Civil Service Leader, 1967 November 28

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America’s Largest Weekly for Public Emptoyees

Vol, XXIX, No, 12 Tuesday, November 28, 1967 Price Ten Cents

Eligible Lists

See Page 22

NEGOTIATIONS UNDERWAY
FOR ALL STATE AIDES

Twelve Point CSEA F Program”

20 Percent, $1,000 Pay Boost;
40 Hour Week; Cash Overtime.
Are Demanded For Troopers

ALBANY Members of the Special State Police Committee of the Civil Service Em-

ployees Assn, presented a 12-point program, ranging from a 20 percent, $1,000 minimum sal- |

ary increase to the adoption of a 40-hour work week, to State Police Superintendent William
E. Kirwan at a meeting November 22 in Albany,

Dr. Theodore C, Wendl, — “=
president, and other CSEA offi- r , but sald he was in-,age salary for every year of

erest certain cases, esp erviee beyond 20, up to a maxi-
cials attended the day-long meet-|'*rested in certain cases, especi-| service beyond 20, ee
; Ny sergeants who are excluded | mum of 30 years of service. Kir-
ing along with the committee b ,
{from overtime —_ consideration. | wan indicated that if CSEA would
In addition to the pay hike | % : : pst 3
oe Whe ed about the te -|draft legistation giving sour
request, CSEA presented the fol-| When d about th ‘ per- | dra ne : 10% # ing 4 oun
ent cash payme! ° guments for it, he would give
lowing items for consideration: |¢M* ©ash Payment in lieu of arguments for it, he would giv
‘ overtime, the State Police head| his support
@ Cash payment at a time and
" vid he was awaiting a set of| @ Terminal leave pay upon re-
a half rate for work beyond an |
guidelines from the Budget | tiement ee days pay for

eight-how v of duty for all|® ae :
Yivector to determine eligibility.) year of com e ioe wit
nembers of the State ce who |”! : sie sive : she
: Promotions up to and in-| maximum of 20 years appplicab
are & 4 to the field. Super-| @ Prom: ons up and PPP

tiding the rank of captain

| He said this should be a neg
{ competitive exam! Hable item.
n felt that this was} @ Uni

mtendent Kirwan said he was

fted accumulation of

. }
Exclusive Bargainer \°

tiem (Continued on Page 16)

© Twent

nent with 1/60th

| working conditions for State workers began Monday between

History-Making

- Session Opened
Monday In Albany

(Special To The Leader)
ALBANY—Negotiating of salaries, fringe benefits and

Governor Rockefeller’s bargainers and officials of the Civil
Service Employees Assn, despite efforts by several smaller
vival groups to block recognition —
nd negotiations of the 156,000-| 194,000 of the State's 133,000
ember public Employee Associa-| employees

ion. | The G

ernor granted recogni=
fA on the basis of

tion to

history-making — session
Petey nett SiO |eyroll dues deduction evidence,
at 9:30 am, a he State

Capitol in Al tne first criterion called for fa

er | the o Law, which showed

The agreement on the date fo

ne openin

|that the employee group repré-

egOUAHONs | ented more than 80 percent of
six days alter Go

round of

nor|the State workers

officially recognized) Council 50, American Federa-
SEA under t Taylor La ‘on of State, County and Munt-
as the bargaining agent for) cipal Employ hich represents
percent of State
ides, in a followup action, peti-

ket

+88 than ten

Two St. Lawrence |“ Would Have Delayed Negotiations, onus hae Ae

Cty. School Boards | Metro, Long island

CANTON Two centr

ecognition and negotiations, con-

stay petition were aired at an

Recognize SEA a h . Last Ditch Fffort” oe a

school boards in St, Lawrenc

Emp! Conference

initial PERB hearing in Albany

e e
County are the first in the| A cooperative effort by the ct Noy, 20, Statements by attor-
5 to e the | Long Island and Metropolitan Va MMIOns :eys for Council 50 and two other
v sn ox w York Conferences of the titloners—a local of the Union

elusive bargaining agent for non-| Qivil Service Employees Assn (Continued on Page 16)
i ae Soewnotion | ore ees lenie y ourts
tral school and the Ma ding ta end |
niral school system Maumendaun end Randolph | 4
Ph crtahapypatbiulecie eh Sa Roles SOrtarence: DERM = State Supreme Court Justice John H. Pennock has | on?
» of CSEA, attended the Nov-lgovecth  mtesumant Armory, Gotu|  #emed a petition by rival unions to prevent the Civil | =—=_
epod-Nortolk Board testing when lor aaa part acer dente Service Employees Assn, from begloning its contract
Olfietal recognition was approved. |sanuyday. Dec. 2 from 9 a.m negotiations with the State on Monday, Nov, 27, The Repeat This!
did Miss Mary Lenney and|s-39 pm. ‘The mornin Leader learned at press time
Francis Hayes, chapter members, wit he divided into two sections, In citing CSEA’s recognition as bargaining agent
who Minounced the action Caine | siate representatives and local) for 124,000 State employees by Governor Rockefeller as Buckley Party
Biaiy? ap thc . wipe cveramen ey ntative A the basis for his decision, Justice Pennock said the
Wak aide Rae Oa, ce nnd eae aa Governor “has done exactly what the statute had aut- Seen Important
exeltl bargaining represen he sumakere conducting the) orlzed him to do, Le. ascertain the public employees’
Ho como, songurint | SA ot spleen cemsaieaeen os aut merece: | Oa
Frank Martello Si hf ’- Jovan, Richard Rubin, Mathes ative, on the basis of dues deduction authorization and 4 OF Kile ‘aoce ieee
ntat attended the me Kelly and Edward Levin of the other evidence.” oO ;
of the Massena Central School |New York State School of In- Denial of the stay, which had been requested by | ing aspects of the recess
rd, Martello sald the Mas-|istrial Labor Relations at Cor-l Council 50 (AFSCME), a Teamsters Local, and the |Clections js the continusg
sena board approved recognition | ney University . . growth of the Conservative
alter over 10 percent of the ni Building Service Emplogees Union, thwarted the latest]. syongth thoughout the
teaching personnel showed thet | | efforts by opposing unions to block CSEA's negotiation |<j.i¢ and its surprising showing
preference for 4 bargaining agen. |GOING PLACES—See Page 22 and left the way clear for the bargaining talks to begin. (Continued on Page 4)

Page Two CIVIL SERVICE LEADER ' Tuesday, November 28, 1967

Suffolk Chapter Challenges Islip Election Demand]

(From Leader Correspondent) ees Assn., last week appealed employees “in view of Gov, Rocke- |

Your Public

SMITHTOWN—The Suffolk ja ruling ordering a represen- | feller's recognition of OSHA.” ‘ ~@ 16
chapter, Civil Service Employ-/ tation election among Islip Town| In a brief filed with Suffolk Relations IO .
. aaa | Labor Commissioner Louis V.

{1 era, ti juffolk chapter

Rae tpinlpton dering 7 By LEO J. MARGOLIN
cated on Tempera to rescind his
decision calling for an election

| and division of the employees into |
White ard blue-collar bargainine Mr. Margolin is Professor of Business Administration at

unite. the Borough of Manhattan Community College and Adjunct
“Gov. Rockefeller recognized Professor of Public Administration in New York University’s
ining unit represented Graduate School of Public Administration

one ba
by CSEA for virtually all Stat sa e .
aichayse’ aa CSEA b Ne yi ‘olice B) utality

argued, "We feel the same applies | AS IF THERE aren't enough public relations problems,
to Islip, There Is absolutely no) a new and totally unpleasant one now faces civil servants—
reason for two bargaining units."/ nublie college and school officiz

A chapter spokesman added:|orficers and Just about
“If there is no favorable decision stistasiit
from Tempera, the matter will be | order and national stability college students shouting obser
e State Public Em- — py¥~e GROWING problem rep-| Provocations at a line of pol
ms Board.” resents a brand-new type of an-| men.
lections had been tentatively archy, camouflaged as “sti TO THE EVERLASTING credit
get for mid-Decem the police, they stood tmpas

police, Federal security
eryone in government with the

responsibility for n

referred to

ployees Relat

militancy.” We are not against
The chapter warned that Tem- “student militancy." We are | Slvely
people who push other hurled at

less trained or disciplined civil

he obscenities were
nem. We donbt that

pera’s proposal would fragment! agaly

ople around papain

emplo 8. Two amall units would
not have the bargaining power of WE WISH WE could report that fants would have been as re-
one unified force,” the chapter it’s only a temporary nuisance, On | tained

* { t THREE DAYS later, “The New
i spokesman said he ¢
Time Turns to Fashion . York Times” ported that “War

> vice corps that this thinly
Wittnauer Co/den Contessa watches for, € Po!

. * . y 1 Foes Cha: ice Brutality.” In
. disguised tumult is actually a min-
ihe woiiian eho warts pattect ; David Smith To Head inaking theme charges, *iSe’ war

fature but serious rebellion, spe
accuracy and elegant fashion. Solid 14K Newbur h CSEA Unit hended by a very tiny group of [e8” showed no rest
gold case with fashion bracelets. & highly aggressive militants, intent |#8 little regard for the truth
David Smith was on creating’ maximum chaos AS OUR renders know all too
elected president of the Te of AS WITH ANY “con men,” this, We!) the cry of “police brutality”
Newburgh unit, Civil Service Em-| minute cadre takes total adyant-| /§ 8” old trick, but the new an
ction. ‘ ployees Assn, at a meeting last| age of every right, license archy's medicine men have trans~

fc ed it into a handy polson.
i week permissiveness offered by democ- | forme
Each $79.95 THIS STRATE is psychol-

itrary, we must warn th

civil

Wittnauer combines the finest . NEWBURGH
craftsmanship with the most up-to-date
styling. The result: wrist luxury
and timekeeping p

Other officers named at the! *8¢¥. They are making “shills” out
arge numbers of unsuspecting | O#ieM! warfare against the police.

i pcial meeting wer ero: a it u
Leo Wiener Jewelers ont es itis td peal youngsters, who think it's all great | ¢ frank objective being that

fun and excitement while naively | When the agitators try again, the

Palmer, treasurer; Prank Wygant, police will be neutraiteed
“The Friendly Credit Store" | seoretary; and Les mark, | Oblivious of their true role as pat- ORTENS BLY. 11 :
delegate to Orange County chap- Ses for unscrupulous manipulat- OSTENSIBLY, this will permit
Poca edi the manipulators to arrange for
‘ ors.
502 EAST 138th STREET ver _ more innocent bystanders to be
tia sacee aaa vour Also elected was m Board of| THIS COLUMN was eyewitness

strategy of this new an- (Continued on Page §)

Directors, including Prank Wood- | te th
| ruff, chairman, and Harold Wood. | #'chy, and their
d Frank | the callow, the inexperienced and

Al Lozier, John Healey an | . .
ra rhe immature wo provoke disorder. JEWISH State Aides
- — cS | happened the night Secretary
303 | of State Dean Rusk addressed the Set Cha kah Dance
Filing To End\Dec. 1 | .cics ccnp ascontian im Nea nu
5 |For Suffolk Positions | york
The Suffolk County Civil Serv-| __ WE WITNESSED terrorism in-
ce Commission has openings for | Stead of orderly dissent; intimida-
prinelpal stenographers at $103 to | 40m, obscenities, provocatior
$325 weekly, Candidates must file) i Uberation rat syspidiei
by Dec. 1 for the Dec. 16 writ-| M’sument. It was all too remin-
lism beara Iscent of Berlin, 1933, just after
Requireménts ave a high school | the Nazis seized power by terror-
diploma and six years clerica)| 8m, Intimidation, obscenities, pro-
éyperience including stenography | Vocation,  vituperation—plus hat-
On Your two’ years of which must have| ted and scapegoatism.
teen supervisory WHAT OCCURRED night| and State Comptroller artbur Le,
Informatio; and applications }of Mr, Rusk's visit was no laugh-| vite will . i
be among the dat# guesis,

AUTO LIABILITY INSURANCE may be abtained from the Com-| ing matter. Lined up alomg the} Rogers chose the following com-

SAVE 209% MORE!  etate-wiie cubscrives to the mission at County Center, River- | curb diagonally opposite Radio) mittee members: For tickuts—Dor-

Safe Driver Pian. If your present company does not, we Head’ NY. City Music Hall were a group of |oihy Rapkine, Gladys’ Stricof?,
give you an additional 10%, if you qualify—(8 out of 10 es Aose Feurverman, Lillian Zelman;
drivers do qualify), vor seating—Sylvia Miller, Ma-

i You Can't Buy Better Insurance... tilda Goldstein, Mollie Goldstein,

. Tether Sheriff; Por guesis—Louis
WHY PAY MORE? | | We understand. Derkawer ‘Abe. Shavsian, and A

STATE-WIDE ie oe

Our men understand, eis retirement, M
INSURANCE COMPANY

mon, Ben Kramer
A Sack Compans
And they understand, through human experiance
rm Ec neighborhood Walter B. Cooke chapel.

8 of using | -—

FRANCHISED JEWELER FOR LONGINES & WITTNAUER WATCHES

The Jewish State Employees
Assn. of New York, will hold
ite annual Chanukah Dinner-
Dance on Dec. 13 at the Sher-
aton Atlantic Hotel, 34 St
Proadway, according to
Strow, 2 tion president

Nat Roger's, past president of
the Association, is general chair-
man, Rogers revealed that Ate
furney General Louis. hetidwitz,

@

Wasting Money!

sve 2D

S00!

