-
| dent of the chapter, has returned |
to his home in Albion after being
}a@ patient at the Veterans Hos-
pital in Buffalo

The following Matrons have
returned from vacation: Rose Ann
McCarthy, Mrs. Stanley Wells,
Mrs. Emogene Harkness, Mrs.
Blanche Beedon and Mrs, Ann
Pisa Relli.

J. Earl Kelly, te director of
classification and compensation,
will visit the Institution on June 5.

Wilma O'Connor, Mrs, Pearl
Ronan, Mrs, Mildred Walker, Mrs.
Gertrude Peters, Mrs. Celia Mali-
noski and Mrs. Josephine Stirk
are enjoying two weeks’ vacation.

GC) a tul

(3) Sample test ques-
U. S, Government

"| guests and members.

ter's appreciation for her
Fellowship good _ spirits
dancing followed the dinne:

| Steuben County

THE STEUBI COUNTY
Chapter, CSEA, enjoyed an enter-
taining dinner-meeting at the
tanton in Corning, on

M

Onondaga

A MEETING of the Onondaga
pter, CE known as the First

iss eth Morse, Steuben | Unit Forum, was held at the Chap-
County chapter president, pre-|el, Women's Building, Onondaga
sided. Plans were discussed re-| County Home. The chairman was

| garding club activ
ture,

| Charles Culyer, Field Represen-
|tative of the Association, spoke
the organization's growth
lation passed during the 1951
ion effecting county and city | s
vil service employees, and bene-
fits to be derived through in-
creased membership.

Highlight of the dinner was the
entertainment presented to the | f
members and guest by the Dad
and Lads Quartet, consisting of
Chandos Shuart, Preston Hill,
Richard and Robert Shuart, of
Pulteney. Several specialty num-
bers were put on by Miss Elinor
Shuart, daughter and sister of the ~
members of the Quartet, George | o!

s for the fu- (Continued on page 5)

LEGAL NOTICE

on

So ithe ‘City of ‘Dllem,
ot New York,
nf you are hereby edited te

Crippen acted as master of cere-| ef Records in. thy
a the 12th day of June.
monies. Forty-two members were | fast ten o'clock’ in the forencun of thee

present,

vt filed berin oo be
Daniele a Trustee wa
der the Will of Jobu L, Daniele, Jr. de

1, abould not be judicially settled:

Erie

ARTHUR BRODBECK of
Erie chapter
that Unit
cates will be
lowing Units:

the
announces
ticipation Certifi-
warded to the fol-

Health Department: Meyer Me-
morial Hospital; Highway and
Parks; Home and Infirmary;
Penitentiary; Towns of Amher
and Chee ga; and City of
Tonawanda,
These awards will be given at Sata

Just and proper

the June 13 m ing of the chap-
ter in the hama room of the
| Elks Club, Delaware Avenue, Buf-
falo, by Charles R. Culyer, who
j will make the presentation to the
| Unit presidents and local officers.
Mr. Culyer is field representative
of the Civil Service Employees

be the

IN TESTIMONY WREREOV, we
have cansed the seal ef the
ald

Mixed
HO)

ORABLE Wi
(SEAL)

Association.
| This, incidentally
big night of the y

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CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Page Five

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(Continued trom page 4)
Stewart Scott of the County
Unit who opened the meeting.
Mrs, Juliet H. Pendergast, chap-
ter president, conducted the meet-
ing. Laurence J, Hollister spoke of
the Association and stressed the
legal aid and advice available from
the Assication. Thomas Parley of
Ter Bush & Powel, spoke on the
Health and Accident Insurance
available to members. Ivan Stood-
ley, president of the Onondaga
chapter, and Elizabeth Mahar
spoke on the Association from the
institutional viewpoint and what
members may gain. Vernon Tap-
per, chairman of the Association
membership committee, County
Division, spoke on_ the _ local
county chapter and The LEADER
as an aid to county-wide coop-
eration with other county chap-
ters. Thomas Jackson, executive
board member of the County
Highway Department, discussed
“A Members Viewpoint and Some
of the Social aspects of Chap-
ters.” Mrs. Norma Scott, general
chairman of membership, spoke

Doris LeFever, executive secre-
tary of the Syracuse chapter, sta-
ted:

“Every employee today needs a
worker's organization to represent
and aid him in the protection of
his rights and his quest for se-~
curity. The individual worker can
not completely take care of him-
self, Alone, he cannot urge or
expect to receive much attention,
but by a united organized effort
with his fellow workers much can
be accomplished,

“Our Association represents the
civil service employee in all mat-
ters relating to salaries, hours,
security of tenure, retirement
benefits, sick leave, vacations and
jevery other worker problem.
| Through our oftic committees
and our paid staff, combined with
hundreds of the best informed
government workers in every pro-
fession and of every skill, our
Association acts collectively to
study the needs of the employees
and evolve policies to satisfy those
needs. Our officers are of the hig!
est calibre and are composed of
fellow workers, who receive no
salary.

“A government service organiza-
tion to be effective, must operate
in & manner quite different from
that of a typical trade union. It
must operate within the frame-
work of State law; it must depend
largely on the conference method
and the process of legislation. It
must work with, rather than on
|management, and it must persuade
rather than threaten, The Civil
rvice Employees Association owes
its achievements to the use of
such methods, and has in th:
won many victories for th

employ including the year

nt program, substantial

of living increases, and pas-

of the Mitchell Bill on vet-
eran’s preference.

Morrisville

OFFICERS and executive coun-
cil of the Morrisville chapter,
CSEA, will meet with Laurence
| J. Hollister, Field Representative
of the Association, on Thursday,
June 14, at 1:00 p.m. at the Mor-
risville School to talk over chap-
ter functions and responsibilities.

At a recent meeting of the chap-
ter, the following heads of com-
mittees were appointed by the
president, Neil Clark:

Auditing — William M. Hough-
ton; Legislative Grace L, Lark-
in; Social — Mildred H. Christ~-
man; Publicity — R. N. Whipple;
Membership — Taze R. Huntley;
Education — George O, Metzler.

The chapter plans to have a
aaa charter presentation in the
all,

Coxsackie

THE N. -V.L employees an-
nual picnic will be held at Karnik’s
in Earlton on June 7, More than
150 have already signed up for
ala affair, S\einverg'’s hep-
a five-piece band, has agreed
to play gratis. Thanks boys, say

the employees. Picnic starts at
4:00 p.m. untill . . . swimming
dancing and partying.

The N.Y.S.V.L bowling team

won the trophy this year. This
red-hot group consists of George
Gates, Joe Conboy, Charles Flood,
James Stelberwald, Jim Malloy,
and Jack Hughes. Congratulations

boys,

The Gates annual Sendionn
first place Ly to Charles Flood,
second place to

Ray Marohn,
“Smiling Mac the Happy Hack”

returned from his vacation at Pine
Lake all sunburned but with a
slight cold. He said it was too cold
for swimming but did not find it
out until later,

‘The softball team is now func-
tioning and has won two out of
three games. The team has won
the trophy for two years running.
If the boys win this year they re-
tain possession of the trophy
permanently,

At the Correction Conference
meeting in Albany, May 23-24 it
was learned that the 25-year pen-
sion campaign fund was complete-
ly exhausted; each delegate was
requested to contact all officers
in their institutions for a 50c do-
nation.

‘The in-service Training Course
at this institution gets under way
on June 5, and will run for a 20-
unit course.

Prison Guard Tom O'Keefe has
left for appointment as an In-
vestigator with the A.B.C, Board.
Good luck, Tom!

Madison

THE REGULAR monthly meet-

Madison chapter, CSEA, was held
on Thursday,
Oneida Senior High School, Nor-
man L. Larsen, president, con-
ducted the meeting.

Committee reports were given.
Mr, William P. Brophy, Chairman
of the Membership Committee,
reported three new members in
the past month, Mr. Larsen pre-
sented the latest information on
the proposed
amendment to permit the Legis!
ture to increase pensions of retire-
ment personnel in New York
State. One particular case which
was discussed by the meeting was
that of a teacher in Madison
County who retired some 16 years
ago and has as her sole source
of income her monthly retirement
payment of $35. It was agreed
that all voters shouki inform
themselves on this subject since
the amendment will come up for
vote this November.

A meeting of the directors will

ing of the Board of Directors, |

constitutional | !

be held in each of the summer
months in the Oneida Senior High
School. The June meeting will be}
held at 8 o'clock, on Thursday,
June 28th.

Schenectady

ELECTION of officer

Activities of Assn. Chapters

Place on May 28, at the Knights
of St. John's Hall, Schenectady.

Harry W. Dennington was
elected President; Mark H. De-
laney, Ist vice president; Josept
H. Winkler, 2nd vice president;
George H. Watson, 3rd vice presi-
dent; Elaine M. DeForest, secre-
tary; Chester W. Looman, treas-
urer; Clifford E. Irving, chapter
representative on the County Ex-
ecutive Committee.

Laurence J. Hollister, field rep-
resentative of the Civil Service
Employees Association, installed
the new officers.

Much dissatisfaction was ex-
pressed at this meeting to a reso-
lution adopted by the Schenec-
tady Board of Supervisors govern<
ing vacations and sick leaves. Be
cause of this, the Schenectady
chapter has asked for another
meeting with the Board. There

| was also a considerable discussion

of the fact that there are not
(Continued on Page 8)

May 24, in the) TH:

Ee emeeeey
and to serve &
if the complaint te net

In this action,
your answer, o
ferved with this summons, to nm
tice of appearance, on the Piaintiffe At

torner within twenty days

fier the sore
vice of th

e of the day

Of wervice, aad in case of your fallure

fo appear or answer, judement wilt

by default. for the

reliet the complaint. ‘The

pleinuitt is a resident of Bronx County,

Dated. May 9,
AHTHUR ROSENRERG, Attorney tor

Pinintiff, OMice and Post Office Address:

8 Weat 40th Street, Borough of Manhat-
New York City

THOMAS FRANCIS BYRNR:

‘The foregoing at

you by puitication,

of Hon. AARON J. LEVY, « Justice of
Ove Supreme Court of the State of New
York, 1951,

ed the Lith day of May,
1

1061
ARTHUR ROSENTERG, Attorney for
iif 8 West 40th Street, New York

STATE OF NEW YORK. DEPARTMENT
OP STATE, sa.: I do nerchy certify that @
rtificate of dissolution ef
‘OLD SPRING DRESS 00.. INC.

aw. and that it

te under my

Depariment of
(80%

DE

Examination Officially Approved! New Class Forming!
N. Y, City Open Competitive and Promotion Tests

ADMINISTRATIVE ASST.
SR. ADMINISTRATIVE Asst.

D
Starting Salaries $4,021- $5,651 ‘and $6,351
Promotional Opportunities as High as $9,350

52 IMMEDIATE VACANCIES

MANY MORE LIKELY DURING 4-YEAR LIFE OF ELIGIBLE LIST
OPEN TO MEN & WOMEN — NO AGE LIMITS

Be Our Guest At TI

OPENING LECTURE TONIGHT (Tues.) at 5:45 P.M.

-MANTY BULLETIN
of Career Opportunities!

aid ADMINISTRATOR

0 Classes in

ASST. FOREMAN
CLERK - Grade 3 and 4

Pre

Executive Offices
115 E. 15 ST.,N.Y.3

GRamerey 3-400

OFFION HOURS - Mon. te Pet. © om,

Preparation for

Als
FIREMAN “nyc rire DEPT.) — FRIDAY 1:15 of 7:30 P.M.