J. Solo-

The sorrow a family feels.

finencias limite elif, Sam Tannenbaum, Abe
arberg, Ruth Topper, Lillian
Zelman,

Vi, SERVICE LEADER

One
“MAIL AT ONCE FOR EXACT RATES ON YOUR CAR When the need arises, talk to the man at your

Assisting on th arious com-
The need to lessen the burden, iajttees: Al Perlman, Ste
~0- hin Boul
i QUEENS 90-16 Suiphin Boulevard, Jamaica 35 and training, how to arrange @ funeral service
| GROOKLYN~CL #9100 with both tact and sympathy.
itate-Wide Insurance Company
90-16 Sutphin Boulevard, Jampica 35, N.Y. CL D

oe te ereiar va sac hasan Veen Walter B. Cooke. nsaere eee
eo FUNERALS FROM $260 Doane at, Sew Yorks S “teee?
I CALL 296-0700 to reach any of our 9 neighborhood funeral homes. tercdtiste postage pala, “Geist
a + Manhatten (E, 85th St.) + Manhatten (W. 72nd St.) » Bronx (Fordham)
—— | + Bronx (Concourse) + Bronx (Parkchester) » Brooklyn (Bay Ridge)
Brooklyn (Flatbush) + Queens (Jeckson Heights) + Queens (Jemaice) Sebsssintien. tries 0b00 Ber &
= 0 08. =
See ereninneniowreerremernenronersener § | Evita) Ceclee, 360
}

Tuesday, November 28, 1967

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Page Three

Snowfall Fails To Deter Officers
Attending Capital Conf. Seminar
On Employee-Employer Relations

ALBANY — Despite a snowfall t

cently at Siena College in Loudonville.

Guests and members were wel-
comed by Max Benko, conference
president. Guests attending in-
cluded Dr, Theodore C. Wenzl,
president of CSEA, and a former
president of the Conference, and
Mrs. Wenzl, Joseph Dolan of
CSEA Headquarters staff, and
Jack Conoby, CSEA field repre-
sentative. The guest lecturers
were Ronald Donovan, associate
professor at Cornell University's

7 State 00! dus~
New York State School of Indus-| 1 ine act to establish bargaining

he pointed out the|

trial and Labor Relations, and dir-
ector of the University’s Public
Service Training Program, and his
colleagues, Richard Rubin and
Robert Sass, extension specialists

The first period held in Roger
Bacon Auditorium, consisted of
the entire group with Professor
Donovan giving a summary of the
Taylor Law, its provisions, bene-
fits, implications, the definition of
bargaining units, procedures for
appeal and review of a bargaining
agent designation by a competing
organization. Professor Donovan
Informed the group that, although
the Governor had designated
CSEA as a bargaining agent for
State employees with the excep-
tion of the State Police and the
professional staff of the State
University, the designation of
CSEA as a bargaining agent does
not resolve the question of repre-
sentation as the action ts appeal-
able

The group learned that the Pub-
lic Employee Relations Board
(PERB) makes its entry into the

picture when an appeal is made
Administration of the law fs the
responsibility of PERB, and the

Board determines whether the or-|

ganization taking the appeal meets
all of the qualifications set forth
by the law and the rules of the
Board. Professor Donovan sum-
marized the steps involved when
an appeal is initiated, and, in

closing his initial part of the pro-|

gram, explained the standards set
units, Purther
rules that clarify the manner in
which wages and job classification
are determined and the methods
used to determine the interdepen-
dence of fobs
Discussion
Following the bios
mary, the group split

sum-
into three

State Aides Exceed
'United Appeal Goal

BUFFALO —
who work in

State employees
the Buffalo area
gave $18,500 to the 1967 Erte
County United Appeal. Most of
the workers are members of the
Civil Service Employees Assn.

The total was 103.8 per cent of
the quota assigned to the State
employee division.

The overall Erie County drive
raised $7,574,450, marking the
ninth year in a row the United
Appeal has been successful
Erle County

Nurses Condemn Delay
In Reallocation Action

ALBANY—Failure of the State Division of Classification
and Compensation to act on a reallocation request filed by

the Civil Service Employees Assn,

tical nurses well over a year ago is drawing sharp criticism

from the emcloyees involved.
Leader was told last week
The report from CSEA’s direc-

Bridge | Authority
Approves CSEA

ALBANY—The New York State
Bridge Authority chapter was des-
tgnated sole bargaining agent for
all employees of the Authority at
® meeting held in Poughkeepsie
last week

In a letter to Eugene Duroch,
president of the chapter, the
Authority also announced that It
would adopt the time and one half

The

pay for overtime, commencing jaat |

‘Thursday
The chapter is seekng other
gains, some of which hinge on the

| the
| Intensified recently both in tenor

tor of research, William L,
sald that the steady stream of in-
quiries coming into his office on
status of the appeal has
| and in urgency

In general, Blom said, the group
feels there is no reasonable ex-
planation as to why « determin-
ation has not been reached after
more than a years time. The
LPN's are particularly aroused
at the time lapse because of the
intensive, prolonged efforts which
they claim to have contributed to
the preparation of thelr appeals,
and the fact that they “complied
meticulously with every require-
ment of

procedure,”

Blom stated.

at left roads slippery and dangerous, the Civil Ser-
vice Employees Assn, Capital District Conference Annual Institute and Seminar, which this

year dealt with Public Employee-Employer Relations, had nearly capacity attendance re-

|
in

in behalf of licensed prac- |

Biom. |

the formal reallocation | president,

|head laundry supervisor to Grade
}.5 and chief
| grade 18.

discussion units with Donovan,
Rubin and Sass each heading one
of the groups. The subjects in-
cluded the negotiating process,
bargainable issues, content of
agreement, and impasse proced~
ures, with the conference members
participating in the general dis-
cussion and question and answer
perlods.

A buffet luncheon was served

with the conference as host, Pro-
gram arrangements were made by
| Margaret Fleming, 2nd vice-presi
dent and program chairman, and
luncheon was arranged by Mary
K. Hart, chairman of the social
committee

Civil Service Employees Assn.,

left,
of the CSEA at the Concord Hotel,

‘December 15 Deadline

HOSTESS — tea temieux, sociat chairman of the Statewide

converses with State Senator John
Flyne of Yonkers, chairman of the Senate Civil Service Committee,
and State Comptroller Arthur Levitt during the annual meeting

Kiameshia Lake,

CSEA Plans PERB Appeal

- Laundry Aides’ Unless Syracuse & Onondaga

Appeal Is Filed
With C.S. Comm.

ALBANY—CSEA has appeal-
ed the denial of reallocation
in the launderer series made
by the State Division of Classi-
fication and Compensation and
asked for an immediate hearing
on the issue.
| J. Earl Kelly, director of Clas-
sification and Compensation,
|rurned down a request last Sept
0 to reallocate the following po-

for State workers, Onondaga
efforts to obtain a similar di
Onondaga County.

The CSEA chapter's
ship includes both city ana coun’
employees, Onondaga chapter's
nearly 3,000 members make it the
largest employee organization of
local municipal workers.

John J. Ray, Syracuse area field

tions: launderer to Grade 7;|representative, also revealed that
senior launderer to Grade 9;| more than 165 non-teaching em~-
laundry supervisor to Grade 12; | ployees of the Syracuse School

District haye signed CSEA mem-

laundry supervisor | bership cards.

“And,” he said, “some 100 non-

‘The appeal and hearing request teaching employees of the North

was filed with the State Civil Syracuse Central Schoo! District,
Service Commission too, have signed membership
a cards, North Syracuse is the

largest central school district
the State.”

Columbia County Chapter,
Exclusive Representative,
Gains Salary Increases

(Special To The Leader)
ALBANY—The Columbia County chapter of the Civil Ser-
vice Employees Assn., exclusive bargaining agent for more
than 350 county employees, has won a 10 percent across-the-

it
GOING PLACES? See Page 22. :

board Increase for county workers, overtime pay for holidays |

Members of the CSEA team ne-

and personal leave.
ara

ployees

must work on
gotiating for the new contract| Thanksgiving, Christmas or New
were Lester Garrison, chapter Year's Day will receive time-and-

and Alan Baringer. a-half pay, Employees wil! also

| Donald Ogden, and Clayton Mink, | be getting personal leave for the

{
member-

| ‘This really was pointed up by chapter members, assisted by Ed-

comments from a spokesman of ward J, Gusty, CSEA field repre-

Budget Director's rulings. Con-|

tract talks are expected to start

sy ate ae S'O"") the nurse's group, Mary Bian-
chinl, who said, "We have gone

through this with the proper of-
Katzen Will Counsel ficials and through the proper
Pure Waters Authority

The appointment of Bernard) professionaliam, What else is there

Katzen of New York City, as
eounsel to the New York State
Yure Waters Authority, has been
nounced by Governor Rocke-
Teller,

to do?”

The long awaited decision, if

favorable, would move the State's | of the increment schedule for this |

‘Heensed practical nurses from thelr
| present grade 7 to grade 11,

sentative

Representing the county at the
bargaining table were Edwin Post,
chairman of the County Board of

channels with tact, courtesy, and Supervisors salary commitice.

members of his committee, and

first time. The contract grants two
days for each employee under the
rules and regulations of the State
Civil Service Law

Garrison, commenting on the
new contract, said, "The negotia-
| tons conducted by the employee
representatives and officials of the

Abram Miner, county attorney
The contract calls for freezing

County Board were the first of
thelr kind in the county under
the Taylor Law and we tee! that
| both sides conducted themse!
in the true spirit of the .aw,”

| year but resuming it next y
In addition to the pay hike,

es
em~-

Counties Act On Recognition

SYRACUSE—Spurred by the State's recognition of the
Civil Service Employees Assn. as the official bargaining agent

chapter CSEA Is renewing its
esignation from Syracuse and

Ray sald CSEA officials met Inst
week with County Executive John
H, Mulroy to discuss the chap-
ter's new demand for recognition
as the bargaining agent for the
county's 2,000-plus, employees.

He said the CSEA executives
told the county government head
that “time is growing extremely
short, and if the county does not
act by the Dec. 15 deadline, the
chapter Intends to appeal to the
State Public Employees Relations
Board” for action on designation
of m bargaining agent for county
workers.

They were referring to the new
rules of the State PERB, which
includes a section stating that a
public employer must recognize an
employee organization as bargain-
ing agent within 45 days after the
rules were published, Publication
{ the rules came Nov. 2.
| Meeting with the county gov-
ernment head were Joseph Loch-
ner, CSEA executive director;
Jerry Rogers, supervisor of CSEA
field representatives; Arthur Kag~
son, first vice-president of CSEA's
Central Conference (and former
Onondaga chapter president), and
Mrs. Hilda Young, Onondaga
| president

With Mulroy were Louls Har-
roids, county personnel commis-
sioner, and Seymour Bernstein,
deputy personne! commissioner.

Ray sald a meeting with Syra-
cuse Mayor William F, Walsh is
planned this week to discuss recog-
nition as the bargaining agent for

city workers, The chapter has
more than 700 members in this
group.

The CSEA representative sald @
tentative meeting has been sched
uled this week with Syracuse
Schools Superintendent Pranklya
8. Barry and Dayid Jacquith,
president of the Syracuse Board
of Education, t discuss bargain=
ing agent status for the none
| teaching employees,
Page Four

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Tuesday, November 28, 1967

Performance Record

In the meantime, here are some
of the rather astonishing per-
ormances of the Conservative
urty around the State. The Con.
servatives got 12 percent of the
vote in Queens in last year's
rubernatorial race. They got 16
percent this year in a civil court
Judge contest. In Suffolk County
John Conroy, the Conservative.

{Continued from Page 1) |

in New York City and Long Is-
end. This continuing increase ‘n
sirength now confirms the fact
that the Conservative Party is a
steady and important political
party in New York State

As the result of its vote gatn-
ering inst year, the party re-
Placed the Libers) Party on Row
Cn te atne machines, oie |candidate, wot 19 percent of the
paychologeial as well as a poltt:-|"t@! Vote and appeared directly
cb} victory. It should be noted responsible for the defeat of the

GOP candidate.

Towever, that a good many pros

also consider that as many as| 1 Westchester County an en-
190,000 votes cast on horizontal |folled Conservative, Edmund Sar
ine machines were mistakenly |Yér, was elected to the County

Board of Supervisors from Mount

put on Row C instead of Ro’

B

When Row C carried any o' Vernon and another party mem-
perty’s endorsement, The con-|b!, Frank Schaffer, was e
fention is that when a voter|> member of the

saw a Democrat or GOP candidate |Counell in Long Island

on the row he assumed the whole | Oddly enough, in upstate areas
Tow was for the y for which |the Conservatives endorsed more
he normally vo be | Democrats an Republicans
Proved, of course, but » good|when they did not put ui
Many pros have told this column own candidate and the!

tney feel it to be so ance in Syracuse, Roch

AMERICAN SCHOOL, D
130 W. 42nd St., New Yor

Name —_
Address

City State
Ele Ge GE OOUR 70th ear

DON'T REPEAT THIS

buffalo was up over last year's.
| What this means is that under
certain circumstances the Con-
th rvatives definitely a party
to figure as having a balance-of-
power role, similar to that played
| by the Liberals in New York City
At least, they certainly pose a
political headache the two
ruajor parties, as evidenced by
ithe Nassau and Suffolk county
executives races

1968 Possibilities

In next year's important elec-
tions—ranging from the Presl-
| eney to local contests—Conser
|tive Party votes may prove highly
sirnificant. The party has made
vo bones about the fact that it
does not want a Rockefeller or
Romney to head the GOP ticket
and are talking about putting
* man of their own if either
the two get the nomination
other they will try to
5 many candidates of their own
possible for the State Legis-
lyture and the Congress or will
endorse various Democratic
GOP candidates as they did
We success,

are

to

up
of
In

areas, run

with some
all adds

It up to the fact
Free Booklet and Trial Lesson the Conservative’s sre in the
il For People Who Want fo Finish State political picture for the for
ceable future, replacing the Lib-
| HIGH SCHOOL versls as the balance of powe
\ Gi nh some areas and, at the lea
AT HOME IN SPARE TIME being a force for the two majo!
You must be 17 of over and have left school, ne Oe en
wow ie Write for FREE 55-page High Schoo! booklet There 1s little doubt #lso that |
Cede today. ay evaluating the US, sena-

torial race
take into
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In such
candidate

in
60)

1968 will have
sideration the
ervative Part
a rac
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draw

doubtless
ator

Jack

nea

Te. ie would certainly make the |\Washington,

Se

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| Who says Vampires are

no laughing
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to

a v

|Memocratic nomination more. ap-
pealing than if there were no
| Conservative candidate,

It Is conceivable that a Con
servative could draw as much as
£00,000 votes from Javits, a factor
that would give even that form-
joable Republican vote-getter
qualms, particularly if a Demo-
cratic-Liberal coalition can come
ap with o candidate of the cali-
bre of U.N. Ambassador Arthur
Goldberg, who it ix reported will
oe stepping out of his U.N. post
oa few months to practice law
in New York City.

Many political pundits thought
hat the impressive showing
the witty, urbane William Buce-
Jey In the 1965 mayoralty cam-
paign was not due to Conserva-
ive party strength, but to the
candidate's own provocative per-
sonality. This has not proved to
be the case. And he is more re-
spected today with his additional
exposure on television and news.
Paper column—even by those who

are not his political supporters
With a lesser known candidate for
Governor, and again by the
trong Conservative showing lo-

cally in 1967
it has strong
‘The Party

the Party has shown
grassroots support
8 roots are now so deep

that it could well be the
Feciding factor in which column
tke State's 43 plectoral votes
cast in 1968.

Document Analysts

The Defense Intelligence Ag
of the United States Department
| of Defe Washington, D.C, ha
mmediate openings tor grade 7
aud grade 9 document +6
nd abstractors. The salary for
hese Jobs is $6.451 for grade 7 and
$/,696 for grade 9, These f
jons demand college degrees.

analys'

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the

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by!

| Where to Apply

| For Public Jobs

| The following directions tell
| where to appty for public Jove
| and how to reach destinations tm
|New York City on the transit

CITY

NEW #ORK O1TY—The Appll-
| cations Section of the New York
City Department ‘of Personnel ts
located at 49 Thomas St, New
York, N.Y. 10013, It is three
blocks north of City Hall, one
block west of Broadway

Applications: Piling Period —
Applications {ssued and received
Monday through Friday from 9
am. to 5 p.m, except Thursdoy

from 8 a.m, to 6 p.m,, and Satur-
day from 9 a.m. to 12 noon,
Application blanks are obtain-

able free either by the applicant
in person or by his representative
at the Application Section of the
Department of Personnel at 49
Thomas Street, New York, NY.
10013, Telephone 566-8720.

Maned requests for application
blanks must include a stamped,
self-addressed business-size en-
velope and must be received by
the Personne! Department at least
five days before the closing date
for the filing of applications,

Completed application forms
which are filed by mail must be
sent to the Personnel Department
and must be postmarked no later
hen the last dey of filing or as
stated ctherwise In the exame
| nation announcement.
| ‘The Applications Section of
|the Personnel Department is near
the Chambers Street stop of the
main subway lines that go through
the area. These are the IRT 7th
Avenue Line and the IND 8th
Avenue Line. The IRT Lexington
Avenue Line stop to use ts the
Brooklyn Bridge stop and the BMT
QT and RR local’s stop ts City Hall
Both lines nave exits to Duane
reet, a short walk from the Per-
inel Department

STATE

STATE—Room 1100 at
Broadway, New York, N.Y.
corner of Chambe telephone

Governor Alfred
E Smith State Office Building and

488-6606.

rhe § mpus, Albany; ‘e
750, Genesee Building 1 West
Genesee St,; State Office Building,
Syracuse; and 500 Midtown Tower,
Rochester, (Wednesday only)
Candidates may obtain applica.
tions for State jobs from jocal
offices of the New York State

Employment Service.

FEDERAL

FEDERAL — Second UB. Civil
Region Office, News Bulld-
East 42nd Street (av and
New York, N.Y. 10017, just
west of the United Nations build.
jing. Take the IRT Lexington Ave
Line to Grand Centra] and walk
| two blocks east, or take the shut-
Ue from Times Square to Grand
Central or the IRT Queens-Pinsh-
ing train Mom any point on
; ine to the Grand Central stor

| Hours are 8:30 am. to 6 pm,
Monday through Friday. Also open

Saturdays 9 to 1 pam. Teles
| hone

Application» are also obtains
able at main post office except

the New York, NY., Post Office.
Boards of examiners at the pare
cular installations offering the
tests also may be applied to for
further information and applica-
tion forms. No return envelopes
are required with mailed requests
for application forma.
r

Tuesday, November 28, 1967

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Page Five

Principal Clerks

Vacancies for principal
Clerks have been announced
by the Suffolk County Civil
Service Commission, Candl-
dates must file by Dec. 1 for the
Dec. 16 written exam for the posi-
tlons which pay $103 to $125
| weekly

QUESTIONS AND
ANSWERS...

+. + about health
insurance

Interested persons must have
been a County resident for six
months and must be a high school
graduate with six years clerical
experience—two of them in a

by
William G.
O'Brien

Sought In Suffolk

ervisory capacity.

Further information and ap-
| plications may be obtained from
| the Commission at County Center,
| Riverhead, N.Y.

Mrs. Poston Attends

ALBANY—Mrs  Ersa Poston.
president of the State Civil Serv-
tee Commission, attended the an-
|tual conference of the National
Urban League recently in Port~
wnd, Oregon.

Blue Cross-
Blue Shield

Manager, “SUPERB!
The ‘

Statewide
Pian

‘Thw cotumn will appear period-
feally, As @ public service Mr

O'Brien will answer questions re-
lative to the Statewide Plan. Please
submit

your questions to Mr.
Blue Cross-Blue Shieid |

SIDNEY POITIER

in JAMES CLAVELL'S Production of
“TO SIR, WITH LOVE” |

WARM AND HUMOROUS!”

Hew York Daily News

all over New York!

‘The Statewide Plan, |
i

NOW At Theatres
Western Ave., Albany, N.Y

Please do not submit questions per- LEGAL NOTICE

taining to specific claims. Only | —— = ! 1
: (Seneral interest can |SUPRENR COURT OF TRE STATS oF €
uestions ‘of general interest Can) iw YORK. COUNTY OF KINGS: ZACK. | ome Into
. SON SAVINGS AND. LOAN |

amas, in which I will publish |\)
basic information on the sub- |’
ject of how the Statewide Plan
supplements the Federal Medi- |
care Program, May I suggest |

that you clip this and future
columns on the subject for)!"
future reference,

UNITED STATES
MOMLE OF THE Stare

ABOVE N
ROSS

VIVIAN

Out-Patient Diagnostic
Services

If you receive services for |¥
out-patient diagnostic care
the hospital should submit a
claim to Medicare for these
expenses. Medicare will pay|'
the hospital 80% of these|)
charges in excess of $20.00 for | 21";
each diagnostic study period
in the same hospital of
more than 20 days. If you have
met the $50.00 deductible un-
der Part B, Medicare wil! pay
$16,00 of the $20.00 deducti-|
ble. Hospital services incurred |" 7
on the basis of out- patients
surgenry or as a result of ac-
cident should be submitted to
the Statewide Plan. The un-|"
paid portion of these expenses
may be considered under the!
Statewide Plan as follows

|
NO } Fell
DATE

RLUAW

Any expenses for out-
patient diagnostic services not
reimbursed by Medicare may
be included as part of a maj-|{
or medical claim under the
Statewide Plan. The Explan-
ation of Benefits form received
from Medicare should be at-
tached to a completed major}
medical claim form and work-
sheet, together with bills for
any other covered expenses.

Prior Retir coverage does
not provide efits for out
patient diagnostic se 5 al

a hospital except as a result

charge is not covered under

of accident or out-patient any portion of the Statewide
SUTeery | Plan

While Medicare pays for all If you incur expenses for
covered services received dur-| physicians’ services, preserib-
ing the first days ina par-|ed drugs and medicines or

ticipating extended care f
lity the patient must pay $5.00
daily toward the cost of these
charges for each of the next
60 days, This

private duty nursing services,
benefits may be available un-
der Medicare, Part “B" or the
Statewide Plan

$5.00 dally | —

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If you want to know what's happening
to you
to your chances of promotion
to your job
to your next raise
and similar matters!

FOLLOW THE LEADER REGULARLY!

Here {s the newspaper that tells you about what Is happen-
ing in civil service, what ts happening to the Job you have and
the job you want,

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ADDRESS

Tuesday, November

LETTERS
TO THE EDITOR
State Employees

Editor, The Leader:

1 was hospitalized recently and
jsome of the nursing staff, be
| aides, LPN's and RN's were State

LEADER PUBLICATIONS, INC. Jemployees working part time to
Duone Street, New York, N.¥.-10007 212-B£ekmen 3-6010 supplement their State salaries
Jerry Finkelstein, Publisher | I have always had pride in the
fact that I was a State employee
but i did my heart good to see
how these people performed.

My observations showed they
were willing workers and made
excellent decisions on their own.

T felt proud that T was associat-
ed with them and could not help
| thinking how lucky the State was

to have such willing dedicated and
| competent employees

There was one sad note. A regu-
lar employee recently left the
State's employ, where she was an
LPN, and was the most competent
of them all. To see her do her job
was something to behold, Too bad.
® great loss to the State!

America’s Largest Weekly for Pablic Emplogees
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations

Publishea every Tuesday by

Kyer, Editor Joe Deasy, Je. City Editor
Virgil Swing, Assorinte Editor Carol F. Smith,
N Wo Mager, Hasiness Manager
Advertising Representatives:
ALHANY — Joseph T, Mellew — 303 So. Munuing Blvd, IV 2-5474
SSTON, N.Y — Charlee Andrews — 249 Wall Stroet, FEdceul 8-8350

We per copy, Subscription Price $3.00 to members of the Civil
Service Emplovees Assoclation, $5.00 to non-members.

Assistant Editor

~ TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1967

Superunion For
State Employees

HE independence of the state’s new Public Employment
Relations Board is about to get its first and most crucial
Governor Rockefeller, exercising an initiative vested in| ss
by the Taylor Law, has recognized the Civil Service Em-| Include Retirees
yees Asociation as negotiating agent for 124,000 state Editor. The Leader:

iployees. | 1 urge all retired New York
A rival union, District Council 50 of the American Fed- ; State employees and political sub
tion of State, County and Municipal Employees, has ask- “visions to write to New York
the Rockefeller-appointed board to void the designation cae Riess rat aria
the ground that it denies the state workers a free choice | 1,04 state emplovece in the
representative. The board's first obligation ts to decide newly enacted 1/60th Pension
hhether to issue a stay of negotiations between the state | pyan

ia the Civil Service Employees Association pending a ruling! ‘They certainly are entitled to
the merits of the complaint all benefits, especially ife insur:
After that the board will have to determine the appro- ance coverage.

lateness of the negotiating unit established by the Governor | FRANCIS X, CURRY, Sr.
ne embracing virtually all state employees except the| Tong Beach, N.Y.
ite police and the faculties of the State University. It must

decide whether enough state employees have indicated
‘ir desire to be represented by the association or whether
election is necessary to resolve the question.

Having such matters determined by the board is obvious-
preferable to resolving them through strikes or slowdowns,
the state's standpoint, there are clear advantages to
Wing a single union set a basic pattern for civil service Ly
@e and working conditions through a single set of negoti- | ‘*4"* of service, and contribut-
ns with state authorities, Pege HORE Re SOO MR FORTS. SE. BGs >
Such an arrangement would obviate the kind of whip- Fowabarper 2 ps Bt heel
wing New York City must always defend itself against in| Under the present set-up the
separate negotiations with strong unions representing |»yension would be more than three.
ers, transit workers, sanitation employees, policemen, |scurths without any contribut
men, welfare workers and a score of other groups. My suggestion ts to return
Whatever the ultimate decision by the Public Employ- | "nnulty amount to those who
Relations Board, its pivotal function in the Albany dis- | Contributed, without losing the an-
ite demonstrates that civil service workers in this state |’ “ity value. The money was paid
aly have a vehicle for peaceful and democratic resolution |‘? Sars now greatly discounted

ord Bo |

The State Insurance Fund

Retirement System

‘editor, The Leader:

1 have been o member of the
Tetirement System since it start-
ed. On inquiry as to the amount
of retirement pension, it was
a shock to find out that with 47

controversies over union representation—a civilized pro- ee oe contributors reap

jure workers {n private industry have enjoyed for three| ~ ae
‘ lic shares with its civil servi yees mae

des, The public shar 8 civil service employees Rochester. 3X

protection afforded by this rational machinery.

Hevinted keane the New Pe

fa
IAL SECURITY

Questions and Answers

There is no way to pay the social
security contributions for work not
actually done,

T became disabled last month.
Since then, I have been tn two
hospitals and have had three doc-
tors. Should T go to them and
get medical reports before 1 fle
for disability?