ASST. GARDENER _ ruesoay ot 7:30 rm
INSP, of WATER CONSUMPTION

And For Coming Promotional Examinctions Fe:

MONDAY
et 7:30 PM,

(SANITATION DEPT.)

TUES. of 12 NOON or 7:30 P.M,
Lecture Repeated THURS. ot

230 and PRI. ot 7:30 P.M.
— THURSDAY of 6 or 8 P.M.

Also in Jameice om TUESDAY ot 5:45 P.M.
CLERK - Grade 5 — weonespay ot 6 p.m.
ration for N.Y. City LICENSE EXAMS tor

STATIONARY ENGINEER — won. & wen. ot 7:30 p.m
MASTER ELECTRICIAN —

he DELEHANTY %nsccrate

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te 9:90 pm. Bat: 0:00 om tet pam.

Page Six

Sorwiee

Ciwil
* LEADER

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

Published every Tuesday by
LEADER ENTERPRISES, INC.
97 Duane Street, New York 7, N. Y. BEekman 32-6010
Editor and Co-Publisher

Jerry Finkelstein, Publisher
Maxwell Lelini

Morton Yarmon, General Manager
ess Manager

Bernard, Executive Ed
Subseription Price $2.50 per Annum

N. H. Mager, Bi

TUESDAY, JUNE 5, 1951

Big Lessons in
P. W. Pay Appeal

T will be well worth your while to read in full the story
appearing on Page 3 in this issue dealing with the
salary appeal of employees in the State Public Works De-
partment. It will bear your consideration whether or not
you work for that department; and it will be of especial
significance to you if you are a high official of State or
létal government, or a legislator.

Why? Because you have here, in capsule from, and
brilliantly presented, the whole story of wages in our time;
the relation of proper salary to the proper performance of
public duties, and what the story of private industry’s
competition for manpower means.

The array of speakers, marshalled by John J. Kelly,
ZJr., assistant counsel of the Civil Service Employees Asso-
ciation, like witnesses in a court of law, were experts, each
of whom could tell a little part of the total story; the
State employees themselves, departmental officials, ex-
perts from private industry, salary economists. And in
logical, integrated fashion, they revealed that—

The State, paying its engineers insufficient salaries,
must give contracts to outside consultants, whose cost is
greater than would be the cost of adequate salaries and
whose use is less efficient than would be the same work
done by a regular, well-paid staff of State aides;

The State has made studies for necessary projects
covering a period of 10 years—but can’t get employees to
fill the vacancies. A canvassing of graduates of five en-
gineering schools brought no results. Salaries too low.

“a direct invi-
" on public

The salaries paid by government are
tation to private industry to increase its rai
employees.

In some areas, the understaffing is listed as 67 pax
eent.

We like the way the salary presentation was made;
f€ stands as a model for other employee groups in pre-
senting their salary cases. We do not see how, on the
basis of the facts revealed, the Classification and Compen-
sation Division can do otherwise—with the Budget Di-
rector concurring—than grant the raises asked, But we
think that even deeper than this is the necessity of recog-
nizing that government must re-think the whole question
of employee pay, so that its own services—which are, after
all, the people’s services—shall not be impaired.

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Tuesday, June 5, 1951

How Vet Preference
Is Administered in NYC

THE EFFECTIVE DATE for the
establishment of war veteran
preference, under NYC rules, is
the date of establishment of the
eligible list. The claim itself should
be made when the candidate ap-
plies for the exam, whether di
abled or non-disabled veteran
preference {s sought.

The candidate is allowed a
minimum of three months from
the last day for receipt of appli-
cations to perfect his claim,

Four Basie Requirements

To be entitled to veteran pref-
erence, the candidate must prov

(1) Active service in the armed
forces in time of war (April 6,
1917 to November 11, 1918 for
World War 1; December 7, 1941
to September 2, 1945 for World
War II; June 25, 1950, Korea Day,
to the end of hostilities in
Korea);

(2) Honorable discharge or re-
Jease from the armed forces under
honorable circumstance

(3) Residence in the State of
New York at the time of entrance
into the armed forces, and;

(4) Residence in the State of
New York and United States citi-
zenship at the time of the estab-
lishment of the eligible list.

Disabled Veteran Preference

For disability preference, the
candidate must be certified by
the U. S. Veterans Administration
as receiving a pension for a dis-
ability incurred in time of war.
That requires a minimum of 10
per cent disability rating. If he
served after the cessation of hos-
tilities, the armed service period
must have included “time of war,”
.e., before hostilities ceased or the
war is officially declared termi-
nated, no matter for how short
period of service during the war
period may have been.

Stabilized Disability

The disability must exist as a
matter of law at the time of
establishment of the eligible list.
The disability is deemed to exist
if the VA certifies that the candi-
date has been examined by a
medical officer of the VA within
one year prior to either the date
of filing application or the date
of establishment of the list, or in
lay-off cases, within one year of
retention.

In cases of stablized disability
—leg off, defective sight or hear-
ing, etc.—the veteran stil must
have been examined by the VA
within one year of time of
the application for
or promotion or the for
filing of the application for a
competitive examination for o
inal appointment or promotion,
or, in layoff cases, within one
year of the of retentio

As the sys perates in NYC
apointing officers must appoint
or promote straight down the
line, no skip-overs. The Civil
Service Law allows skipping one
out of three, but a 10-year rule
of the Mayor's office prohibits
skipping over an eligible without
the Mayor's permission. Appoint-
ments and promotions to the uni-
formed forces of the Police, Fire
and Correction Departments are
exceptions,

When a Claim Is ‘Used’

Preference claims may be made
any number of times but don’t
count unless a permanent ap-
Pointment results, in an open-

Memorial chepie,
ent meeting in the
8 Etk Street, in Albany, they plan @ drive for

of} Dunn, Louise

son in that order, Also present in the picture are Ethel Bates, Clolr
ne, Florence Lepper, Florence McGill, Anne Metele,
Edward McKers, Helen O'Conner, Cathelene Persons,

of the probationary period, or re-

period, does not constitute use of

not count. The veteran starts all

but under the new law may use it
only once. Also,
—10 for disabled, 5 for non-dis-
abled veterans in open-competi-
tive exams, and balf as many,
respectively, in promotion exams
—apply only to those who actual-
ly pass the exam without the aid
of the extra points.

After preference is actually
jused, it is exhausted for all State
purposes — exams held by the
State Civil Service Commission or
county or other local Commissions
—but In no way affects veteran
preference for U. 8, jobs.

Warning Issued

If the candidate's name appears
on other eligible lists at the time
of permanent appointment
promotion, his rank on such other
list is reduced. by deducting the
additional credits he
received on such other lists, More-
if after his appointment as
ult of additional credits, it is
discovered that he has on a pre-
vious occasion received an ap-
pointment or promotion as a re-
sult of additional credits, his ap-
pointment will be void and his
services terminated. Purthermore,
he may incur further penalties by
reason of any fraudulent state-
ment in his application that he
had not previously used his addi-
tional credits.

No matter how many times a
person has been appointed or
promoted as a result of ran
Preference under the old law, this
has no effect on his right to claim
additional credit any number of
times, and actually use it once.
2 examinations under the new
jaw.

May Pass Up Preference

There is no obligation to claim
veteran preference credit, but any
claimant must perfect his case
before the list is established and
can’t claim after that date, or,
having claimed it previously,
can't go through w
list is out. A claim may be
drawn at any time prior to
manent appointment or promc

w

r-
tion

competitive test. Non-completion
lease at the expiration of that
preference, Also, any preference
obtained prior to January 1, 1951,
which was under the old Jaw, does
over again with his preference,

the extra points

or}

may have!

h it after the | C!

The meaning of “permanent” i#
the same as in the discussion ef
the probationary term, Any with-
drawal, once made, is final,

Since credits can be exhausted
only by @ permanent appointment
or promotion, a temporary ap=

intment from an eligible list

as no effect on the use of the
additional credits,

If a person is appointed to a
permanent position as a result of
additional credit from a list for a
different title which is deemed an
appropriate list for that position,
he will be deemed to have ex-
hausted_his credits,

Passing Up Credits

Candidates may prefer to pass
up preference after they learn
their standing on a list. The
standing may be high enough to
suit their purposes, without the
extra points. Then they could
claim their points either in other
open-competitive exams or in @
promotion test. However, these
factors are important:

(1) The points added in a pros
motion test are only half as much;

(2 Passing up the claim may
seriously delay appointment or
promotion, resulting in less senior-
ity than that of others, appointed
prior to the deferring candidate,

Seniority is important in pro-
motion exams, in which record
and seniority count half, the test
itself the other half. Also, to coms
pete in a promotion test, a mini-
mum length of time in an eligible
title—-soon to be six months—and
number of years in the depart-
ment—soon to be two years—are
necessary.

Seniority also is important for
lay-off purposes. Those lower on
the list, even for original ap-
pointments made on the same day,
have lower retention rights, where
all else is equal,

Veteran preference in retention
is not affected by the new law,
|Both before and after January 1,

| 1951, in the event of the abolition

lof @ position, suspension or de+
motion must be made in the fol-
lowing order: (1) non-veterans,

(2) non-disabled veterans, and
| (3) disabled veterans,
| Under the new law veteran pref~
Jence does not apply to Labor
lists; because there ate no
percentage scores, hence no base
— to which points may be
added,

Employees

ALBANY, June 4—A luncheon
meeting of the Eastern Regional
Conference of the Civil Service
heard Leonard L. Knott, president |
|of the Editorial Associates, Mon-
treal, Canada, encoura public
employees to publicize their goals
fully and keep the public well in-

formed.

“You have a right to tell your
story,” he said. “And you have a
responsibility to tell it, because
the people are shareholders in|
your enterprise and pay the bills.”

He urged full participation in

informational programs by Bublic |

i) Theime Foimer,

dition te the chairman, ecomne Brows, ne be) Mery Byes, Site Sermons lnose, Shecides Lr lad Reve
Delton end Pow! Reble- 1 Televarebh, me

et the extreme right, there ere Rishar

archi, Regine Werherst ond

Frank Wi

Are Urged:

To Publicize Goals

;employees for public benefit, He
said that public talk about bu-
reacrats was unf: ince private
business has its aucrats, too,

and public employment has led the
way in reform.

J. Edward Conway, President of
the New York State Civil Service
Commission, and Jesse B, McPar-
| land, president of the Civil Service
Employees Association of New
York State, were introduced to the
| audience. The State Department
of Civil Service and the CSEA
| Were co-hosts of the Assembly.

The toastmaster was Philip B,
lanes general chairman of the
Assembly's Regional Conference
| committee, who was later elected
Chairman of the Regional Assem-
bly itself.

The next evening the Associa-
tion was host at a social hour at-
tended by 300 delegates and

guests, including Lieutenant Goy-
ernor’ Frank C. Moore, Deputy
Comptroller H. EI Kaplan,
President Conway, NYC Civil Ser-
vice Commissioner Paul R. Fino
and Frank Walker, president of

New Jersey ‘Civil Service

ociation.