No, We will be glad to assist
you in getting the necessary med-
jeal reports to support your claim,
once you have submitted your ap-
plicath

When J filed for disability, 1
was told there was a 6-month
waiting period. My checks have
started now, but I have never re-
celved my back pay for those 6

Tam receiving disability bene-
from social security, If 1 try
work supplement my in-
@ Would social security
checks?

your work will affect your benefits,
Remember, not everyone is en-
titled te a nine month trial work
period, Your cheeks can be stop-
pde after as little as two months
Generally speaking, 4 person of work, |
iving disability may be entitled My claim for disability was
‘& nine month trial work period | turned down because I need one
his checks will be stopped. more year of work under social

je strongly advise that you notl- | security, May I pay in the differ- | months. Why not?
your social security office of ence? | No payment is made for the
work you engage in, In this’ No, A person must have at least first @ months of a disability. The
+ Your representative will five years of work di x the last 7th month of a disability is the
able to explain to you how | 10 years before becoming disabled, beginning of disability payments,

stop

LOUIS E. STERN|

a

At MID

Civil Service
Law & You

By WILLIAM GOFFEN

te

em
(Mr, Goffe, a member of the New York Bar, teaches law at the
College of the City of New York, is the author of many books and
articles and co-authored “New York Criminal Law.)

. ideals
Pick Seniority

THE PRIVILEGE of selecting vacation time, work shifts,
and work locations may have great value to the Civil Service
employee, This privilege, known as “pick seniority” to New
York City Transit Authority employees, is based upon length
of service. Twenty-nine motormen of the Independent Sys-
tem are concerned enough about their pick seniority to
have instituted an Article 78 proceeding against the Transit
Authority to enjoin a merger of their seniority list with
the list for BMT employees (Newtown v, New York City
| Transit Authority and the New York City Civil Service Com-
| mission, New York Law Journal, November 14, 1967,

THE LIST merger prejudices the petitioners’ pick sen-
jority because BMT motormen had longer seniority than
|they. However, the Transit Authority maintains that the
merger ts necessary because of the opening of the new
| Chrystie Street Loop which will result in a combined opera-
tion of the previously separate Independent and BMT Systems,

THE PETITIONERS are war veterans who were in mili-
| tary service in 1944 while a promotion examination was
‘held from conductor to motorman, The examination was
' given given to Independent and BMT conductors and re-
sulted in the creation of separate eligible lists. The BMT
list was established earlier and moved faster than the
Independent premotion Pst

| THE MILITARY Law has many provisions for the pro-
tection of the rights of Civil Service employees who have
given military service. In accordance with this law, the peti-
tioners were given a “comparable” promotion examination
upon their return from service. They were placed on a
|Special eligible list from which certifications were made
| before certifications from the original eligible list, They
| were given service credit for time absent in military serv-
| ice. In the event of abolition of positions, the petitioners
would be deemed to have been appointed on the earliest
date they would have been reached on the original list if
they had net been in service and had taken and passed
the original examination,

NONE OF THE rights of returning veterans relates to
pick seniority. Pick seniority Is determined, pursuant to the
terms of an agreement with the T.W.U,, solely by the ac-
tual date of appointment from the promotion list, Therefore,
velerans were prejudiced in this seniority right by their
| military’ service which delayed their promotion, With the
merger of the Independent and BMT pick seniority lists, the
| Independent employees were further prejudiced because of
| the earlier appointment of BMT conductors,

THE MILITARY Law would have been violated if the
| earlier appointees from the BMT list had been given sen-
| tority credit greater than the petitioners on future promo-
tion examinations. There would also have been violation of
the Military Law if the former had been given seniority in
connection with the abolitjon of positions. However, the
granting of preference with respect to pick seniority to
| BMT employes over Independent employees does not violate
| any law,

AS PICK seniority is solely the creature of a collective
j bargaining agreement, all that ts necessary is to comply
| With its terms, If the determination of the Transit Authority
to merge the pick seniority lists causes substantial pre-
|judice to the Independent motormen, perhaps they have re-
course under the provisions of the union contract govern-
ing grievances and arbitration.

ALTHOUGH THE petitioners are veterans, it cannot be
said that the flixng of the date of actual appointment as a
measure of pick seniority under the terms of the union agree-
ment is arbitrary and capricious. In the circumstances, Jus-
tice Nathan R, Sobel, after lucidly presenting the issues and
{applicable law, held that the petitioners may not enjoin the

merger of the pick seniority lists or obtain a judicial decree
'
|

commanding the Transit Authority and the Civil Service Com-
mission to give them a preferred position on the merged list
Tuesday, November 28, 1967

| CIVIL SERVICE LEADER Page Seven

Morgue Clerk Jobs
In Suffolk; $70 Plus

Persons may file until Dec 1
for the Dec. 16 written exam for
appointment as morgue clerk in|
the Suffolk County Medical Bx-
aminer’s office. The position pays
$70 to $85 weekly,

Candidates for appointment)
must be high school graduates and)
&@ resident of the County for six)
months

Por further information, con-
tact the County Civil Service Com-|
mission at County Center, River-
head, N.Y.

Employees.

Save money on your
next visit to New York

Check into the Sheraton.
Atlantic Hotell The special
raton-Atlantic rate for all
wernment employees and
eir families will save you
real money.

49.00 single

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Great Location—Arcade con:
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jen. Same block as Em-
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$o on your next trip to New
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Memorial Hospital and the De-
partments of Probation, Finance, |

Erie County Promotion Legal Stenos Needed
and Social Services. Candidates Im Suffolk; $89 & Up (25. six months,

Exams Close Dec. | must have been employees of) Legal stenographers are being) por applications and further (te

A promotion exam for the posl-| the department concerned for at).cught by the Suffolk County formation, contact the Commis<
tion of principal clerk in various | least six months. Civil Service Commission at $89 | von at County Center, Riverhead,
Erte County departments has been | Application forms may be ob- | 1° $108 weekly. Filing closes Dec. | wy, "

transcribing legal dictation, They
snust have been County residents

announced. Candidates for the | tained from the State Department | ! for the Dec, 16 exam for ad ay

Jan. 13, 1968 written exam must “Al Servi hi | Patntment |

file by Dec, 1, The positions pay |! Civil Service or the personnel! “Candidates must be high school BUY

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thay feel it doesn’t offer enough in tha way of
fancy gadgetry

Look again, How fancy can you gat?

ad cars.

re-

SUQGESTRO RETAM. PRICK POE. (RAST COAST), LOCAL TAXES AND OTHER DEALER DELIVERY CHARGES IF ANY ADDITIONAL, WHITEWALLS OPTIONAG
AY EXTRA Cost

Amityville ho Huntington Feo Renwelaee Cooley Motors
Avburn Marti Inwood Volkswoy Riverhead Avichovs Corpocatia:
Hatovia Bob Hawkes | Whaca Ripley Mo Rothastor Beato V
Boy Shore Traralstand Adtomobiles Corp. » Jamaica Manes Volkewagan, Inc. Rochester FAM) I
Boyride Boy Volkswagen Cory $2 Matots, | Rocheiter Mi, Read Volkewagen, lo
Binghamton Roger Kronga, Ince mol Cor Corp. Rome Seth Huntley and Some, ln
Bronx Ayoxe Corporatio: Kingston Ar olkewagen, | Roilyn Dor Motor, ld
Bronx Balk-Dafrin Motor Corny La Grangeville Ahmed Motors, bed Sayville Bianco Motars, tn
Brooklyn Aldas V \ Latham Academy Motors, Schenectady Colorin Mo
Brooklyn Economy V away Voluewagen, i Smithtown George and Dalton Volkawagar, In
Brooklyn Kingsboro h e tore Corp, tid Southampton Brill Motors, Ud)
Buffalo din Kelly's lac Middletown Greenipan Motors Spring Valley C. A, Holgh, |
Einelord Howard Mount Kinco Novis County ¥ Shaten luand Staten tsaed Small Cars, tid,
Potton fos. New Hyde Pork Ayiland 91, Ince Syracue Sprague M
Geneva 0: New Rochelle County Auto Eout Syracuse Fre

imparts, tne, New York City Volkniagee Bris Tonawanda Ora 0

Motors, | New York City Yo! Filth Avenve, fi Utica Martin Volkawagen,

1, Newburgh F&C Motors, Valley Stream Vols

Niagara Fulls Pat Dillon, Inc. Watertown tiarblin M
® bi Olean Olean lnparts, ine. Wevt Nyack for
f Oneonta John Eckert, Ine Woodbury Courter Vokawagen, tos
Horseheads H. &. Amocher & Sone, Ince Patrburgh Ce! Motors Woodside Queensboro Volkowagan, ng,
Hvdvow Joli Feare Motary lnc. Qveens Viduge Wels Volusn-agen Carp, Yorkers Ouewaadie Matar Carp.
Page Eight CIVIL SERVICE LEADER Tuesday, November 28, 1967

feans Influential in foreign policy) ist of the 20th century was Adolf

P.R. Column decisions to their homes, their of- | Hitler.
(Continued from Page 2) fices or any place where they ap-| THE PUBLIC relations image
pushed around by their “shills,"| pear. This is harassment and in-| of government is threatened by
| who will also scare the wits out timidation at its most vicious the buccaneer behavior of the new

of uninvolved motorists and pedes-| We ARE TOLD that what hap-| anarchists, If not brought to a
trians—as they did during the) pened to Mr, Rusk was a demon-|sharp halt by overwhelming con-
| antl-Rusk disorders. |stration of non-conformism|demnation through mobilization
| THE INTIMIDATION brigade| against “The Establishment.” If|of the strongest public opinion,
| will surely try again. One of its| this is so, it would have been more| the nation’s very existence could
leaders candidly admitted to «| useful to the education of the stu- | be in dire jeopardy.

|“New York Times” reporter that | dents in that unruly mob had they} IN THIS critical time, public
the so-called anti-war demonstra-| stayed at home and studied just | relations can be an overwhelming
| tlon was just a test of a new tac-| one piece of world history: | powerful force against an insidious
tle that called for pursuing Amer-| THE GREATEST non-conform- | evil.

| new ;

Bell & Howell 50%

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cameras and

projectors
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{
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No winding, no threading, no
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You'll thrill to the bigger,
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577 Madison Ave.

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Across From 1,B.M.—New York, New York
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American Express ° Uni-Card

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serra

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Tuesday, November 28, 1967 CrviL _SERVICE LEADER

Auld =

COLONY INTERNATIONAL PRE-HOLIDAY SALE
ON GENERAL ELECTRIC PRODUCTS

OPENS CANS IN SECONDS.
NO MUSS—NO FUSS!

“Custom Electric
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Easy th ine ~ shoe Roasts; Hams, Turkeys, eastiy — all
you do is guide it,

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Our Price

$395

= ‘
ee! | *
== © Up front control pierces cans with ease
= © Easily operates on counter top without tipping over
© Features magnetic lid hold and handy cord storage area
, =
| —t
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© Blades. detachable for easy claaning
© 8 foot attached cordset

© Compact enough to store easly in in the tightest of kitchens. Comes tn white

| LP YOUR ENTIRE FAMILY ;
) 10 IMPROVED TOOTHBRUSHING HABITS!

8

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ther Made

& wer Our Price
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LA 4-3046 BR 9-7395 - 6

COFFEE MAKER $995

Page Ten

CIVIE SERVICE LEADER *

Tueeday, November 28, 1967

=

the smart gift this

"
Christmas

is Lunt Sterling

gift than Sterling Silver.
Nothing will give her more
Jasting pleasure or greater
pride, And you simply
couldn't be more thoughtful!
Lunt is a top quality line,
and there are many patterns
from which to choose,

SPECIAL -

For a woman there is no finer

"JOMPOLE'S PRE-HOLIDAY SALE ON
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From $421.25
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WA
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Divided Payments if Desired

BE FE IEE SE ED

‘he

the big gift...
the important gift for her
this Christmas is

STERLING SILVER

Now — more than ever before — is the time to
make this imporiant purchase, This ix truly an
investment, In good living. And in the value of
this precious metal itvelf.

}

You still hove

the opportunity to
SAVE $65, $90, $105 on
Sets of 44, 64 & 70 pcs.

Y our wife, or sweetheart, or a daughter will treasure
this gift a whole lifetime, Its meaning and solid
worth will grow through the years, Many beautiful
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Sets from $421.25
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For a limited time = Save $65

Every bride longs tor Sterling.
Now is the tirne to purchase. You may save
$90 on a 64-Pe. "'Service-for-12,"

4
Tueaday, November 28, 1967

CrVviL

SERVICE LEADER Page Eleven

Typists And Stenos

The State Employment Service is receiving applications
or typists and stenographers with City agencies. The post-|
tions pay $4,050 to $4,300 8 : |

Stenograpners must be able to| thelr spelling and to practice nete|
take shorthand at 80 words 9 |sborthana and typing skills, Ap-
minute. Typist must pass # typ-|Plicants for typist jobs should
ng test at 40 words per minute on Practice on @ non-portable type-
& non-portable typewriter, In ad-|Writer to Insure maintaining the
ition to the practical exam: necessary speed on the practical
tions, appileants must take a writ | €xamination. t
ten examination covering yocabu-| Appointments for taking the
ary and spelling. There are nojabove-mentioned tests may be
ormal requirements for the writ-|made at anytime by phoning PL
ten teat. 9-1020 in Manhattan, JA 2-2428

‘Those interested tn filing ap-jin Brooklyn, or GI 17-2031 on
plications are advised to brush up|Siaten Island

examinations, -

worker
maintenance trainee and main-
tenance man trainee and eligibles

City Is Scheduling Walk-In Exams
For 3 Maintenance Trainee Jobs

Examinations for three maintenance positions in the service of New York City are

due to be scheduled by the City’s Department of Personnel. Advance word on the exam«
nations suggest that they will be walk-in tests with no pre-filing required.

The following information applied at the time of the last maintenance trainee

A singte eligible list will be es-| A Person who accepts a trainee| the end of three years of service,
ablished for sewage treatment | *PPointment to any one of these) employees tn these titles will be
trainee, treffic device) titles will be removed from the) given ® qualifying test and aps
eligible list and will not be certi-| Pointed to the corresponding

fled for appointment to another | Journeyman title

will be certified to the title most
suitable to the requirements of
the title

trainee position.

‘These titles are in the begin
class with a three-year term, At

GO

IN
GOOD
HEALTH

Almost every language has an
expression to wish good health
to someone starting on a
journey, or when proposing
a toast

But sometimes the good
health that people wish for you
— whether you're traveling or
sticking around — is interrupted
by illness or injury, That's when
there's comfort in knowing that
the doctor bills are covered —
anywhere in the world. That
kind of comfort is especially
welcome when you're
enrolled in GHI,

More than a million GHI
subscribers — men, women and
children — share GH! benefits
whenever illness strikes, More
are enrolling all the time. And
as a Civil Service worker, you're
entitled to particularly broad
benefits — including services in
the doctor's office or your home,
from the doctor of your
own free choice.

Be sure to have all the
facts in front of you before
you decide. When you do,
you're sure to choose GHI,

HEALTH

THROUGH

| for

| Government

During training, employees will
receive $4,000 annually with $500
increments at the end of eacl
year, They will be appointed to
the journeyman titles at the ap<
propriate salary schedule, At the
present time, sewage treatment’
workers receive $7,320; traffic d

vice maintainers, $8,200 and
maintenance man, $8,174 a year,
The examinations will bé

weighted at 100 per cent of tha
final mark and the passing mark
will be that of the person placing
number 300 on the examination.
In the event of a tle for the nume
ber 300 position, all candidates
will be considered passing that
receive this mark.

Minimum requirements for the
Sewage treatment and traffic de«
vice positions include: graduation
from a recognized vocational high
school after a three or four year
day course or the equivalent in a
field of study relating to the
duties of the position or gradua-
tion from a recognized high school
and either participation in a co
operative educational work pro-
gram in jobs relating to the duties
of the position or one year of
practical experience relating to
the duties of the position.

For the maintenance man
trainee post, the above require~
ments are necessary in addition
to one year of satisfactory prace
teal experience in building maine
tenance or two years of the exe
perience.

This exammation is open only
to persons who have not passed
their 35th birthday on the date
the fling of an application
(test date)—except in the case of
veterans as defined tn section 85
of the Civil Service Law. All other
veterans may deduct the length
of time they spent in the military
service from their actual age to
determine eligibility

Por further information on thig

| position, contact the applications

aection of the Department of Pere
sonnel, 49 Thomas St., New York
Clty or call 566-8700,

Computer Jobs
With U.S. Gov. -

There are many openings for
computer technicians and com«
puter operators with the US,
in the Washington,
B.C. area and a few in foreign
countries and in various areas of
the U.S. These positions have
tarting salary of $5,331 per year
Up to $7,696 per year.

All applicants for these positions
will be judged on education and
experience. There will be no write
ten tests

Por further information write
to the Interagency Board of Civil
Service Examiners, U.S, Civil
Service Commission, 220 Eaat
42nd Street, New York City and
ask for examination announces
ment WA-1-24

GHI/221 PARK AVENUE SOUTH, NEW YORK. N.Y. 10003 “Use Zip-Codes to help speed

Phone: 777-6000

your mail
Page Twelve

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Tuesday, November 28, 1967

Headlines Like These
Need Not Apply To You!

Most doctors demand patients
pay extra money, despite
insurance coverage.

im,

Hes EXTRA A CHARGES Bx

Ze Ey EXTRA
harges + hata Charges Ex ed

a) Indemnity insurance
link to higher fee

DOCTOR FEES RISE
WITH BENEFITS
STUDY SHOWS

Saris Pees Drain
Increase in Benefits

If you are a City employee, only H.I.P. can
stand between you and the extra charges
that lurk behind headlines such as these.

Cash allowance and major medical insurance programs cannot give you the
full protection that your family needs today.

Fewer and fewer physicians are accepting insurance fee schedules. And major
medical subscribers find that the higher the medical bill, the greater their “share”
of the cost.

Only H.1.P. members have the peace of mind of knowing that their insurance
Jully protects them for all the plan’s basic services—whether it be a preventive
health checkup or open-heart surgery.

And they also know that H.1.P. is the only plan in the New York area that has
established its own professional standards for affiliated physicians.

1947-1967
20 years of Quality Medical Service
A better plan today—An even better plan tomorrow!

HEALTH INSURANCE PLAN OF GREATER NEW YORK
625 MADISON AVENUE, NEW YORK, N.Y.10022

Hip

Job Training Post
Exam Is Scheduled

The Suffolk County Civil Serve
jee Commission will receive ap-
plications until December 27 for
the position of job training direc-
tor

Normal residence requirements
have been waived for the position
which will pay $175 to $214 week-
ly. The written exam will be Jan,
27, 1967.

Duties will include planning,
directing, and promoting the de-
velopment of on-the-job training
programs in priyate industry, Can-
didates must be college graduates
with four years experience in per-
sonnel selection, public adminis~
tration, employee relations, or re-
lated fields, Additional experience
may be substituted for the edu-
cational requirement

Purther information may be ob-
tained from the Commission at
the County Center at Riverhead,
N.Y.

Grounds Maintenance
Jobs Open In Suffolk

Applications must be filed by
Dec. 27 with the Suffolk County
Civil Service Commission for an
examination for grounds main-
tenanee supervisor. The written
exam for the position, which pays
$119 to $145 weekly, will be Jan.
27, 1968

Candidates must be high school
graduates and have four years ex-
perience in large scale ground
maintenance work, including two
years as @ supervisor. They must
have been County residents for
six months at exam time.

Purther information may be ob-
tained from the Commission at
the County Center in Riverhead,
NY.

Naval Reserve Unit
Asks CS Members

The Ship Activation, Mainten-
ance and Repair Division 3-3 (S$)
Naval Reserve Unit of Whitestone,
N.Y, is seeking civil service em.
Pp.oyees as members of the unit,

Employees who served on active
duty in the Navy or Coast Guard
within the last four years are
‘mvited to look into benefits of
joining the unit which trains the
fist weekend of each month at
Whitestone Naval Reserve Train-
ng Center.

Interested persons may call Lt,
Fouarty at PL 9-4064 after 8 pm,
ach Tuesday or come to the
venter at 160-74 Sixth Avenue,
Whitestone, during the monthly
ail

Project Directors
Sought In Suffolk

December 27 is the final filing
date for an examination for pro-
ject director, according to the
Suffolk County Civil Service Com-
mission, The position pays $185
to $225 weekly

A written test will be given Jan,
27, 1968 and the Commission h
waived normal residence require-
ments for the job. Candidates tor
the position must have a college
degree and six years experience in
job or manpower development,
personnel counseling, public ad-
ministration, social work, induse
trial relations, or related work

Additional information may be
obtained from the Commission at
County Center, Riverhead, N.Y,

And for added speed—use Zip

Code numbers in all addresses,
Tuesday, November 28, 1967 CIVIL SERVICE LEADER Page Thirteen

This ad is: supposed to give
you a reason for listening to the Fisher
We decided to give you several:

5] Fe et NN
.
j
The Fisher 95 Bay Grand’ i
Custom Module Stereo Phonoraph/FM i

Tunner System The Fisher Baby Grand’

With 35-watt solid state stereo-control amplifier, Custom Module Stereo Phonagraph System
matched speaker systems, 4-speed Garrard auto- idsatical’'¥o Medal 96, Wea FAA stereo: tuners
matic changer, Pickering cartridge, FM stereo (With epionad larger epeakecs)
tuner, in oiled walnut, (With optional larger +PISHER TRADEMARK
speakers for extended bess.)

*ISHER TRADEM AWK

mE

|

©. |

The Fisher 220-T The Fisher 500-T

55-Watt Solid-State AM-FM Stereo 90-Watt Solid State FM Stereo Receiver
Receiver With STEREO BEACON, 4 IF stages, 3 limiters,
With STEREO BEACONT, FET front end, 4 IF transformerless output stages with silicon trans-
stages, 2 limiters, transformerless output stages istors;

with silicon rtnsistors;

The Fisher TFM-200

, Transistorized FM Stereo Tuner The Fisher XP-5A°
~ ? With STEREO BEACON?, NUVISTOR-GOLDEN Compact Free-Piston Loudspeaker System
yp SYNCHRODE front end, 4 IF stages, 3 limiters, With 8-inch low-resonance woofer, 2!/)-inch wide-
} 1.8 uV sensitivity; dispersion tweeter, 2000 Hz crossover;

The Fisher XP-6"
3-Way Free-Piston Loudspeaker System

With 0.inch woofer, 5-inch midranger, I!/z-inch
soft-dome tweeter, 300 and 2500 Hr crossovers;

The Fisher XP-7"
3-Way Free-Piston Loudspeaker System
With 12-inch woofer, two 5-inch midrangre, |'/p-

inch soft-dome tweeter, 300 and 2500 Hz cross- The Fisher XP-9B°
overs;

The Fisher TX-300 4-Way Free-Piston Loudspeaker System
“ Rm irels With I2inch woofer, éinch lower midrange;
. Cieeualr, -Senecstate Steneg: Sentrak Sinch\ upper midrange, LA-inch ‘solt-dome
e isner With transformerless: output: stage, four output tweeter, extraheavy magnets, 300, 1000 and
transistors per channel, 21 controls and switches, 2500 Hz crossovers;

every Fisher convenience;

No ad man can do it justice.

CARSTON STUDIOS

1686 SECOND AVENUE at 87th STREET
New York, N.Y. EN 9-6212

OPEN SIX DAYS A WEEK — MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
> ——

Page Fourteen CIVIL SERVICE LEADER Tuesday, November 28, 1967
may be obtained from the Inter- s C
Temporary Clerk agency Board of US. Civil Service vance ity Exam Schedule
Examiners for the Greater New -
H Area York City Area at 220 Bast 42nd
Jobs In City St., New York, N.Y, 10017 and the The following list, including test filings for February through April, 1968, completes

Jamaica, Hempstead, wlasievown| Lender. - a ae

February, 1968 vxam number 6110, test date— (100 candidates expected.

: Senior shorthand reporter (P),
Assistant director of rent re-|May 8. 10 candidates expected. 1104) date june 22, 15 candidates
search (C), exam number 1287,| Landscape architect (C), €xam | ox nected

0 f For Fili N main post offices in Brooklyn,| the tentative schedule for City examinations which has Appeared in past issuess of The

Newburgh, New Rochelle,
The Interagency Board of ogue, Peekskill. Bovghkeeputs,
US, Civil Service Examiners Riverhead, and Yonkers.

for the Greater New Seg Hs test date~May 15. 10 onndidates number 6112, test sa May 13.| Senior title examiner (C), teat
ee ee eet Lagat TW cenidicates: expects dste—May 17. 70 candidates ex-

| Punch Operator: Jobs May tes
eations for positions as tempor-

Civil engineering draftsman (C),) Marine engineer —_ uniformed | pected,
ary clerks at GS-1 and GS-2, The Federal government hasjexam number 6102, test date—|(p), test to be held in April, 10 Supervising medical record tl-

levels, paying $1.74 and $1.89 per, numerous vacancies for card) May 3. 100 candidates expected. |candidates expected Dravian (P), test date—May 15, 28
hour, respectively. punch-key punch operators in tn] Director of volunteers (C), test Principal rent examiner (P), |eandidates expected.
be, stallations in the New York area.|to be held in May, 20 candidates) seam umber 6592, test date—| Supervising rent examiner (P),

Appointments will be made from /expected June 16, 35 candidates expected. |@xam number 6531, test date—
the lists resulting from the quall-| Foreman bridgeman and riveter Radiation technician (C), test|June 15. 35 candidates expected.

fiying examination to part-time |«P), test date—May 20. 35 can-l14 me held in May. 15 cundidates| Supervising stenographer (P),
as well as full time positions, dates expected expected. exam number 7532, test date—

| Jobs are available at GS-2 and Psa structures group at Real estate manager (C), exam|May 25. 600 candidates expected.
GS-3 grades. The starting salary) (P), exam number 6571, test date|

ton in Rego Park, New York. Part : a ; |number 7015, test date—May 25

time us well as full time appoint. | £0" GS-2 (s $1.89 an hour or $3,025) -May 1, 29 candidates expected liea: candidate ames March, 1968

Mients will be made from the tists|* 7e0r. Por GS-8 the starting pay bent ear + exam) ‘Rent examiner (P), exam num-| Assistant civil engineer (C) (P),
5 an hour or $4,269 a year | fumber 6571, test date—May 1, 35|:, gsa9, test date—June 15. 40/exam number 6606, test date—

For turther details, see an-|candidates expected. didi sted. Ji 8, 200 didates ted.
Applicants must pass a short} | ; ,, [Candidates expec june 8, candidates expected.
ste ie Rouncement No. NY-7-02 which} Junlor building custodian (P),| senior electrical engineer—RR| Assistant rent examiner (C) ex-

written test covering clerical abil- , wi Funes

fties. No experience ty required for| 2, ceauable at the Interagency jtsam humber 6507, test date—/signal (P), exam number 6877, |am number 6053, test date—June
~ py Board of U.S. Civil Service Exams |June 15, 200 candidates expected. | o:¢ gate —May 8. 5 candidates ex-|15. 600 candidates expected.