Mrs. Helen Todd of the Conser-
vation Department, a member of
| the executive committee of the
host association, was hostess of
| this event and Harry G. Fox was
chairman,

COMPTROLLER
three chief aids received pay in-
creases from the NYC Estimate
Board. First Deputy Controller
Lewis F. Lang went from $15,000
@ year to $17,500, Second Deputy
Controller Abraham L. Doris from
12,500 to $14,000, and Morris
Special Deputy Con-
troller in charge of the Bureau
th ag Taxes, from $10,000 be

4

JOSEPH

Tuesday, June 5, 1951

CIVIL SERVICE

LEADER

“ROSES UNDER GLASS’
just about solves that problem of
‘@ gift for the June bride, or as a
gift for any occasion, This ill
tration hardly does it justice. I
wish you could see it as I did. Red,
red roses, hand carved and hand
set, in beautiful, sparkling plexi-
glas surround candlesticks, so
lovely they defy description, Gor-
geously decorate dining table,
television console, etc, 3%” di
meter x 214" high. Only $6.95 per
pair, 2 pair $12.95, Send check or
MO. and receive them postpaid.
DE MAT PRODUCTS, INC., Dept,
Pha Summit Ave., Union City,

HOLLYWOOD HOSTESS SET
CHROMIUM ON STEEL

I have seen plenty, but never a

set so complete and useful as this.

Fork Spoon tongs for salads, meat,

vegetables, eggs, pastry, ice ¢

etc. Churn Beater, Works

with up and down s

Convenient small si

Sery-All-Tongs, just gre

tatoes, corn-on-th

chen Saw, with finest quality hack

saw blade, Cuts meat bones, hams,

| FEET ACHE?

Magnificent 1Kt.
Arcay Titania,
with 2 approx.
% Kt. side gems,
set in 14 Kt
white or yellow goid custom-
type mounting for only $60.
wi band, with 5 ap-
prox, % Kt. gems in mount-
ing to match $49.50. Both
gift boxed and P.T. inc. Can
be purchased — separately.
Arcay Titania is finest grat
more brilliant than a di
mond, expertly cut. The
difference you save buying
Areay Titania engagement
ring, can help pay for furni-
ture, clothes, a home, ete,
Order by mail with confi-
dence. THE ARCAY COM-
PANY, 299 Madison
(41st St.) N. ¥, 17 Open
daily and Sat, 9-5, Phone
MU 17-7361,—John }

|
|
|

|
|
|

@ Here's the han-
diest hang-all |
gadget I have/

Helever seen. No/
hammer, nails}

or screws. Aluminum ends hook
over each end of door. Does not
interfere with closing. Wonderful
for Bedroom, Bathroom, Kitchen
Ideal for traveling. At only 75¢
each, 3 or more 69c each postpaid.
I recommend it as a great buy,
Send check or M.O. to MASTY’S
HOPPING SERVICE, 113 W.
‘D” St., Iron Mountain, Michigan.
—Alice

Get Blessed Foot Reliet With

PEDCOS ws:
auBaER

COMBINATION ARCH AND METATARSAL SUPPORTS

Gives suPrORT |_£. @) i women
whane not [ZEB ey van
“ Trans foe

a

I know of no better ald for the
relief of aching feet, weak ankles
and excessive fatigue caused by
foot or leg pains due to weak or
fallen arches. Order a couple of|
pair today. Speci: hoe size. Send
cash, check or ©. to PEDIC:

chops, frozen foods, poultry, etc.,
like butte Now st, but not

the Carvers’ Aid for holding
and poultry, As a special,

ideal gift. Money back guarantee,

today

PRODUCTS CO, 309 llth &t.,/
Dept. L., Hoboken, N. J—John |

CIVIL SERVICE WORKERS
PRAISE POWELL OPTICIANS
Many readers of the Civil Service|
Leader have reported that they)

SANIT

{2
The Modern Toothbrush Holder

@ Sanitary, attractive, conveni-
ent. @ Automatic door snaps open,

| snaps shut with slight pressure of

your toothbrush. @ Small vial
back of the door contains germi-|
cide crystals that sterilize your
brushes as they hang. @ Moulded
of attractive, easy cleaning plas-
tic in four lovely colors; White,
marbleized pink, yellow and biue,
@ Simple to attach. |
UNIT FOR 2 BRUSHES — $1.00)

4 BRUSHES — $1.75
‘The germacide crystals in vial e-
main effective about one year, Re-
placement vial only 25e, @ First
1000 to order will receive a Travel |
Pocket Toothbrush FREE. @ Send |
check or money order, mentioning
color desired to UNIVERSAL DE- |
VICES & SALES CORPORATION, |
627 Provident Building, Tacoma
2, Washington. @ Sanit is en-

dorsed by Alice and John.

LEARN SHORTHAND AT HOME |
IN A FEW SHORT WEEKS
Complete Self Study Course in-|
cluding text and dictionary com-
bined, plus key to exercises only;
$10.00. This is my idea of a real

|which led to the certificates

The Stanley A
to-Net is the an-
swer to the ang-
ler's prayer. You

fishermen friends
of mine are going to love this
streamline designed janding net,
which opens automatically when
cocking knob Is released and can
be retrieved with one hand. 20”
long closed, weighs only 13 ounces,
Netting 13” long. Handles 30”
trout. Retracts completely into

non-rusting, anodized dural han-/|

dle, Easily carried over shoulder,
I say buy one today for only $3.95.
Send check or M.O. to KING'S,
7 West Broadway, Butte, Mon-
a.—John

HELP FOR YOU!
Nise In every

tani

21State Aides
Complete 2
Years’ Study

ALBANY, June 4—Twenty-one
employees of Rockland State
Hospital and Letchworth Village
have received certificates upon
completion of two years’ study in
stationary engineering. The course
en-
titled Advanced Stationary Engi-
neering, was under the State's in-
service training program

|

Receiving the certificates were: |

James Nolan, Lewis Brundage,
Horace Asimus, Alfred Block,
Leo Bonneau, George Bull, Prank

opportunity. Take advantage of | Condlin, Peter Helder, John Han-
it today, Write to CAPITAL CITY | ly, John Johnson, Thomas Mur-
COLLEGE, 1101 Vermont Ave.,| Phy, Raymond Smith, Elliott Sis-
N. W., Washington 5, D, C.—Alice | co, Herbert Throop and Maurice
———| Woods, ail of the Rockland State
store, | Hospital Engineering Department,
Operate your own catalogue store. | Aree et ay desi Ropert
Own independent, highly profit- 7
able, mail order business from| Leighton. Ernst Cox, Jr. Theo-
home, spare or full time at small| “ore | Humenny, George Hoover
cost, No canvassing. Free coun-| %0¢ Lawrence McNally, from Let-
seling service. Write for full Free| “MWorth Village. |
details, Your 3c stamped self-| «ne following people received
addressed envelope will help speed! certiticates te vonien eee
this material to you. ASSOCIAT-| f*rtificates for completion of their
bo? material to you. ASSOCIAT- | frst year, or, Elementary Cours
5591 Metro Station, Los Angeles| fre posart and Joseph Petrisko
eek mia Beles! of Gockland State Hospital, and
6 Ce actual Richard Hamilton, Hector Hutt,

| Presenting Miss Muriel French, of
| the State Employment Service, worke
ceptionist at 205 Scher

prompt delivery of
This is in answer to the boys wi
have agreed that our recent series
of photos prove civil service girls
have pretty faces, but how about
the figures? Here ere some vital
statistics about Muriel: Stands 5
| feet 8 inches, weighs 119 pounds,
desi own clothes, and models

in dition te her t of screen-
ing applicants in search of job
id

| gui

Send check or MO. to | first learned of 8. W. Layton, and i ‘
JIM LEWIS, P. O, Box 23, In-| Powell Opticians, Inc. through - Balogh of Lederie
wood Sta., N, ¥, 34, N. ¥.—Alice | this column, ant!’ have’ expressed | Interested in HYPNOTISM? Read | '4boratorie

- |their thanks to this newspaper|the amzing facts in “The Journal|,,2¢ 18 interesting to note that

a 2 PROFITS
MAKING PE AT HOME
Now, you can MAKE FAST EASY
PROFITS, making perfumes and
toilet clalities at he NO
ALCOHOL EDED.
RABIRO AQUAROMA PE:
CONCENTRATE — BAS
Formulas supplied, with purch:
of base 00 per oz, Make:
oz, of
fragranc
Good fe

t
REU

s new,

acturing

to my mind sur-

aything that I have

b and is indorsed by both

Alice and John, Write for parti-
culars lo, RABIRO, 246 Fifth Ave.
Dept. Lead. New York 1, N, ¥,

NOW 79 NEXT BIRTHDAY
Austen Bolam wants agents for
“LV.", sold personally by him
since 1918 as only guaranteed
remedy for Poison Ivy; Oak; Su-
mac; all herbal allergies, Safe to
use near eyes and on tender parts,
Many grateful testimonals help
introduction, repeats are steady,
Season now on, Send $1.00 for 14
dos, 4 for
$2.26, AUSTEN BOLAM,
Box 92, Howells, New York, .

PURE MAPLE SYRUP _

$6.50 per gallon delivered in New
York, or New England,

$6.70 delivered in Penn & Ohio,
$6.90 delivered East of the Missis-
sippi River,

Shipping welght 1344 lbs, per gal-
lon,

Modern methods employed in
gathering and boiling the sap, as-
sures you of quality second to
none. Both Alice and John cec-
ommend it highly, Send check or
M.O. today to, FALLS BROOK
FARM, Elizabethtown, New York.

money
ing thi

they
e firms. Typical
readers of
visited 5. W.
ans—at 130 E.

by

\r
|amination, and many styles of
|frames to choose from. I wish to|
|thank Powell Opticians, Ine.
Broadway between 73rd and 74th
Streets, and 5S. W. Layton Co.,
Inc, 130 E 159th Streets f
making it possible for a Civil
Service Worker to purchase such
wonderful eye-glasses at a pri
that is beyond comparison,

o PULLEY = Inside

My advice to you, my dear friends,
is to buy this window or porch
pulley at once. It’s as important
as an insurance policy, Send
check or money order to, B. A.
BOSMA & CO., Dept, C, Box
539, Preakness Ave, Paterson 2,

of Hypnotism” the big bi-month
ly magazine devoted lusively
to hypnosis. Pac

Photos, etc, about thi:

science. 50c per c

HYPNOTISM ©

ington Avenue, Boston 16, Mass.

Lovely Distinctive
GRADUATION
(2) PIN

| Foe

the
GRADUATE

Here is a timely gift, the
memory of which will
Unger a lifetime. Strik-
ingly styled in black on
yellow gold (1/20-10K,
GF.) or white on sterl-
ing silver, Initials in-
FREE on back. Hand-
somely gift boxed. The price
quoted here, (less than nationally
advertised) is special to Leader
readers, so I advise you to send
check or M.O, today to HASSLER
CRAFTSMEN, 2040 So, Cecil St.,
St., Philadelphia 43, Pa, State
color and initials—John

|
|

i

“FLOWER GEMS,” — The true
Fragrance of Flowers! The Modern
Perfume, strong-lasting, not ob-
tainable in stores, made up to in-
dividual order. $2.00 per bt)
3 btls, $5.00, 19 different odors.
Apple Bl, Orange Bl., Magnolia,
Wisteria, Rose, Violet, Jickey, Im-
perial, Carnation, Narcissus, Li-
lac, Spice, Muguet, Fougere, Ori
ental, Musk, Gardenia, Mil Fleurs,
White Mist. Order from this adv,

246 Fifth Ave., Dept, L.

N, J-Alice .

these courses, which originated at
Rockland State Hospital two
y now being taught
in New York
under the supervision of the In-
Training Division.

Some Stenos
Get a Raise
Temporarily

ALBANY, June 4—A temporary
pay increase of $276 for stenog-
raphers who work for the State,
in NYC, and in Westchester and
Nassau counties was approved by
the Budget Director's Office, on
recommendation of the State Civil
Service Commission, The raise
was granted to prevent the large
turnover in the number of pro-
visionals, However, any permanent
employees, of whom there are 330,
who get less than the new salary
of $2,416, will get the difference
temporarily. Appointments had
been made at $2,140, The new ap-

intment rate goes into effect on

june 15,

Albion and Westfield
Matrons fo Be Heard

ALBANY, June 4—J. Earl Kel-
ly, Director of Classification and
Compensation, will conduct hear-
ings at Albion State Trainin
School on June 5, and at West:
field State Farm on June 8, com-
menocing at 2 p.m., on the appli-
cations filed by Matrons and em-
ployees in higher titles of that

New York 1, N. ¥,--Alice

series for a change im title and
salary grade,

Sheriffs Will.
Hear Kaplan

|
BUFFALO, June 4—H. Eliot
<aplan, Deputy State Comptroller
|in charge of the Retirement Sys-
| tem,
Qu

will be guest speaker at a
tion and Answer Forum of the
County

Sheriff

20. The topic is: “New York State
Retirement Benefits,”

The forum will be held in the
| Hotel Buffalo Ballroom at 8 p.m,
| The sheriffs invite city, county
and state employees to attend
‘and participate in the question-
ing.
| There is an admission charge
of $1, Tickets may be obtained
from the following: Harry G.
Leech, 169 Winspear Avenue,
Buffalo; Sam May, Harold Deut-
scher, or Miss Rheta Good at
Cleveland 2735. The Sheriff's
office is at 10 Delaware Avenue,
Buffalo,

| Coast Guard League
| Honors Dead

The Coast Guard League, Third
‘

District, (the New York Are
held annual memorial services
for the departed dead of the
Coast Guard on Sunday, May 27,
in Trinity Church Yard, A wreath
was placed on the grave of Alex~
ander Hamilton, father of the
oast Guard, From Trinity Church
those present proceeded in order
of mareh to Pier 9, East River, te
the Coast Guard Base at the foot
of Wall Street, Brief ceremonies
were held at the base, after which
a cutter was boarded and a wreath
ey! on the waters of New
‘ork Bay. ' %

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Tuesday, June 5, 1951

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Activities of Association Chapters

THE CLVIL SERVICE EMPLOYEES ASSOCIATION

(Continued from page 5)
enough county positions in civil
service,

Other committees that will be
appointed later are: Membership,
Personnel, Insurance and Pension,
Civil Service, Auditing, and So-
cial.

Vernon Tapper, Chairman of
the Membership Committee, Coun-
ty Division, also attended this
meeting.

Brooklyn State Hosptal

THE SISTER MARY Margaret
Club, which is sponsored by mem-
bers of the Brooklyn State Hos-
pital staff, had its annual party
in the Assembly Hall. Victorine
Porter was Mistress of Ceremon-
jes. Principal speaker was the Rt.
Rev, William T. Dillon, President
of St. Josephs College. Father Red-
mond, Chaplain of the Mother
House Nursing Sisters, gave an
interesting talk. A film, depicting
nursing by the Sisters, was shown,
and narrated by Sister Mary Loy-
ola, Vocal renditions were given
by Mr. Drogue, Mr. Behan and
Mr. Mastridge. An eulogy to the
late Miss Bridie Owens, Head
Nurse, was given, Sister Mary
Margaret was presented with @
check from the members and this
was followed by a@ collation,

The male and female members
of the Hospital Metropolitan
Bowling League attended the
Jamboree at Creedmoor on Fri-
day evening, May 18.

Congratulations to Miss Mary
Boddey on her marriage to Jos-
eph Laterrza which took place on
June 2, at St. Catherine of Gen-
oa’s Church. Best wishes to Mart-
in Stamler, who walks down the
middie aisle with Miss Constance
Sharka on Saturday, June 9, at
St. Casimir's Church, Pittston,
Pa. Congratulations to Sidney
Heyman, P. T. Dept,, on his re-
cent engagement; and to Miss
Helene Kabak engaged to William
Livermore, currently with the
Armed Forces in Virginia.

Good luck to William Breaker,
Practical nurse, who recently re-
signed from the hospital,

‘The following have enjoyed va-
cations: Mrs. Elizabeth Couch;
Katherine Collins; John McCoy;

Cartons of Cigarettes
At Low Prices

Cortlandt Store, at 243 Broad-
way, NYC, is offering, as a
courtesy to civil service em-
Ployees, cartons of cigarettes
at $1.64 on all popular brands,
such as Lucky Strike, Chester-
field, Camels, Pall Mall, Herbert
Tareyton, Raleigh Plain and
Tipped, Philip Morris. To take
advantage of the offer, it is
necessary to give some identifi-
cation that you are a civil ser-
vice employee.

LEGAL NOTICE

CITATION—P 401, 1051, The Peovto of

the Binte ef New ‘York, by the Grace of

God Free and Independent. TO: The
Public Administrator ef the County of
BENEDICT,
CHARLOTTE

MILLE

decedent herein, to thelr
Administrators, fegatccs, — devises
Siemens and succensony in interest ‘whore
names and

known

places ef residence un
oar etre lay Bet of

‘Beekman ta
of Manhattan, iy of Kew "York,
tar polled to Frogate's

fom ‘tar of May, 1048, relating

teal personal property, duly proved
tae lust Will and Testonent at Becoles
aud Marquis, decessed,

. you and each of you are

cited 10 show cause before the Surrogate’

Court of our County of Ne

7 i He i Mg
What day, =why the said last Will and
‘Testament shoutd not be admitted to pro
bate ae 8 Wil of real and personal

Gorey

d County of New York.

Mr. and Mrs. Albert:
Hampton; Mr. Guy Pugh; Mr, or]
Mrs. MacDonald; Frances Wil-
son; the Searson family; Julia
Brown; Lorraine Purcell; Bridget
Pitzgerald; Mr. and Mrs, Robert
Langhorst; Mr. and Mrs. Isaac
Howard, Bernice Mullane who is
on a leave of absence from her
duties as Head Nurse in Sick Bay.
Albert Euler, on a leave of ab-
sence from his duties. Mr. and
Mrs. Timothy Carroll have re-
signed from the hospital to reside
in Dover, N. Y.

Sincere sympathy to Dr. and

Mrs, Theodore P. Goldstein on) Schmidt, ser
the death of Dr. Goldstein's broth-| meeting was elds
er; and to Mr. Harcourt McLean | bridge armory.
on the recent death of his aunt
. DUBOIS BLOUSE AN!
Metro Armories TROUSERS PRICE $49.85
A typographical error in last
WILLIAM MAHAR was elected o

preident’ of the “Metropolitan | Week's LEADER, in the advertise.

ment of A Dubois & Son, Inc., of
17 Union Square, N¥C, on police
uniforms, gave the incorrect price
for summer blouse and trousers
for rookies. The price should have
been $49.85,

Others elected were; James Clark,
vice president; George Fishe!
treasurer; Frank E. Wallace, ex:
ecutive secretary; Fred Held, re-
cording secretary; Tony Scalio,
corresponding secretary; Henry

157 E, 33rd St., N.Y. C. peed ied on
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Compare — prices, workmanship and

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Guaranteed- all materials and

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17. Union Square”

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PRE HERE O HERERO ROREE EERE REE EE REE EEEEP ER
j ‘Twesday, June 5, 1951 CIVIL SERVICE LEADER Page Nine
EE PET

Bring Your
Refrigeration
Up-to-Date With

Why risk hot-weather breakdown?
Trade in your “old-timer” for this new
HOTPOINT with all 4 “COLD ZONES”:

Low Temperature — Low Humuvrry.
Stainless steel Speed Freeser completely
enclosed—stores 2 to 3 weeks’ supply of
frozen foods. Makes 60 cubes of ice.

Low TemPerature — H1- ib dg
Meat Storage Pan, extra-d
lain-enameled—meata stay fresh, juley
—at right temperature for maar
notice” cooking—without thawing.

3 Reouar TEMPERATURE — Meprum Ho-

MIpITy, 14.22 square feet of Generel
Food Storage space with handy upright
space for 12 to 16 tall bottles.

Reoutar TemprraTurs—H1I-Humirry.
Not one but two fruit and vegetable
drawers—glass-covered, roller:
porcelain-enameled.

— Five-Year Protection Plan on
PLUS famous Thriftmaster Unit! Thia
big “eight” costs less to run than old-style
“sizes” —pays for itself out of savingsl

69 a |?

For pennies a day, you’re safe for years!
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50
sD Weekly

Radios troners

Washing Machines Ranges
Alr Conditioners Jewelry

““DOWNTOWN’S NEWEST DEPARTMENT STORE”
Cameras Sporting Goods Headquarters for Civil Service Employees

Television Refrigerators

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Page Ten

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Tuesday, June 5, 1951

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Public employees, noting the
disposition of Congress to exer
from Federal income taxation)
vertain institutions and organiza-
tions engaged in non-profit activ-
ites, have spurred their demand
that exemption of public em-
ployee pensions should also be
voted, at least on the same basis
that Social Security annuitants
now enjoy.

Social Security annuity income
is free of income tax for the full
amount, whatever it may be now
or in the future. The present pri-
mary benefit under the Social
Security program is $1,800 a year,
‘Thus, if the tax increase recom-
mended by the House committee
is enacted, an ex-public employee,
retiring on a public pension,
would have to get a $2,400 retire-
ment allowance, to equal the net
benefit of an $1,800 Social Secur-
ity pension, Also exempted by law
are Railroad Retirement Law pen- |
sions. The maximum pension un-
der that law is $1,440,

Keogh in Front of Fight

| Representative Eugene J, Keogh |
of Brooklyn, who has been active
|for years in attempting to get
| public employee pensions exempt-
| ed, introduced a proposed amend-
ment to the pending tax bill, to
benefit public employee pension-
ers, but without success. Now an
effort is being made by public
employee groups to force the
exemption into the bill, by point~
ing up the need to end the long-
standing discrimination against
public employees, and at least
bring the proposal to the floor
of the House for a vote. Repre-
sentative Keogh is all in favor of
that.

Ralph L. Van Name, secretary
of the NYC Employees Retirement
System, wrote to Mr. Keogh, and
sent copies of the letter to Presi-
dent Truman, Secretary of the
Treasury Snyder and others,
stressing the need for immediate
and emphatic action. Mr. Van
Name has long been a leader in
the fight to obtain the exemption.
EA Backs Exemption

The Civil Service Employees
Association is on record in favor
of previous similar proposals of
Mr. Keogh and is expected to lend
its weight to the effort to get ac-
tion from Congress now. The asso-
ciation’s members are employees
of the State and of county and
other local governments.

Mr, Van Name in his letter
calls on Mr. Keogh's colleagues
from NYC to join in the effort to
get the exemption enacted.