GS-1, and six months of clerical | jners, 220 East 42 Si, New York,| Junlor geologist (C), test date | very ’ Lan Rous

se ornee experience OF graduation | N.Y. 10017 or at the following post |Wispeeified. $ candidates expected. |" genior tlustrator (C), exam|test date unspecified, 18 eandl-

rom Mah schoo! ts reaulted f0r| offices in New York State: Brook-| Junlor landscape architect (C),!aumber gi15, test date—May 22 |Cates expected

GS-2, Complete information con-| jvm Jamaica, Hem a
n pstead Patch- ‘ i hice
Gerning ‘these. and oiher requite- 1) candidates expected. Assistant supervisor—Bus &

Bn | ogue, Riverhead, Middletown, | report directly to room B-20 ih Senior public health physician|Shops (P), exam number 6564,
ments 4s contained in announce-| Newburgh, New Rochelle, or Yon-| the lower level of the News bulla | (P), test daie—June 26, 50 can-/test date—June 5. 6) candidates
ment No. NY-1-68, | kers ing, 220 East 42 St, New York,|didates expected expected.

Copies of the examination an-| Applicants who wish to take the| N.Y. on any Wednesday at 8:90) Sentor rent examiner (P), exam| Captain police (P), test date—
Nouncement and application forms) written test in Manhattan may am. or 12:30 p.m. rumber 6520, test date—June 15 | June 8. 1,800 candidates expected,
r = =,| Junior building custodian (C),
exam number 6109, test date—

COMFORTABLE June 15, 500 candidates expected.
Rent examiner (C), exam num-
PRIVATE the slender shelf

ber 6058, test date—June 15. 300
LISTENING ] loudspeaker dinar be peepee tomer:

Many of these positions will
Tovated at the Manhattan and |
Brooklyn district offices of the
Internal Revenue Service and at|
the New York Payment Center)
of the Social Security Administra-

resulting from this examination

candidates expected
}tor, test date —June 10. 50 can-
| didates expected,
| Senior laundry worker (P), ex-
fam number 1542, test date—June
1. 200 candidates expected

Senior project development co- {
ordinator (P), exam number 6603,
test date—June 28. 10 candidates
expected.

Senior public health physician
epidemiology (P), test date—June
26. 20 candidates expected

Shorthand reporter (C), test
date—June 22. 500 candidates ex-
pected,
| Supervisor of x-ray technician
[services (P), test date—June 19
20 candidates expected.

‘Tractor operator (C), test date
mover TF-4 ~-June 15. 400 candidates ex-

5-SPEAKER pected.
AWAY SYSTEM ‘Transit captain (C), test daie~
June 8, 40 candidates expected.

50
oiled wainut . sd | 35 ‘Water plant operator (C), test
rm uring June 110 candidate ex-
HS-2 unfinished hardwood 11459 |) tries
STEREO HEADPHONES Te TF-4 a fl range reproducercompsing the temous April, 1968
JENSEN FLEXAIR® woofer, a spacial 8” midrange, two direct Senior public health physician
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Wh 8 0rd one pig cs nvennee MOO

(P), test date—June 26. 20 oa
didates expected, J

The TF-4 expertly biends these 5 speakers into a 4.way system
for true high fidelity sound, Grille fabric or complementing

rattan, The slim eabinet measures only 8i4" deep x 16%" high x || Sign Painters Sought
eoranret eow"wde 1) By U.S. At $3.04 Hour

Jensen HS-2 stereo headphones bring a new dimension
to private Kstening. The unusually smooth full range of
these headphones starts with a bass below 20 cycles:
and extends beyond 17,000 cycles, Although rugged

(WARRANTY, The Interagency Board of U8.
and durable, they can be worn comfortably for hours, Civil Service Bxaminers for the
They may be connected to any stereo or mono systems Tine tpi iacint ca
OF an accessory phone-jack panel is available. Comfort AU D i {i |1 for sign painter positions ab
able listening level requires only 1 milliwatt. | btewart Air Force Base in News

—, :
Sie Vaan ee ae burgh, N.Y. The positions pay

$?04 an hour

There t# no written exam for
N LI | the position and candidates wil
he Judged on experience.
t 4 Application forms may be obe

| tne from the Federal Job Ine
715 SECOND AVENUE

WARRANTY,

ormation Center at 220 East
42nd St, New York, N.Y. 10017

o at the main Post Offices in
New York, N. Y. Hempstead, Middletown, News
M u 2 - 3 8 3 6 burgh, New Rochelle, Patchogue,

Peekskill Poughkeepsie, Rivere (
|hend, and Yonkers.

Pruceday, November 28, 1967 CIVIL SE Rg bf 1 cE LE ADE R Page Fifteen

$218,000 Contributed
By Civil Service Aides
‘To Israel Emergency Fund

A non-sectarian group of commissioners and civil ser-
ice personnel in the New York City government have raised
ever $218,000 for the Israel Emergency Fund of the United
Jewish Appeal of Greater New York,

Announcement of the total,—— ——W————___
more than triple last year's tration; Timothy W. Costello,
tmount, was made in a Jewish Deputy Mayor - City Administra-
ew Year's assessment by Finance tor; Donald H, Elliott, Chairman,
Administrator Roy M. Goodman, City Planning Commission; Con-
| chairman of the special campaign. stantine Sidamon-Eristoff, Com-

“We expected those of the Jew-| missioner of Highways; Mitchell
ish falth to contribute,” said Ginsberg, Commissioner of Social
Goodman, “but the participation | Services; Mrs. Randolph C, Gus-
7 Catholics, Protestants, and) genhelmer, City Planning Com-
’

veek Orthodox was extraordinary missioner; August Heckscher,
nd deeply gratifying.” Commissioner of Parks: Mrs, John
The non-sectarian committee L. Loeb, Commissioner to the
¥as formed on June 9 with the United Nations; Robert O. Lowery
eicouragement of Mayor Lindsay Fire Commissioner; Carl Mado-
a: the time he signed a proclama-| nick, Commissioner of Real Es-
tion designating United Jewish tate; James L. Marcus, Commis-
| Appeal Week sioner of Water Supply, Gas &
Co-chairmen of the committee Electricity; George F. McGrath,
were: Frank C. Arricale, 11, Com- Commissioner of Correction;

é { ,

missioner of Recreation; ¥ Mathias L. Splevel, First Deputy MHEA MEETING — sam Cipotta, con. ing, including, eft to right: Bernard Silberman,
Cohen, First Deputy Administra- City Administrator; Robert W | sultant to the Mental Hygiene Employees Assn,, MHEA counsel; Cipo! Doris Blust, secretary;
ter, Human Resources Adininis- Sweet, Deputy Mayor and Joseph standing, makes his report during the annual meet- Frank Costello, president and Clarence Laufer and
vio, Commissioner of Hos- ing of the MHEA at the Concord Hotel, Kiamesha Irene Hillis, vice-presidents,

Gov’ Need: \ Lake, recently, Others attending the delegates meet- er
| t. IS

Carpenters, | COMPARE THESE NEW SHERWOOD SH0GTET FEATUERS AND PHC! ALLSILICON tail = = ay ss
’ atenent, s intone J. er Action Switches for Tape Mon ” Main aod rwawre eee
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store plum 16

The Interagency Board of
US. Civil Service Examiners
or the Greater New York City
area has announced that it D
will resume accepting applications oO
and carpenters until Noy, 7, 1967
Only persons wno are wiling to

aly persons wn rein Sherwood

tion in Castle Point, N.Y,, should

.
file for the carpenter position. Ap- lo.
plleations for electrician will be use Pl PR, Bee So
necepted from persons willing to

|
work anywhere in the five bor-
coughs of New York City and the
Counties of Nassau, Suffolk. West-

and Rockland
Details concerning these posi-

tions are contained {n announce-
ment No. NY-7-3 which is avail-
tble with application forms at the .
Interagency Board of US, Civil = —————
Service Examinérs, 220 East 42 : an r si an enn age '
Bi, New York, NY. 1001 °O@ OO QUesSbe
The announcecment and appli- enti = we OEE =
cation form may also be obtained
t the main post office in Brook- —
yn, Jamaica, Hempstead, Middle-
town, Newburgh, New Rochelle
atehogue, Peekskill, Poughkeep-
. Riverhead, and Yonkers, and

Did you think because Sherwood makes such beautiful receivers we would neglect Sie Fes teen eee
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Dital at Castle Point FET FM/AM 140-Watt Receiver shown above has been specially designed for urban si a head rubted wali eablnes
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Hh rocker switehes for multiple apeaker installations throughout your home
ustrator Jobs tes Be a ae alcigcads Sos ae
The United States Civil Serv © mh rejection shwost 10 times (80 db i]
fee Commission has announced

ibat there are many position:
#allable with the United State
{ overnment in the Washington.

Ports of the country for astra
tors, Starting salaries for these
ceucmicr 24 NEW STREET

Yor further information writ

” Newark, New
Vo the Interagency Board of US :
Civil Service Examiners, U.S. Ci 201 ~ Mi 2-6816
‘Service Commission, 220 East 421.

veel, New York City and as tor Just across the river to big savings, Save 5% city sales tox,
JArnouncement WA-1-36

c
|

Tuesday, November 28, 1967

SERVICE LEADER

CIVvit

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XS, S, M,

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Average, Tall. $4

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XS, S, M, The Set,

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Gently shaped slip.
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Every Body's Bra. A, B, C Cups. $4

Fashion Lights Pantie Girdle, S,

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Hosiery

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50} MADISON AVENUE

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werday, November 28, 1967

y ,
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

-———| ORDER DIRECT — MAIL COUPON }+—

TO HELP YOU PASS

GET THE ARCO STUDY BOOK

Assessor Appraiser

Attendont

Beginning Office Worker
Beverage Control Invest.
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5.00

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Civil Service Arith. & 3.00
Civil Service Handbook 1,00
Clerk N.Y. City 3.00
Clerk Sr. & Supy, 4.00
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flectricion
Electrical Engin:

b gels Test Pract. for 92 US, Jebs
HLS, Diploma Tests
c.

Housing Patrolman <a
Investigator-Inspector
Jonitor C i"

Leberatory Aide
Lt. Fire Dept.

ster Vehicle License Exemteer
Motor Vehicle Operator

Netery Public __ — 2.50
Nurse (Practical & P 4.00
3.00
4.00
5.00

Pharmacists License Test
Ploygr Director — Recreation Leader
Policewomon _
Postmaster

ice for Clerical Type. & Ste
liminary Practice for the H.5.
Principat Clerk-Steno
Porole Officer
Professional Career Tests

N.Y.S,

| broadcast

Gvil Service
Television

Television programs of interest
to civil service employees are
daily over WNYC.
Channel 31 Next week's programs
are listed below

Monday, December 4
4:00 p.m.— Around the Clock —
N.Y.C. Police Department train-
ing program: “The Universal
Summons Project."
30 pm. —On the Job—NYC
| Fire Department training pro-
gram: “Foam,”
00 pm.—New York Report
| Lester Smith hosts Interviews
with City officials.

Tuesday, December 5
00 pm. —Around the Clock -
N.Y.C. Police Department train-
ing program.
1:30-5:30 pan
sembly
when held)
00 p.m.—What’s New In Your
School? Current information
about the City’s schools.

Wednesday, December 6

2

U.N, General As
Afternoon session

=

4:20-5:30 pm.—U.N, General As-
sembly Afternoon session
twhen held)

7:36 pm. —On the Job—NYC

Fire Department
gram

00 pm—New York's
Penal Law
ferences of guilt

Thursday, December 7

00 p.m.— Around the Clock
N.Y.C. Police Department train-
ing program

130 p.m. te $:30 p.m —UN Gen-
eval Assembly (when held)

30 pm —On the Job NYC.
Fire Department training pro-
gram: “Hose.”

10:30 pm.—Community Action
Ted Thackrey hosts program.

Friday, December §

4:00 p.m. — Around the Clock
N.Y.C. Police Department train-
Ing program.

10:00 pm.—New York's Revised|
Penal Law—Explanation of dif-
ferences of guilt.

Saturday, December 9

7:00 p.m —Community Action —

Ted Thackrey hosts pro}

30 pm.—On the Job

| Fire Department

gram

training pro-

Revised

m.
-NYC
training

pro-

Ld
Public cheer ys
Reol Estate Manager
Senitetion Mon
Schoo! Secretary
Sergeont

Stationary Eng. & Fireman
Storekeeper Stockman
Supervising Clerk-Steno

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

S5¢ for 24 hours specie!
C.0.0.'5 40e ext

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

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LEGAL NOTIOR

OF THE STATE OF

lover D1, 2007, New York
|"iereicm ty fle elandant Mel. Bor
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Publication, purvuant to

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November, 1067, with

Discussion of dif-|

|
New

Hospital Offers Therapist Jobs

Therapists are needed at the/$5.867 to $7,068 per annum.
‘Ourpatient Clinic of the Veterans
Administration {n Brooklyn.