Mr. Van Name cites the exam-
ple of two bus drivers, one of
them employed by a private line
in NYC, the other working for
the Board of Transportation. He
shows how, under the present tax
rates—which are destined for up-
ward revision—the disparity hits
the public employee hard when he
retires, Wrote Mr. Van Name:

“By reason of the committee's
action yesterday (in rejecting the
Keogh amendment), retired bus
drivers on the Third Avenue bus
route in NYC, which is privately
owned, will continue to be $1,800
tax-free, regardless of any other

ated lines, at $1,800 retirement
allowance, subject to 2244 per
cent Federal income tax, would
have only $1,395 take-home pen-
sion pay, after taxes,

Difference Emphasized Again

“Actually, a Brooklyn munici-
pal bus operator would have to
earn $2,322 pension to have the
same $1,800 take-home pay that
Congress grants to the bus driver
on the Third Avenue line, and to
those persons retiring from the
45,000,000 other industrial posi-
tions, as they come up to age 65
and $3,600 income.”

He called for the untaxing of
public employee pensions to the
same level as Social Security pen-
sioners,

The Neglected Public Employees

Those covered by Social Secur-
ity, who may have additional pen-
sions, as through private contract
or employer grants through union
negotiation, still enjoy the tax-
free feature, we thelr addi-
tonal

to the Social Security
tax exemption applies, Thus pub-
lic employees are the only ones,
excepting the scattered groups E
covered by Social Security, who

do not have tax exemption, Even
those outside groups are being
brought under Social Security,
one by one, The recent

of domestics to the list is an ex-
ample,

Both the American Federation
of Labor and che CIO have
Monwide ‘Keds tates ox

income, while the bus drivers re-|
tired from the municipally-oper- |

“al

achieve tax exemption. The AFL
|'s expected to send out notices to
members of its international
union this week, The CIO's Gov-
ernment and Civic Employees Or-
ganizing Committee and the
‘Transport Workers Union have
written to Mr. Keogh, urging
action now in favor of the exemp-

tion, The NYC Council of the
GCEOC will vote indorsement
this week.

Philip F. Brueck, State chair-
man of the government and Civic
Employees Organizing Committee,
CIO, wrote to Representative
Keogh:

“Civil service employees were
shocked to learn of the action of
the Ways and Means Committee
in killing the proposal to place
civil service pensions on & par
|with Social Security for Income
| Tax_exemption,

“Why must civil service em-
ployees continue to be discrimi-
nated against? Why are they not
entitled to the same Income Tax
exemption which Social Security
jand Railroad pensions have had
for many years?

“Our organization has hereto-
fore believed that the delay of
Congress in granting this exemp-
|tion was caused by the need for
jan educational period. The time
for further education has passed,
The extension of Social Security
to practically all employees of
private industry without the
granting of similar exemption to
governmental employees . makes
Congress guilty of the rankest
kind of discrimination.

“The eyes of 600,000 employees
of the Federal, State and Local
governments in New York State
are upon you, They insist that you
vote NO on the new Tax Bill when
it comes up for final passage un-
less it contains a provision to
equalize pension exemptions.”

Groups Back Tax-Free Pensions

Van Name Gets Letters of Praise

‘The following extracts are from
voluminous mail received by Mg,
Van Name:

“Iam a retired teacher on pen=
sion so you can imagine how dif-
ficult it is in these days to meet
living expenses and then to pay
more and more Federal taxes, Ie
there anything I can do to assist?™

Another penstoner wrote:

“It ts with great pleasure that I
find you will take up the cudgels
to correct the inequity that exists
for every retired civil service
worker concerning the tax bite om
his pension.

“Not only taxation but inflation
has reduced his stipend where he
must take on arduous work im
his declining years to escape o
Penurious existence,

“There is inequity which aws
person who never was under strict
supervision all of his life in pub
lic employment to receive cn an-
nuity which is not taxable and
punish the old faithful of the City
or of Uncle Sam in an uneco-
nomic way.”

Political action was proposed
by another:

“The shameful discrimination

against government pensioners
calls for action,
“There are 10,000 retired

teachers of the NYC System and
each one of these can control
some votes. In our family, I cam
control three others, Surely
this question can be brought te
the attention of all pfesent em~
ployees of New York State, we
can create quite a force for jus
tice.”

“As a retired patrolman of the
Police Department of the City of
New York, I am deeply interested
in your throwing down the gaunt~
let to the NYC Congressmen om
the question of tax exemption for

Pensions.”

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Tuesday, June 5, 1951

as

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Page Eleven

U.S. GAZETTE

THE FEDERAL CAREER Em-
Ployees Association will hold a
meeting on June 6, at 6 p.m., in
me 304, 215 West 23rd Street,

RATINGS in the written tests
ge April 28 as part of the U.

. executive placement program
were mailed out last week. Pur-
Pose of this program ts to locate
outstanding administrative talent
within the Federal service which
might be used to better advantage
in the defense effort. 4,700 candi-
dates placed.

“GET YOUR PROMOTION
program under way immediately,”
all Pederal agencies were told
week by the U. S, Civil Service
Commission, Inspection has shown
that some agencies aren't doing
much about a promotion program

tive service are—theoretically—
governed by Civil Service Com-
mission standards. U, S. employees
don’t have to take promotion
tests, but they do have to meet
certain qualifications set up by
the Civil Service Commission. In
lower positions promotions may
come fast, but for posts above
the middle grades, you have to
serve at least six months before
you can be promoted. Below grade
GS-10, it's possible to be pro-
moted two grades at a time. No
employee may be promoted during
his first six months in service,

All of which will sound exceed-
ingly startling to State and local
employees who have to wait long
periods and go through arduous
examinations and procedures be-
fore they can be promoted.

THE U. 8. . CIVIL SERVICE

for their employees. This is espe-
cially true in field offices,

Commission has announced a

| titement under the G, I. Bill of

| ENROLL
while there are still some

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ARCs er eenee
seeeenees ADtr ower

| te pean thle pt Bd

All motions in the competi- | grou!
pace through their qualifications and jC.

aig of young men and women
4 though they aide qualify
in ai phases of the difficult Junior
Management Assistant exam given
last fall, did qualify in the writ-
ten test portion of the test. About
2,800 near-geniuses fall in this
ip. The Commission will prow!

if they seem good enuogh, their
names wilt be added to the Junior
mo Assistant eligible
ists,

PHOTOGRAPHERS, blueprint
operators, and photostat oper-
ators will have a chance to co!
pete for jobs in Washington some-
time this month, There will also
be opportunities for trainees. The
Posts will pay $2,200 to $3,100 a
year. Young people, keep your
eyes peeled for this one.
good way to get started on a
government career.

STLL SITTING on pay
bills: Congress.

NEWS FOR FOR letter carriers: The

raise

It’s alé

Comptroller General of the United
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in the top automatic grade as a
substitute carrier may be com-
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employee in the top automatic
grade in determining eligibility for
promotion at a first-class post of-
fice to longevity grades A, B, and

ENGINEERS whose skills are
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44) Lexington Ave, RY. (44 St) MU, 23527

LEGAL NOTICE

¥LAD, PAULINN.—CITATION.—P, 634,
1951—The Peoyte of the Stale of Ni
York, By the Grace of God Freo aad
dependeat, To Marie ¥lad, Adolph | Fi
Paula Bucher, Irgne Eppler, Adolph Bauer,
Karl Bauer, August Bauer. Panline Pantel,
Frieda Engits, Elia Stauch, Helene Koem-

J, Brich Bauer. Irene Ocker, Siglinde
jaer, the next of kin and heirs at law of

tiv
proverty. duly’ proved ite tha fort Sil aod
festament and codicil of Pauline Flad, de-
ceaned, who was at the
a resident of 540 West
gush of Manbatian, the County of New
fork,
‘Therefore, you and
to show cause befor
‘ourt ef our County af New York, at the

hs ot you are cited

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popular exams are on sale at The

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Federal jobs may be re-assigned
by the Civil Service Commission.
That sounds like a valid idea—
and it could be higher pay for #
lot of employees.

$4,600 to $7,600, the pay offered
by the U. S, Bureau of Mines
for physicists, chemical engin-
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Page Twelve

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Tuesday, June 5, 195T

Big Meeting of Mt. Vernon
Employees Planned for June 12

A city-wide meeting will be,;cates a large turnout for the
held in Mt. Vernon on June 12| meeting. The purposes of the
for all employees of the city and! Association, and {ts plans for pub-
the Board of Education at the lic employees in Mt, Vernon, will
building of the Veterans of Foreign | be fully discussed, and the bene-~
Wars, Post 596, 13 South Third| fits of membership described in
Avenue, Mount Vernon. detail. All questions from the

The meeting will be cpen to ail| floor will be answered, including
employees, and is for the purpose|any regarding assistance which
of beginning the formation of a Association give its mem-

Mt. Vernon Unit of Westchester 5 on matters of pay, working
Chapter, Civil Service Employees | conditions, civil service rights, re-
Association. The meeting will be tirement, and similar.
addressed by officials of the 50,-| Members Interest Being Covered
000-member, State-wide Associa | A sizeable block of Mount Ver-
tion, and the 2,100-member|non Board of Education em-
county-wide chapter. Representa-| ployees, who have recently become
tives of the Association's head-{ Association members, have asked
quarters and legal staffs will be|to be represented at the Budget
present Hearing of the Board of Educa-
Lively Interest tion on June 7, A communication
Liv interest has been dis-| has been forwarded to school Su-
played by public employees in| perintendent Jordan Larson stat-
Mount Vernon since the Associa-|ing that representatives of the
tion started accepting member-| Association will be present to ap-

ship in the city during the last few
weeks, and every evidence indi-

pear on behalf of these members
at the hearing.

ks,

U.S. Exams Open | Annual —e
[Of CSEA to Be
jHeld on Oct. 2

The following U. 8. exams, some |
for jobs in and around Washing- |
ton, D. C., the others nationwide, |
are open until further notice:

231, Elementary Teacher, $3,-
100.—For duty in the Bureau of |, Mi gral mg Merit HE ot
Indian Affairs, Department of the |e Fey Giscnaden: Wie
Interior, in various States, and in ee Sen ee
Alaska,’ Requirements: | Appro- | oo." tcom chapters and will re-
priate education. No written test: | port back to the sponsoring chap-

SAL1(61), Miltary Tralning | tor*_ oo thelr peomceed resolvsone
Instructor, $3,100 to $4 600.—Jobs inet eo ae
are in Fort Monmout N. 4 ntation at the annual
quirements: Appropriate = |

a r of the
ienc t

payin

and/or educat

$3,862 d a
as an instructor
application

Send

tary, Board =
ice ' Examir
esi LEGAL NOTICE
nal Co .
ith, Fe t °
nw. Ye
-— 1 te
LEGAL NOTICE ' ALMANE
MINTZ, BENIAMIN—In 6 I the
a) William 1. € .
Wisch. A mt “a 4 way. White

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of sald Street and Second Avenue

Both Oitions Open Thure, tli 6100 FM,

john P. Redmond, IAFF president, hi
in the City twice, in recent weeks, on the project of sttetelng legislation et the special session of the
Legislature, Mr. Redmond, extreme left, is bet in contereane with Acting President John Forren of the
UFOA, oad Battalion Chief Winford Becbe, Frederick J. Muesie, ond Captain Charles Freeman,
members ry the UFOA executive board.

Public Works Employees
Probe Problems of Overtime,
Grievances, Rates of Pay

State Doctors’
Pay Rise Lauded

ALBANY, June 4—Officials of
the Civil Service Employees Asso-
ciation have expressed approval
and satisfaction over the salary

ALBANY, June 4—Annual sala-) Joseph Corr, Earl Ingraham, |increases recently announced for
ries for all per diems continuous- | District Mrs, Ethel Chapman,|more than 600 doctors in State
ly employed, overtime beyond 40) District 3; Margaret Donahue, |Service by J. Earl Kelly, Director
hours per week, increased subsis-| District 5; Paul Hammond, Dis-|of Classification and Compensae
tence allowances, adjusted rates|trict 10; ‘Joseph Crotty, Ham- | tion.
for personally-owned trucks and| burg; Roy Keeler, St. Lawrence The Association has backed this

ication of grievance proce- alm, Orange; Stephen |campaign of state physicians and
were covered in the day long . Columbia; Bernard Gaf-| psychiatrists for higher salaries
meeting of Public Works delegates | fney, sego; Edmund Bielinski, | since its inception two years ago
of Orleans; H. H. Glosser, Mont-| at a conferenc ¥
A: officials of the|gomery; and John Cox, Mrs. Ella | tatives of the M
| DPW artment and officials of | Dilg, Joseph O'Hare, Floyd Barnes | doctors and the then president of
the iation at Albany head-|and Frank Ryan, Main Office. ZA Dr, Frank L. Tolman.

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c assistant counsel, Henry | ty
salary analyst, and Larry only f hole
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ciation
gates attending included Photography
ENGAL NOTICE Spectai discounts on photographic eauip,
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EME oo. 7-530 1 om ued oquip Spee Smm fim rentala,

CITY CAMERA EXCHANG:
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Tuceday, June 5, 1951

CIVID SERVICE LEADER

Page Thirteen

Civil Service Rights

Dy MORRIS WEISSBERG

A TRANSFER is the act of
moving ® public employee from
one department or unit to
to do the same work under the
same title, or the same or similar
work under a different title. This
second type of transfer is usually
called a change of title.

There is no “right” of transfer
from one job to another or from
one department to another. How~
ever, special laws sometimes pro-
vide for transfer of bureaus or
functions from one department to
another, together with all the em-
Ployees. In such case, the em-
ployee has the right to serve
the department to which the |
transferred him, and the depart-
ment head may not refuse to re-
ceive him into that department.

Power to Transfer

Department heads have the
power to transfer or reassign em-
ployees from one place to another
within their department, or to an-
other department, with or with-
out the consent of the employee.

‘The law provides that transfers
require the approval of the heads
of the departments and of the civil
service commission having juris-
diction over the position. Such ap-
proval is discretionary and may be

jourt of the State of
Bronx, Vartkes Moxi

County
tiff, against Plorence Hope FitaGeraid, steo
known sa Florence FitzGeratd Joseph Av
FitzGerald, and all ef the above. if living,
and if they or any of them be dead, weir
‘widows, widowers, next of

kin, executors, adminintrators, saslens,
trusters,  Seeniees, grantees, — ereditore,
Henore and any and all persone claiming
lien or interest upon the real

Fesidence are unknown to the plaintiff,
defendante, Piaintift Joe at S10 NW

Plaintift desle
place of trial

Haig Maygoon!, Attorney
OMee & FP. Addresa: 67
Morough of Manhatian, Cily of

for Plaintie,
Ww

re the above named defendants except
7

pUrMANt 10 the order
dor, Juaticn of the Su-
the Siaie of New York,

Disinti. You ate interested im the
of action which ia te foreclose the fo!
ing tax ten: Bronx Lien No

Map of Bronx County
Dromire consists of vacant and ait
10 wont side of Bayshore Ave

Mayroon!,
Ofice & P.O

«| a stenographer’s work necessarily

| mvolved is paid from the trea- trea-

discretion to fill vacant positions
by transfer instead of promotion.
Exempt to Competitive

provide that no such transfer will
be approved unless the employee

in effect, denies any
transfer from the exempt or non-
competitive to the competitive
class, since a person who gains ap-
pointment from an open competi-
tive eligible list has no practical
position
Must Complete Probation

Under the Rules of the Btate
Civil Service Commission employ~
ees may not be transferred until

than they hold; nor to a position
involving different or higher es-
sential tests or qualifications than
those prescribed for original ap-
pointment to the position which
they hold. For example, the Courts
have held that an inspector of
milk may not be transferred to
inspector of meat and poultry,
and that a pumping engineer may
not be transferred to stationary
fireman, because the positions in-
volve different essential tests and
qualifications. On the other hand,

includes that of a clerk, but the
converse is not necessarily true,
so that a stenographer may trans-
fer to clerk, but not vice versa.
State to City

Employees may be transferred
to State service from city or coun-
ty service, or vice versa, where
the compensation of the positions

~~ COMMENT

LAUDS ‘LEADER’ REPORT
OF ASSEMBLY MEETINGS
Editor, The LEADER:

May I take this opportunity to
congratulate you on the fine re-
porting of the Civil Service As-
sembly convention, held recently
in Albany, which appeared in the
May 29 issue of the Civil Service
LEADER. This is a valuable issue
to all who are interested in the
advancement of public personnel
management; first, for those who

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ae Lp % Cor. ood Ave. Ind. sabwey- se treie—Nessau Ave, station

attended the convention, the issue
offers a summary of all the pro-
ceedings in a readable and con-
cise compilation; and second, for
those who did not attend, it pro-
vides a clear picture of the con-
vention as a whole,

I believe that some of the best
government reporting is done by
the press, and while it may be in-
direct, it is never ineffective.

RS, E. W. ADLER,

New Rochelle

jer Merton Yarmon,

te ¥ Civil Service Job” ts written se
*, by LEADER editer Maxwell Lebmen ena

tells you how to transfer from
lditiena) fects abost government

W's only $1.

LEADER BOOKSTORE
97 Beane Street, New York Clty

Please send me immediotely
Civil Service Jeb” be

po ay all Yd
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tor btoee

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Page Fourteen

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Tuesday, June 5, 1951

Lists Certified to NYC Depts.

Assistant Court Clerk, Grade 3;
10 (Domestic Relations Court).
Assistant Electrical
V2y (various).
(Continued on page 15)

The title of the position, the
list standing of the last eligible
certified, and the department are
given in this list of NYC certifi-
cations. “Various means that
certifications were made to sev-
eral departments. “Y” means that
the investigation of the eligible
has not been completed.

SPECIAL MILITARY LIST

Assistant Court Clerk, Grade 3;
0.5 (City Magistrates’ Court).

Car Inspector, Car Mainte-
nance; V2.5 (Bd. of Trans.).

Clerk, Grade 3, Bureau of Ad-
ministration; 1.4 (Office of Comp-
troller).

Foreman, Cars and Shops, IRT

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Seasonal Sports @ Saddle Horses
Instruction in Folk, Social & Square

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Foreman, Cars and Shops, BMT
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Cleaner, women; 584 (various),
Laborer; 98ly (various).
Laborer (outside of NYC) Sulli-
van County; 21 (Bd, of Water
Supply).
Laundry Worker, men; 282
(Hospitals).
Window Cleaner; 130 (Public

Works),
PROMOTION

Asphalt Worker; V44 (Office
President Borough of Brooklyn).

Assistant Civil Engineer; 4
(Marine and Aviation).

Assistant Court Clerk; 24 (Mu-
nicipal Court).

Assistant Court Clerk, Grade 3;
10 (City Magistrates’ Court).

DE ROUTE IY BEF TER TALTAD 757)

ERDI CATSKILL: Wy

Vacation at Beautiful
LOON LAKE

Heart of the Adtrond:

THE RIVERVIEW

nN
vc

ond, N.Y
x Phone 80° 8-035

SWISS COTTAGES

NWOOD LAKE. N.Y.

ECHO LAKE LODGE

“Bo at

trom home

Lounge

@ Delase Cabins heated throushee!
@ Churches Near
Free colfee bar f

late
. ine!
ALL

i, 8002 OR S492d.
HONEYMOONERS DREAMS

the

Reserve for SHEVUOTH—Low

Engineer;

ror tHe TIME
or your LIFE

Rates as low as $40 wk,

+ Brand New Filtered Pool

© STAR ENTERTAINMENT

Latin-American Orch-Ritely

COCKTAIL LOUNGE

FREE BOATING FISHING

WORSEBACK RIDING

ALL SPORTS

EXCELLENT FOOD (Oietary)

SUPERVISED DAY CAMP

+ SPECIAL CREDIT PLAN

», (WRITE FOR PARTICULARS)
Brides!!!

FREE courses in

* Cooking

py

Wholosome meals

Lawes. Rates: $50-865-$00

ATTRACTIVE

JUNE RATES

Specially Reduced Kat
& Con

-. lounge

excellent cuisine

Camp «
(iletary laws)

ON BEAUTIFUL Swan ase N.V.|
68 Eves SC 45772

Digby 9

PARKSVILLE 6
N.Y.

ny Our 1% MiN
PRIVATE LAKE

LOW Rates

Concrete Swimming Pod
CAMP @ Finest Kosher-Anver “ACCOMMODATIONS with
Prt 30
Pennsylvannia
| HAPPYLAND FARM §,, ine wi oo preenl or Tamiliea write
Kast St >.

LOCUST

RIP VAN WINKLE

Modern.

SCHMITT’S MT, REST Sink,

E House Hawi Siroudsbure, Pa, ® D. 1, all eports, Bxoell

Write for’ booklet,

Wills Box L. Pa, Bat
porta, ecco Or churches, Wei

Rxcel

Resort Directory

Pear ERNST

i ee ee

New York
wir f Round Top % N. York; very mod.: fo
PICKWICK rena oie fooat’ concrete peal, “al amtses woeremen,
Amor, Kitchen, afl trea
wets: aporte, churches!

, N York.
family places,

Bx

it food, all mod, 8 min, to 96) amuse, A
tur x

Write for Dlkit, Jobo Hughes,

Kael Durham, § Excellent Ger-Amer, Garden tres
‘Ali modern, Ail churches, Shower-baths $93,
Green ville 6-4

excell, German-Americnm
Write for Booklet,

Leeds, N. York. Deluxe cabins,
food. Showers, bathing on premises.

Greenville, N.Y, Excell food,

all amuse, Large airy rooms,

conerete pool, shaded faw
bathe, hot and cold runaly
Write for Booklet.

water all rooma, All churches,

a

UT FARM fen
tet
CANTWELL'S Weil Sar Cotte
J. WH. Cantwell: tng

CATSKILL VIEW HOUSE Perry Execetl, food, bathe, #hol
J. Paratore, Prop. baat arches. $38-840," Wei
THE COLONIAL Yann, Forks oxticat tonal moderns all am
DEAN'S COREE > rbd a ms

for booklet E, W. HOBART, Prop,

Excell food, new concrete pool,
all sports, showers, hot-cod water im

; eS Hil] 2-2301. Modern, deli-

*S FARM

(LM REST HOUSE

Near ch

ches

Yor your pert
sale

Sever
Mrs. Eva St, Eve, Purling. §. ¥.

Keon, 3% excell food: all
od, “teapta iis, churches: $30

GLEN FALLS HOUSE Top. N, York. Bacal food, hot & 7 i.

churches, Write for Booklet.©.