The clinic is recruiting to fill
the following positions: occupa-
tional therapist, GS-6, 7 and 8,
$5,867 to $7,068 per annum; man-
ua, arts therapist, GS 6, 7 and 8,
$5.867 to $7,068 per annum; phy-
sical therapist, GS-6, 7 and 8,

professional school

¢
Outpatient Clinic,
Street, Brooklyn N.Y.
telephone (212) 696-3044,

Page Seventeen

Qualifications for these positions
ere graduation from an accredited
and = appro-
yiate experience for each grade
For further taformation write

Chief, Personnel Division, VA
35° Ryerson
11205, or

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CIVIL SERVICE LEAD

Page Fighteen

ER Tueatay, November 28, 1967 @

been scheduled for Dee. 6 at the
Suffilk chapter office here at 330
E. Jericho Turnpike, at 8 p.m

Suffolk County
\Seeking Clerks

suffolk Court Aides
‘lect J.L. Benedetto

: 2 8 he Suffolk County Civil Serv-
le coat matey ein, U25: Government $s Connmention s  anbksnd Hes
bapter Court mployees unit,
stett Service Employees assn,| S@@king Nurses | schoot graduates for clerk post-

lected the following officers and
telenates 5
President, Joseph L, Benedetto

Irst vice-president, Clarence Doll

Applications to fill immediate tions with various County depart-
dmeancies for nurses will continue| Ments, The positions pay $70 to
10 be accepted by the Interagency | $85 weekly and candidates must

Board of U.S. Civil Service Ex-| file by Dec. 1
The written exam for

|Man Of Year Award

Islip CSEA Unit
Calls For Salary,
‘Benefits Program

ISLIP —

Goes To Judge Silver

Kings County Surrogate Judge
Edward 8, Silver will receive the
Man of the Year award at the
annual dedication to the Torah
treakfast of the Association of

Jewish Court Attaches. The event | The Islip Town

will be Sunday Deo, 3 at the unit of the Suffolk chapter,
americana Hotel |Civil Service Employees Assn.,
State Comptroller Arthur Le-

jhas submitted a 12-point pro-

econd vice-president, Ida Bara-| miners, Greater New York City appolnt~ | itt will make the presentation
ato: third vice-president, Elisa|oreg, Positions will be filled) Ment will be given Dec, 16 and). 4 speukers will be Michael Ar- nie 5 Sgeaetnie headed by
oun; secretary her Lewis: |ihroughout the states of New iiterested persons must have been |.0, “coneul general of teraei; |, "4 for ® $1,500-a-year across
reasurer, Lois Smith, and serg-'york nd New Jersey, In New | County residents for six months. Gwen Mecivers, jostion of the the-board salary boost as well as
‘ant-nt-nrms. Joseph Abruzzo. |york vacancies are at such in-| Applications and further IMfor-| qoute Division of Supreme | °X°lUsive Tecognition of CSEA.
Delegates chosen were; Suprem* rictiations as Stewart Air Force | mation may be obtained trom the) ou: Louis Lefkowitz, Attorney) The unit also urged a freeze of
Zourt, Winthrop Hodges; County | Base, the U.S, Military Academy | Commission at County Center.) sonerai of New York; and Harry |@ $150 cost of living adjustment,
Yourt, Herbert Hite; Surrog at West Point, the U.S. Naval! Riverhead, N.Y Herhfield 10 percent premium for night
Yourt, F ces Mulcahy; Pamily|pospital at St. Albans and the — Reservations are $6 and may Work and improved starting sal-
ourt, Janet Torma; and Dis U8, Public Health Service Hopst ‘. . tc made with Emanuel Pinkel,| aries in the highway department,
Sourt, Harry W tat in Staten Island; and at Fort|Erie County Seeking [2.0m aiz, 851 Grand Concourse,|in another pay package ttem
The first reular meeting bas) pix, in New Jersey Meter Readers; $2.42 |p estat telephone 293-8000,! additional demands include: 1);
,—— a ——e Starting salaries range from $4,- ext, 28 0)
a he ne he Erie County Water Auth- salary and classification survey t
Do You Need A to $7,303 depending on ex snr cee seas Ae a eliminate existing tnequities; 2
sdiageosbeipoameasannetioles peadnts ab SiGe" to 82 Taser’ teas Haberer Appointed = fuly-paid health plan; 9) fully-
1 leant en the’ looation ae the | candidates must file by Dec, 1| ALBANY—John C. Haberer, a| paid dental pion; 4) three addi-
‘ ition, ‘The minimum qualitica- ; suet Gigli heen i Fey RpIARGe, ckiiek 2
High Schoo lions for a position require com-|{0T the Jan. 13 N68 written | Car es ivtt : rvant, has by tional holidays, to # ar ot M4:
9 st yum for sppolntmen tamed acting assistant. comt seven days personal leave; 6)
Equivalency pletic a two ve F course Af 81) “interested persona must be high of the State Health De-| 15-cents-n-mile automobile allow~
school of nursin: wy,
A ool gradtittes, or have fou ment’s Division of Pure Wat-| ance: and 7) uniforms for sweepes
Diploma Aplication forms and copies of |) th cn has "The post pays $23,502 operators
the announcement NY-01-6 which | oe | i
yuttine the duties and require-|).,° 4 \
toe civil service may be obtained from the pe |
for personal satisfaction agéricy Board of US. civil} omy, te COLLEGE GRADUATES ”
veigraly yd xaminers, 220 Bast 42nd +!
: w York City. They are |) MEN AND WO N 5 }
uation : ‘ ! I
- siso fiable at the Installation: -
bids ey of Civil Ta |
Eastern School = Ak 45027 | ieee is New “ Ny Ga (New FACE TOMORROW'S 4
72) Rroadway N.Y. 3 (at 8 St in N York and Ne :
nite me thee About the Sie STENOTYPE
Rqutvainney etna = _
|| iG SCHOo, ne :
a Euvival ENROLL Join the exciting field of Social Work as a
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Do You Need A DIPLOMA 4 4
wn. . This N.Y, State diploma JANUARY *
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TRY THE “Y” PLAN | balury is $6.100: $6,840 in 3 months: $7.200 In 6
SED ce 10 nookevcs SEO ditional increase after on varation (
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ENdicott 2 he ere rem APPLY IN PERSON for Aptitude Test
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x\

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Page Nineteen

ALBANY—Employees in

ployees As

n.

je met last October 10 with Dr
hristopher F. Terrence, first dep-
y commissioner of the Depart-
lent of Mental Hygiene, and dis-
seed an agenda of items which
adopted, would benefit employ-
in all phases of mental hy

work, including the lNber
lization of overtime rules

As @ result of that meeting, the
ppertment’s Office of Manpower
jd Training has promulgated an
teroretation of overtime rules,

ruway employees

2 We officially requested recog-

Sept, 20," said Joseph
Association executive

“and submitted an af

‘ector,

lavit testifying that 1,665 em-
oyees of the Authority were
es-paying This con:

tutes an overw
the worker

Lochner stated that CSEA wa
formed days Inter by W
hm ‘Tinney, Thru
hecutive director fo
Hations, that ‘ation of
request “should be deffered
itil the rules and regulations of

ge majority

assistant
employee

conside

Public Employ Relations
bard ‘implementing the Taylor
w) have been promulgated

The CSBA official said that the
les became effective November
Sud “we believe there is no
son whatsoever for not recag-
ving CSEA as the bargaining
ent and that the Authority
ould follow the precedent set by
State of New York

its ree~

teing us under the law and
ules of the Board.”
¢ executive director warned
any further delay will pr
lice the rights of members

ly ni
onity under the
ticle 14 of the Clyi}
"We again have requ
nition in a letter to R
chairman and secretary of
le Authority,” “and
le anticipating "
Theodore C. Wenzl, CSEA
ident d@ “Our ‘Thrawa,
mbers are crowing increasingly
patient with the silence
thority, We told th
bmits its budget
* Office on
¢ of any
n made this
increases

tiate

pro
Se

said Lochner
& prompt reply

were

vem-

1 and we
having be
salary
proved fringe benefita for
etiployees

¢ CSEA

are unawa
pvisions

ming year {or

learned that

niform Overtime Rules Slated
In MentalHygiene Department Soon, Plan Joint Program
agatt Promises Employees Assn.

uniform system of overtime compensation,

CSEA officials and members of the Association's Special Menta! Hygiene Commit-

hruway Auth. Delay «::
(SEA Recognition
it By Wenzl & Lochner

the,

(Special To The Leader)
the Department of Mental Hygiene may soon benefit from

by school district
thanks to the efforts of the Civil Service

ice Employees Assn.

The 15-point program.
chairman Prank Piazza, provides,
to the detriment of the for the first time, a coordinated

employees, the Institutions or both | countywide program te eliminate
¢, We are particularly concerned inequities among the county's 60
about policies on work schedule school districts
adjustments in lieu of overtime, The program calls for a 15 per
As you are aware, the Budget Dir- | cent across-the-board salary boost
ector’s overtime rules and regu- for all non-teaching employees,
provide that a work sched. | exelusive recognition of CSEA and

specially in regard to work sched- may we
ule adjustments,

In a letter to directors, assoc!
directors, assistant directors, bus:
Iness officers, personnel officers
and personnel clerks, John J Lag-
att, director of personnel for the
Office of Manpower and Training,

lations

said we adjustment should be made written annual contracts
“There is substantial evidence |in lew of payment for overtime The program fn detail:
of diverse policies at our institu- n such work schedule adjust-| © Fifteen per cent, across-the-

board pay boost
© Exclusive

* CSEA
© One-year contract to be
d 60 days before budget 1

tions concerning
tion of overtime,

the administra-
some of which

is practical

“There ts no Department policy
or Budget Director's regulation.
said Lagatt hat mandates a
hedule adjustment every

recognition of

employee is required to leted,
overtime, Each situation egotiations to be conducted
must be examined to determine 901 board.
if a schedule adjustment is Indeed © CSEA building representative
pe able and necessary, Work {n each building
schedule adjustments should be © Pree time for building rep-
made on @ reasonable HA ANG. vecenta to conduct OSEA

As possible, with due con-
viven to the employee

insofa

sideration

(Special To The Leaders) The personnel chief said that,” Tree weeks vacation after
ALBANY. official of the Civil Service Employees the Bureau of Manpower ana of- ¥¢ Ye8"S four weeks after 10
said last week there Is no reason why the Thru fice of Administration and Fiseal *°**
uthority should not immediately recognize the employee Management agree tha work
oup as the vole and exclusive bargaining agent for all Schedule adjustments involving

small generally un-
der two hours, could be considered
practicable if they do not op
but that {t can be erate to the detriment of the in-
amended prior to that date. “This stitution and mployees, Work
points out the urgency of our schedule adjustments, he said.
gaining immediate y not be cticable if they re-
and fo in employee ir

units of time

Thruway’s budget becomes effec- 95

tive

ary 2

recognition
the early commencement
tations,” Dr. Wengl said

onvenience

(Continued on Page 24)

Nassau Chapter’s Holiday

(Special To
BABYLON—Stricter

week at a mee!

sion Jast 2

Greetings To Serviceman 22 oo.

emphasis at the

Grows To Conference Level. =:

ing the wide
feeling among Commissior
(From ader Correspondent) ployees that a tightening up is
MINEOLA—The Long Island Conference of the Civil Ser- needed
ice Employees Assn. has adopted the Holiday-Greeting-for ‘Seniority considerations now
Viet-Nam-Servicemen program begun last week by the Nas- | owed in making » promotions

and appointment are inconsistent
and need much better definition

sau chapter,
The Long Island-wide conference,

representing chapters @ojpy said. This applies also to
with more than 40,000 members, will send special greeti: per diem and part-time workers.
to friends and relatives of CSEA members now serving in he noted

Viet

m. Members are urged to submit to the conference the Commission official

names of servicemen they would like to receive the greeting. seniority should prevail ins
The program was announced by Irving Flaumenbaum, pres- css 82d promised an intensive

y N er with a view
ident of both the Nassau chapter and Long Island confer- TY!" of the matter witt c

to improving existing practices
CSEA also asked that addition-

al maintenance personnel be pro

difference be- | vided According to the Commis

once and second vice-president of the St
The card will bear this message
It has been Wisely said that ‘faith is the

te CSEA.

tween success and failu: Americans know that faith is the | sion, this is now under consider-
key that unlocks the cabinet of all God’s treasures. ation, but the eventual decision
The members of the Civil Service Employees Assn. want) !s in the hands of the State Di

you to know that in this holid
servicemen.

season we have faith in our

New Hempstead Unit

“We have faith in your fight to free the world from
threats of communist oppression =f Elects Officers Slate
We ask, in return, that you have faith in us, in our| HEMPSTEAD —A new unit of

Civil Service Em-
here has elected 4

Nassau chapter
ployees Asan

joyalty to our
of gratitude

country which we all love with an equal debt
for your personal sacrifices for our safety and

surity.” Heket of unit officers, beaded by
dag |'‘Thomas Abramak! as president
The card will bear the emblem of the CSEA with its! ayo chosen were Nicholas Petrone
motto’ “We Serve," and each card will be signed by @/ as vice’president ard Lows Bianco

conference or chapter officer, \as Weasurer,

according

Island Inter-County State Park chapter, Ci

notice

agreed that

‘Suffolk School Units

For Contract Talks

(From Leader Correspondent)
SMITHTOWN—A joint program

has been agreed upon

units of the Suffolk chapter, Civil Serv-

to school legislative

© Three personal jeave days per
change in employment

without prior consulta-
with CSEA,

tion
© Non-contributory

health and
dental insurance,

© Negotiations with CSEA when
new titles are created,

© Night differential of five per
{ for shifts between 3 pam and
might, and 10 per cent for
between midnight and 8

cer

am.

ht man in charge of each
y school building, with
annual premium of $150.

© Additional holidays the Pri-
day after Thanksgiving, Christmas
Eve and New Year's Eve, and,

® Job tenure for employees not
on competitive examination, vet-
erans and volunteer firemen

Piazza said districts which have
achieved some of the basic pro-
fram may substitute or add other
objectives. CSEA will furnish as-
in negotiations, he added.

elemen'

sistance

LI. Inter-County Park Chap.
Promised Stricter Seniority
And Other Employee Rights

The Leader)
observance of seniority
promised by officials of the Long Island State Park Commis-

rights was

with representatives of Long
vil Service Em-

ision of Classification and Com-
pensation.