GRAND VIEW How Mody Ex od. 4 to 838

HANI FARM $ytentood, torte, Bar'p-Cue, BKC Harry Hanes

HARMONY LODGE Eiken

Write Mes, Betty McGowan, RD,

HIGGINS GREEN LAKE HOUSE (stk @:02. 40 take, “a imi,

Chitdr $16 up to yre Write Phone Catskill 930" See eeh: See SRE Re

JOE'S MT. VIEW FARM Catt 8. ¥

KNAPP HOUSE:

bidet, Ratoe FA-3I6.

amatl ng
Phon

Hurleyvill al
all. modern SIM Mrs

ell. French ¢

“LA CASCADE” Haines Falls, 8 York. 2800 ft. elev., &
(einai, Bites otk Whe tele tee peek Ge 8
LEEDS ® el, Leeds N. Ye AK mod.

all amuse, chi

en, Write

Farm

MAP ot
MAPLEWOOD FARM®

rates, all churches Writ

Bareyvilte,
boot

N. York
all churches,

) GROY

Excell Tabl
rite booklet,

All amuscments, Co
All ‘mod Speciat

Septemt

MILL BROOK HOUSE ova Top N. York, Box 82, concrete pool, excell

‘ cecAmiers cooking ait ‘mod, churchen write, Bk

McGOVERN HOL Catal RDS. MY. Homelike: bathe “

OAKWOOD [ori aly rooms B5.00'ub wie Wile Mek Mire ie Gr

OSBORN HOUSE Winsham. x.y. w

Amiuse,, ait churches, Write’ar ‘phone Winditna &

PALENVILLE MANOR Patnvite 8. ¥, Al wo UnilanAmoran, Buco,
20x 100) pool, dancing nightly own orcas

alt sports, churches, Write for Mo

m. NY. Tel. Freehold
ation Concrete ewim:
iS wkiy Special Kates Ju

pool x te
‘& Sept Write J

facilities

RHINE!

Tarvery
Palenvilie, N.Y. Come up for play and rest and
wet the bert. Bports, churches. Write, P. Horwes,

_AND MAI

NOR

RUSHBROOK (2%, Weak Sauawt

ool. Accom 20, Churcher, Wrtie 3 sienaliealicnaalbaai
HOTEL Saucortics. 6. Saugerties 6; pool, covk=
Ail evorts, Buropenn ‘plan, Bin Foon $26 ‘weekly

VALLEY VIEW FARM (uni\2 So "DAoMS iakat'irop od:

A MARIA Haines Pate. ® York, Tialian, A ah Apna eae
ier A, eRe ae Se
WINDING BROOK HOUSE ound op. Kew York Bacclicnt food ai
The WINDMERE  urthen’ locatit"ne!” vitaree 430.00" ap wis, ‘wele
WOODPECKER FARM 5. Durkan. ¥,_ ¥. 4 family place, owin oe

whily, churches, Write. Mre. BK Heese

Ce Box 3, N.Y. Tele Cal t4, Malian Amer, bite
WOOD STOCK arm .Psh, anion, oy selsmune pe ana
nightly, all modera improvements, Reasonable rates, Write Mr, and Mre, Poul Legrane,

-_ nn OEP PPS ery = =

‘Tuesday, Jane 5, 1951 ‘CIVED SERVICE LEADER Pagé Fifteen

Certifications |NNYC Battalion Chief Eligible List; |

(Continued from page 14)

fits, Baas eases| Last-Minute Switch of Names Made

Assistant Maintenance Engineer

ears and shops; 2 (Bd. of Trans.). wen ine Weems A ! Nome bd
Assistant Maintenance Engi- PRS.) eee ee | ee oe
neer, signals; D4 (Bd. of Trans.) Nome ay Record i
Assistant Station Supervisor; 8| 1 T. Milner (D) 766 93.75 y es
didn ar Grant). E Biterd p) meanis (W) CH 33.00 at
Assistant Supervisor; 464 (Wel-| & a8 WIS 739
fare). 5s. se ea 72.5 85.00
Auto Mechanic; 35 (Office, $ bee we a $100
President Borough Bronx). H rod 95.00 ; 5-4
Bridge and Tunnel Sergeant; | °. S04 S826 3 92.00
V12 (Triborough Bridge and Tun-| 1% a4 ae | 8 90.25
nel Authority) th, Micke! J, Clery 765 er 4 Re
Bus Maintainer, Group A, BMT'| 13: Charles W. Hyper (¥) — 5 94.28 3 0
division; V44 (Bd, of Trans.). V4: Thomay J) MeElray AH 2130 | 103. Anheny ‘Buraoret i be
Captain; 129 (Police Depart-| \% john,’ 3 a3 90.25 | 05. Normon “Angswecy 1 $100
ment). Ha eased c. ‘Brennen (Ne. t) (¥) 34 toad 106. William £. Royer (\ | 85.00
; ‘ “4 31
Car’ Maintainer, Group A; V17| }§ Fawie J tserere, aa v0 | dy ae
Bd. of ‘Trans.). Be Wain he tonay 370 92.00 1 $500
Car Maintainer, Group B; V3] 21. Evgene E Schoenleber (V) 92.00 | 39 fi0o
a. of Trans). Bi Tremor K. takin. () 3500 | a3 $130
Car Maintainer, Group P; | 34 Willlm Hi Cormichosl 9500 | at $30
Gd. of Trans.). z fermen, rod ¥) aa 79.5 £1.00
Chief Marine Engineer; 2 (Ma-| 26 jomes AM] 760 “se 4
; 27. James M. Rochford { 50 | 7
rine and Aviation). Me. feremich Cronin, Wr, Wi uso | wt Nas
Chief Psychologist; 1 (Hospi-| 29. John J. Cully (¥) 85.00 792 5.00
v5 | 30: Robert 2 Reynolds — 91.25 A
bah 3. Mortin P. OG: as | s 83.50
Civil Engineer; 5 (Bd. of Bd.).| 32. fetura’i. Boker tv) 00 | $1 Hrd
Civil Engineer; 6 (Marine and fo ponies Y ag esreng sod ? - rr | . Raymond J, 90 8100
Aviation) Jomnes J, Myrroy [Ne 2 Mich itt 39 B00
MTN iiher 3, Const 5 :
Claim ‘Examiner, torts, Grade| 3. tvera’G rem 3393 v $82 He
2; @ (Bd, of Trans.) 3. Charles # Ge ms 6430 oa $025
Clerk, Grade 3;'2 (City Clerk iiiom mw) 0 ne
and City Councit) | 3. Sho. M Knecheskousr | at, wo tas0
Clerk, Grade 4; 119 (Bd. of | 41° Chories' J. Wolfinger | est rea Hid
Ed). 4 deseh Mare | George Mayer 0.1 90.25
Clerk, Grade 5; 70 (Bd. of Bd.).| 42 fronts €. Comey (We cee Tage ri ue
Clerk of Colirt, Grade 4; 3] 4% Benn shea (V1 — 77.6 81.30
Momestic Relations Court) : y 4 Pat
3 i
Clerk of District; 8 (Municipal) %& iy 333 50
Court) 4 - 138. Cal e450
Deputy Assistant Corporation| #7: gbeit$ 139. ra] 8650
Counsel, Grade 4; 21 (Law) 52 Timothy. J if . (Y) Bi es
Deputy Clerk | of District; | $2 Jame: &, Walsh (No, 2 3 Vaz. Patrick J. 763 Be
(Municipal Court). 720 143. Jahn. J. Kell 764
Foreman, Grade 2; 5 (Office,| 36 $025 | 145. Waltee ee fig
esident Borough Queens). 7. 83.50 146. John Depiet 774 £1.00
Foreman, Buses and shops, BMT | 3 Se AE ine og odor 33 cc <
division; 10 (Bd. of Trans.). @. 91:30 | 149) Chorles T. Robinson 63 1.00
Foreman, cars and shops; V18| §) 2200 | 180. Robern e. Fay 783 100
Ba. of Trans.). 6. Chor 9275 152 Poul Schander” 5 #100
crreman, electrical power; BT] 4° Bevin Acrenton 7 $2.50 | 153. Frederick White 749 oo
. of Trans.) mV. Schnaible 154. Arthor J. Glenn 350 ra
7 . 66. Lovis Terzoga 78 95.00 1 r 7.
Foreman of Porters, Grade 2.| @ time & Grecsek (¥) 7o3 $50 | 458; eteete 4, Sok ae 3
men; 110 (Housing Authority). 8. Joseph M. Peidl 707 93.00 157. Hermon H. Huneke 740 00
Foreman, stores, materials, and | 9% froncis J. Been ae one 158° Wiliam 4. Brody 724 4
1 les: ( 2 70, Hugh F. McMichael as5 81.00 199. Julius W. Deaheim 738 00
supplies; 5 (Bd. of Trans.). 31 Thomas’ Cr Ric #30 8350 | 38. Cat HY Armola 721 30
Gardener; 39. (Parks). Ba. Willam 3: Yangon 708 $500 | et: George © Wear 745 ro
Gardener; 166 (Housing Au- = 162. Lee G. Howkins 743 =
thority) 7 Be $380 163. Rober! M. Foley 738 ‘00
a 164, Thomes P. Roche 737 #100
e rrarig a Pikes snd Castings, a pi SP is at = = 165. Groderiek Dehner 731 81.00
brade 4; § (Bd. of Water Supply). | 7% Ole W. Matson (V) 8450 | 164. Anh J. Golden 723 #150
Inspector of Plumbing, Grade| 79: joven’ Meme) seco | len. Src. htoray 3 Hid
3: 1 (Office Comptroller) 80. Emanuel Fried 8250 | 169. Fronk. Hounfelder 129 $1.00
} enance Ene! cars y. Th ye
Maintenance Engineer, cars and fy [ton y: Grey S500 roe Hed
of Trans ES. Stephen '#, OReilly 83.50 Adi $100
hanica! Maintainer, Group| #4: Thomor J. Ryon $450 108 £1.00
Re a er | 83. Arbor’ 3 ‘sack (no. Ped Ne 3 708 $100
Medical Social Worker, Grade =2gardndpusbies aud ot ts
2; 18 (Hospitals) Pasat = : ester cs
Park Foreman, Grade 2, men | a —
8 (Parks) - = =

Plumber's Helper; 21 (Parks). si Health and Safety

Power Maintainer, Group A; i Area in ONDERFUL NEW
14 (Bd. of Trans.) ig ee |

Resident Buildings Superin- A ? |
tendent; 'V20 (Housing Author- ® ARCO COURSES
ty). ?

Senior Housekeeper, Grade 2; jociest incor

(Hospitals), ate in aun kissed
pais oe HERE IS A LISTING OF ARCO

mond Ht 19130 1180 COURSES for PENDING EXAMINATIONS
arimente steams bath, oll” detached : An INQUIRE ABOUT OTHER COURSES
ine ee oe oe ee me ile 2 M3 ru LOW AT 1 Accountont & Auditor ..92.50/[] Engineering Tests $2.50
‘aheg i» or Ngee
EGBI ay Ar WairresrOo cost wens pole Ccelghrl C Administrative Ausistont | |EI Biromen (6.0) m3 88
‘ome

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York 18, N. ¥- F
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with this nd mt the ? State $s. L. 65
HOTEL

STRATFORD ARMS
117 W, 70th ST, N.Y. C. =
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t

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ORDER DIRECT—MAIL COUPON |}-———,

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97 Duane St., New York 7, N. Y.
Please send me.......... eoplet of books shocked above,
I enclose check or money order fer $..sereeee

weekly
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GROUP OUTINGS
Are More Fun At

INDIAN POINT Park

OPEN DAILY
Raseball Pields, Playgrounds,  plemie
Swimming Pool, Boating,
ahs, Restaurant, Cafeteria, Heer
Garden, Kiddirland, Rides, Amisomente
Specials for Civil Service Groups

On Route Near Peekskill
N.Y. OFF, CH, 45659

Address

City ivccccecveseveseerersrecceres SMM csrerer genes

Page Sixteen

ee ae ee Pee ee

crvin SERVICE LEADER

ene eae Ge ee

Chapter
Activities

Herkimer County

A MEETING of the Herkimer
chapter, CSEA, was held on Wed-
nesday evening, May 16, at the
City Hall in Little Falls, John
be mpg chapter president, pre-

ided. Laurence J. Hollister, fleld
representative of the Association,
Was guest speaker. This meeting
was held for employees of Little
Falls and vicinity. Some of the
problems revealed are these: the
employees in the Dolgeville Cen-
tral School and the village em-
ployees are not members of the
Retirement System. Mr. Hollister
Pointed out that arrangements had
‘been made for a meeting with the
Board of Education, Central
School District, and the Town
Board to consider bringing their
employees under the Retirement
System. Mr. Hollister spoke fur-
ther on the purposes of the As-
sociation. Vernon Tapper, chair-
man, Membership Committee,
County Division, explained the
Association on the local level and
expanded on the retirement laws.

Among those present were:
Harry Hotaling, Trustee, Village of
Dolgeville; Albert Gallusha, Street
and Water Commissioner, Village
of Dolgeville; Harold Clark, mem-
ber of the School Board, Dolge-
ville Central School; and Edward
J. Burns, Assistant City Engin-
eer, City of Little Falls.

Ray Brook

MEMBERS of the Ray Brook
chapter, CSEA, held their annual
dinner-dance on May 26 at the
Elks Club at Saranac Lake.

Chapter president Emmett
Durr, who was re-elected for the

sixth time, gave an after-dinner |

resume of the Association’s more
recent accomplishments.

Father Cuthbert Micali, who
@ave the invocation, also made
the closing speech. John Bala, re
elected vice-president, was toast-
master,

Out-of-town guests were R. lL.

Albany Conference Holds
Elections on June 14

ALBANY, June 4—The annual
meeting for the election of offi-
cers of the Capitol District Con-
ference of the Civil Service Em-
ployees Association will be held
Thursday, June 14, at Crooked
Lake Hotel. The meeting will be
held at 6 p.m. to be followed by
a buffet supper and dancing.
Guests have been invited for 3
p.m. and there ts a schedule of
Sports and games arranged for the
afternoon arrivals,

The nominating committee, of
which William Kuehn is chair-
man, has submitted the following
nominations for officers, and
nominations from the floor are
also open.

Dr. David M. Schneider, twice

Conference chairman, and pres-
ent incumbent has announced he
is not a candidate.

Nominated to succeed him are
Dr. Theodore Wenzl, Education
Department and Wiillam Baker,
Department of State. For vic
chairman, incumbent John Fox,
Department of Public Works, and
Frank Wilcox, Department of
Taxation and Finance; secretary,
Matthew Fitzgerald, Bureau of
Motor Vehicles, incumbent, and
Mrs. Esther Wenger, Department
of Social Welfare; treasurer, Mar-
‘aret Mahoney, Public Service
commission, incumbent, and Mrs.
Mildred Meski!, Department of
Commerce.

Stark and Thomas Seymour. Both
Mr. Stark and Mr. Seymour are
connected with the Department
of Correction’s Clinton Prison at
Dannemora. Mr. and Mrs, Ray-
mond Ko of Toronto, Canada,
dropped in for a short visit. Mrs.
Ko, nee Gillette, was formerly as-
sociated with this hospital's x-ray
department.

After the installation of re-
elected officers, who include
Treasurer Ernest Brusso and Sec-
retary Eunice Cross, there was
dancing to Joseph Boland’s or-
chestra,

Those who recently spent week-
ends out of town were: Catherine
Rice, who visited her parents, Mr.

rs Michael J. Rice of
Eileen Holmes, who
visited her family in Schenectady;
Mrs. Anne Polasek, who holidayed
with her son-in-law and daughter,

Otsego County

A MEETING of the Otsego
County State Pubile Works chap-
ter Thursday, June -14, at the
DPUI Office, 2nd Floor, 256 Main
Street, Oneonta, at 8:00 P.M.

The purpose of this meeting is
for election of the Executive
Council. The following are candi-
dates in each classification, and
voting is done as follows: all
| Foremen vote for one Foreman,
all Truck Drivers vote for one
Truck Driver, et

Foremen: Mau
Edwin Geerken,

Truck Drivers: Stewart Steen-
rod and Clifford Sisson.

Laborers, North End: Robert
Schwenk and Robert Moore.

Laborers, South End: Alexander
Miller and William Hendricks,

Equipment Operators: Ralph
| Judkins snd James Somerville,

ce Gardner and

Mr, and Mrs, Anthony Kuspiel,| Administration: Harold West-
of NYC. Also, Mrs. Mary Margaret | Cott.
Reilly, who visited her parents,| Ballots have been provided

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Orris of
Buffalo and her brother-in-law
and sister, Mr. and Mrs, Robert
Willis of Kenmore; and Hospital
Pharmacist Frank Rattigan and
his Mrs., who attended the 4th
Degree Knights of Columbus Con-
vention at Niagara Falls.

members, and there is space on
the ballots for write-in votes. Bal-
lots are to be returned to the Bal-
loting Committee William Cady
and Glenn Gill prior to the meet-
ing June 14th, or may be brought
in to the meeting.

‘The officers of this chapter that

THE:
NEW HAVEN
FOR THE
YOUNG SET!

‘The magnificent private
beach club which is attracting
the most attractive young
people in town; where every:
thing you could want in a
summer resort is right here
in the city... easy to reach
by subway of bus... and
EASY TO ENJOY ALL 16
WEEKS OF ‘THE SUM
MER, FOR LESS THAN
THE COST OF A SINGLE
WEEK AWAY FROM
TOWN!

JUST A BREEZE from where you ore!

Folks who work downtown can be in SHOREHAVEN
by subway in fess than an hour. How delightful you wilt
fee! after a cool, invigorating dip in the pool. Then, if you
wish, you can enjoy wholesome food in our own cafe:
¢ prices, Between swims you can relax
and enjoy cool breezes and warm friendships .,

teria, at modern

make each Summer day a perfect onet

SHOREHAVEN riers unvivaties tactics fr 9 sea

son of fun; the magnificent salt water pool of breath-
taking magnitude; dozens upon dorens of athletic courts
and fields; a Band Shell and Dance Pavillion for your
entectainment. There's MOONLIGHT BATHING votil
10 P.M; Square Dancing and Movies; Gala Week-end

: Broadway Shows; and DANCING
NEATH THE STARS on Saturday
All Free to our Members

NO PUBLIC ADMISSIONS + sonore

Sh wr

At the Foot of ive; Ave., IN THE BRONX

Nights

EASY TO

AY Tat us

OPEN FROM
10 A.M, te 10 P.M,

Phone

TA 3-7600

ond ineny pointe te beteeen,

FREE PARKING AREA Far Mester wit aa) Association honoring Appellate
FOR MEMBERS: ph abminven fae,
aT Main Gave Rastates Goats Te teak tat iyaee Cer suiopbee J. Hoffernan

were elected as the chapter con-

stitution was adopted are:
President, Bernard J. Gaffney;

Vice-President, Patrick T. Ker-

win; Secretary, June Wescot
Treasurer, Howard Lent.
Binghamton

THE ANNUAL MEETING and
election of officers of Binghamton
peal was held Monday, May

President Gerald Reilly was
“railroaded” into the presidency
for another term. Other officers
are: first vice-president, Albert E.
Launt; second vice-president, Stu-
art H. Anderson; secretary, Mrs.
Freeman E. (Florence) Drew;
treasurer, Elizabeth Groff; and ex-
ecutive secretary, Clarence W. F.
Stott,

Delegates: Donald Stark, How-
ard Pike, G. Rausch, Jean Dris-
coll, Helen M. Van Atta and Jean
M. Kroboth. Alternate Delegates:
| Noralene Curley, P, McHugh, R.
| Coyle, N. Smith, F. Doloway and
Gregory Saraceno.

The chapter went on record as
strongly opposed to the idea of
separate departmental chapters
in cities where several state de-
Partments can cooperate more
effectively in one chapter, Since
the Association is all-inclusive, it
is believed that local units should
be organized the same way as far
as practicable.

Details of the proposed outdoor
social meeting were discussed by
the membership and the social
committee—Jean Kroboth, chair-
man, in a special session, Partic-
ulars will be announced later.

DON'T GET LEFT
OUT IN THE HEAT!

Every season hundreds of
people fail to get into
SHOREHAVEN because
they do not believe our
ng of membership

ations, Done
happen to you! We repeat

SHOREHAVEN is « PRI-
VATE MEMBERSHIP
CLUB, limited to our actual

and 90

sure your membership,

WHY WAIT AND WILT?

ENROLL NOW!
SEASON MEMBERSHIP FEES

Addie Chidene
Membership. $64.17 $31.67

Total Com, . $77.00 $38.
0 TRA Coates « no ARLENE

Yew Pray
BEACH CLUB

Workmen's Compensation
Bar Group Elects

Jack J. Goldman has been unan-
imously elected president of the
New York Workmen's Compensa-
tion Bar Association. He is a prin-
cipal claims exmainer with the
State Insurance Fund.

Elected with him:

Abraham Markoff, Ist vice-pres-
ident; Alfred Samonga, 2nd vice-
president; Harry L. Kurach, sec-
retary; John Little, treasurer; Ir-
win Cassell, financial secretary;
Chandler Fraser, Harold Fiatto,
Joseph Di Fede, Board of Directors,
The officers will be installed on
Tuesray evening, June 5, at the
annual dinner given by the Bar

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CHARGE IT the BOND WA)

1. Regular 30-day Account
2. Convenient 90-day Account
3. New “6-Months” Account

topen Thursday evening

“open every evening

Fifth Ave. at 35th St.! 60 €. 42nd St.1 Broodwoy at 33rd St.1 12 Cortiands 5,

Broadway at 45th* Bronx; 324 £. Fordham Rd.* Brooklyn) 94 Flotbush Ave.*

400 Fulton St., B’klyn! Jomoica: 165.07 Jomaica Ave." Newark: 146-148 Market
Jervey City: 12 Journal Sq.* Paterson, 154 Market St.t

ALBANY: 74.76 Stole Strest ©
BUFFALO: Moin & Eagle

SCHENECTADY: Stote Street ot Erie Bhd,
SYRACUSE: 320-324 South Saline Street

ROCHESTER: Downtown: 133 E. Mein Street
At the Factory: 1400 N. Goodman

Metadata

Containers:
Reel 3
Resource Type:
Periodical
Rights:
Date Uploaded:
December 21, 2018

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