Other CSEA proposals included
that civil service exam
cements, both promotional

and open competitive, be posted
in all parkway installations, Simil-
r notification was asked in the

© of Parkway-sponsored super-
“Adequate advance
should be posted through-
parkway,” Colby said, “so

vision classes

out the

that everyone would have am
equal chance to apply. for this
uable training,”
The CSEA agenda also asked
| that janitors relieved from
having to serve as watchmen dur-

ve 2 certain period when the lat-
on duty, Commission
agreed to take up the
m and seek to eliminate it
It was announced at the meet-
reported, that a new
has been installed
at Heckscher State Park

tey ae not

Ing. Colby

water cooler

CSEA's delegation to the meet
ing, headed by Colby, also in-
cluded William Hurley, chapter
grievance chairman, and Arthur
Gray, CSEA field representative,

Vincent Leiteh, employee reja~

epresentative, and Jerome
personnel director, repre-

| sented the Long Island Park Com-

mission

. J
GOING PLACES? See Page 22.
Page Twenty c Iv

7

IL SERVICE LEADER

Tuesday, November 28, 167d

PR. Trainee Jobs Available File By Dec. 4 Filing Ends December 4 For

Persons interested in public, headquarters at 8 Elk St., Albany,
relations trainee sitions |start at $6,825.
with the Civil antes Em-| Candidates must be high school

raduates with four years experl-

Assn. must file by) dua
Se othe Seaninak ia Caae ence involving knowledge of pub-
z < = lic relations—including one year

jas a supervisor—or college grad-
| utes with « journalism or related |
| degree. |

Candidates must be in good
|heaith and a New York driver's

Neense ts required.

- - | Jan, 18

{ton wonormaos tor SUTMAL AOTICUIRUTE JODS 7 mm ces om exams ae
: ’ open only to permanent employees
: INVESTIGATE | Ge sourtaech someone, En
H ‘| Ara 0 en At $82 And J jean, 13 exams will be
' ACCIDENTS ' 7 | Interdepartmental
keg ' College students are now being sought for full-time post apiece carbo pe gio |

: lege 8 F - st 4 aa
| ADJUST CLAIMS | tions next summer with the U.S. Department of Agricutture. aca ice lie
* gare $200 |The jobs pay $82 to $92 weekly. SENIOR MEDICAL RECORDS
| apte eweek (Fulltime) }| The Department has an organ-_——— ———| CLERK, exam number 32-810,
| Fare $100 ., t}wed work study program in the!curing the vacation period which) G-23 |
' y teghlew ely ber daggernad {leccupational areas ot soll conser-||, coupled with attendance at col-| ASSOCIATE PLANNING COOR-
{fe whe, (dat, classes aise) “Razuiep || Vation; soil science; engineering: | eve during the scho'astie year DIATOR, exam number 32-813,

sorure Ne. age. or eilucntion

acricultural management; agricul.
tural statistics; and accounting.

reawiremente Free advisory pinerment
werelen Cail now

FREE BOOKLET - BE 3-5919
ADVANCE BUSINESS INSTITUTE
51 W. 32nd St, NY. 1, Mey, |

‘Those students who are selectrd
participate in programs consisting

<f planned on-the-job training

a.

raScott
Component

Stereo

System?

(THERE'S A SOUND REASON.)

$299.95 buys you not just a “stereo”, buta rea

Scott
component stereo system. Here's a best-selling Scott
stereo receiver, topped with a professional auto-
matic turntable by Garrard with Pickering magnetic
cartridge and diamond stylus, Complete with Scott
Controlled Impedance air suspension speaker sys-
tems, this music system is made for people who are
serious about their listening. There are separate
Bass, Treble, and Volume controls for each channel,
plus an accurate tuning meter, connections for
microphone,

guitar, ear
phones, extra
speakers, tape
recorder, and
cartridge player
Model 2504 FM
Stereo Phono
System

shown is

only

i

AM/EM, and phono models are also available, at
prices ranging from $249.95 to $499.95, Dust cover
optional

Bryce chal

110 WEST 40th STREET NEW YORK, N. Y,
BRyant 9-4050 - 1 - 2

In addition to passing a written
| test, students must have com-
pleted, by June 30, 1988, at least
Jone full wendemie year of study

Labor

4UNTLOR COMPENSATOR

CLAIMS = AUDITOR, —exars
for GS-3; and two and one-half number 32-814, G-10.

years of study for GS-4, in one of] CompENSATION CLAIMS
the fields described above in order) “"atprroR, exam number 12-
|to qualify ees cise

Detailed information can be

SENLOR COMPENSATION
| found in Civil Service Announce-

rOR, exam num-

| ment NS-7-56, issued by the In- 316, O-16
|teragency Board of US. Civil sssocraTE COMPENSATION
Service Examiners, 301

Boulevard West, Syracuse,
York 13202. These announcements
are available at most of the larger

CLAIMS EX-
818,

Post Offices, If you are unable! G14
to get a copy, write to the Inter- s 108 COMPENSATION
agency Board. | AIMS EXAMINER, exam
| number 32-19

Think of the price of a false | /SSOCIATE YSATION
alarm, It could cause dealt ‘| CLAIMS exam
| fireman. number 3
|- : = URANCE FUND HEARING
| ‘TATIVE, exam

864, G-18

New York
State

SENIOR SOCIAL WORKER, ex-
am number 32-864, G-18

SUPERVISOR OF SOCIAL

i é WORK, exam number 32-779,
Employees: &°

WORKM ATION

EXAMINER, exam number 32-
875, G-14
SENIOR WORKMEN'S COM-

Nassau Co. Seeks
Welfare Workers

Welfare caseworkers are now
Leing sought by the Nassau Coun-
ty Civil Service Commission. The
positions, which involve public
wssistance and child welfare case-
work, pay $6,656 to $8,658 annu-
lly, Cundidates must be college

| craduates; though college seniors
nay fe, Purther information may
obtained from the Commission
at 140 Old Country Road, Mineola,
11501

bx

NY,

Unwind with
special room rates
($8.00 single) at
these Sheraton
Motor Inns

HIGH
SCHOOL

EQUIVALENCY

DIPLOMA

BINGHAMTON — Sheratoa Motor

Inn (call 462-6401) |
BUFFALO — Sheraton Motor tan,
Sheraton-Camelot (call RA 3-8341)
ITHACA — Sheraton Motor Ina
(call 273-8000)

ROCHESTER — Sheraton Motor
Ina (call 232-1700)

SYRACUSE — Sheraton Motor laa
(cull 463-6601) |
(IN ALBANY CALL 4344111 FOR
RESERVATIONS, IN NEW YORK

ROBERTS SCHOOL
S17 W. Sith St. New York 19

CITY, CALL CH 4-0700) Please Phy on aa inform. |
| Sheraton Hotels & |}.
_ Add:
“Motorins@)@ [| :==—

———————

State Promotion Exams

State employees have until Dec. 4

State Department of Civil Service for 24 promotion exams.
13 and the rest

Twenty of the exams will be given Jan.

{

1
to file with the

| number 32-876, G-18.

ASSOCIATE WORKMEN'S COM-
PENSATION EXAMINER, exam
number 22-877, G-21

Law
SENIOR DICTATING MACHINE
TRANSCRIBER (LAW), exam
| number 32-866, G-7.
Social Services
CASE SUPERVISOR, exam num-

|
|
|
|

ber 32-867, G-17,

The four examinations set fog
Jen, 18 are

Correction

CORRECTION LIEUTENANT
| (FEMALE), exam number 32-

912, G-15.
CORRECTION LIEUTENANT

(MALE), exam number 32-91),
G-15.
CORRECTION
MALE
G-15.
XRRECTION SERGEANT

(MALE), exam number 32-915,
G-15,

SERGANT (FE-
exam number 32-914,

‘THURSDAY =

| Bloodmobile
To Visit In
Brooklyn

(Special to The Leader)

ALBANY — A_ bloodmobile,
sponsored by the State Health
Insurance Blood Program, will
visit the Downstate Medical
Center in Brooklyn on Thursday,

Noy, 30.
Irving Vincent, assistant person-.
nel director of the Center, is

jchairman of the visit and urged

all employees to sign up as donors,
for this worthwhile program

Two other bloodmobile visits)
were held on November 21 and 22!
at State Police barracks in Bing-|
hamton and Sidney under the
auspices of the Community Blood,
Council of New York City.

The bloodmobile visits have thi
strong endorsement of the Civil
| Service Employees Assn. an
|CSEA has pledged its full coop-
eration toward making the bl
collection program a success

rok

LEGAL
[SUPREME CouRT oF THE stare
[NEW ORK. COUNTY OF yy)
| MAX LAUDUN, Mainsite
LADDUN, Deton \

te
y 07. Tauneatt’ dew

Dotew ost
SUMMONED

¥
L

: es «

‘weaday, November 28, 1967 CIVIL SERVICE LEADER Page Twenty-one

eligibility from the date of dis-

The

Veteran’s
Counselor

—————— By FRANK V. VOTTO

charge or release from his last
neriod of ute ay. any out! * REAL ESTATE VALUES +
cf which occurred during war-

war-time military duty, but not

to exceed the maximum terminal Biwi ——— niche Flor ida Raa
date for the individual veteran. oo

Korean War veterans’ eligibility | —________.i§.m.—

time, plus one year of eligibility
began to expire on January 41, Venice, Florida

for each three months of active
1965 and, every day since that CAN YOU

date, eligibility expires for many AFFORD VENIOR FLA. — INTRRESTED?
PUBLIC LAW 87-84, approved on July 6, 1961, provides) veterans. $1.00 per day smn ow & WEIMERS, REALTOR,

for an extension of eligibility for loan benefits for veterans} G.I. LOAN entitlement of many |] tor Rovirement Home in Miorida, near

pf the Korean War to Jan, 31, 1975. The maximum date 4s/ veterans was Increased as @ re-|]{Ma0hing inctuding tot and darace, || SAVE ON YOUR MOVE 70 PLORIDA
sed in computing the| sult of 2 change in the VA's|| Compote and ready to move into 8 Pelsrebure from Mew, York City,
et a ee ee ‘3 : method of computing the dura- |} ye! tt Bee mouth. (Cover $00; Philadelphia, $999; Albany,

%
Beincipal ahd inierest) ay, taxes Lo gg NG
ton of ® veteran's entitlement, |} yearly about $20.00. Lake stocked || unm In" Floris write” SOUTHES

Individual terminal date for loan| [5 formula, "each korean Wie

ae $20.00. Lake stocked 1] earion in Florida write SOUTHERE
eves for each veteran. Under|yteran has ten years of asl ere is ow allowed forthe] Sine clones asaketnes || Heaterin, Stckage ne
— — ‘extra days” in the veteran's |] "Ath ir iy coun LIVING for Floride
Period of qualifying active mili-| Limited ime Retirees — ———
te tar poles od
tary duty over and above the " Y HILL ~~ || Farms & Co. Homes,
number of whole 90 day period of | HOLIDA Eee Green Co., NY. State
such active duty. The credit Box 295 and country hem

mt, view, CAviog room with

smounts to four days of eligibility || New Port Richey, Florida of, birt, 88 fant
|for each such extra day. Each } Ni Ri a il, WN,
For those who eligible Korean war veteran has — — ° kins
end will continue to have ten ST. PETE — the City for Living
prefer Sterling more years-of eligibility from the date || FREE! “LIVING IN ST. PETE” bool. HOLLYWOOD BEACH,

talfipapte FLORIDA
ica is of discharge from the last period |] let Pected full of facts, gues and

fotos of SUNNY ST, PETE. Popular ||] Sant
of qualifying active duty, plus one |] resort for 1,350,000 visitors annually Yree' Poot. Heating & Wishing, Lounge,
style, Incised sdditional year for each 90 days || —ideal retirement center, Prices here

Diecoant Golf, Vree Cousiry Club
facilities, ete.

YES, EVERYTHING!
LOVELY EFFICIENCY AND
BEDROOM FAMILY

TY

uty. The extra days in|] at. tinder to your budget, Wide
th 1 choice of accommodations
he whole number of | [oct he

periods heretofore disre- |] Wonderful

ornament as delicate vgtbaigshd

| excess 0!

as lace provides |e

@ unique contrast PME “CHAR aera.) Seenartean®'wnte Toot [|] suuenieren ts tee, wea
with the sculptured December 30, 1966, The basic re- |] {°* "i informative boot. Fe etl Natorally. Wigher
border. Hegat reggie ing Te NE
Rich, Distinetively will not revive expired eligibility, | meed| frre ter ear mir Mg
ae unless it produces a future expira- Stuart, Florida Or

tion date, nor will it extend the | — SNEE LT Be AGO ep | tit BURTON. 2404 M. Surf Ra

| RETIKEMENT WOMPS ,. . $0,600, up

maximum terminal dates of eligi- EVERYTHING IX REAL BSTATB RIES

| bility. No Korean War Veteran L FULFORD, SUART, FLA Farms & Country Homes —
will be eligible after January 31,| Y8!'T# BRQUIREMENTS. Ph, ° New Jerse
And now... | 197s, patil 2 , Howes
; ‘ aie ; uve == Katates — Acreage
in Sterlin | THE GI LOAN benefit ix a m & Home Realty
8 valuable asset, and no veteran STUART Hewton, Hi (Closed on Sundays)

ON THE TROPICAL BAST coast }| — ———
should use his entitlement until |} Lance

by LUNT

fe SMALL ACREA. TRACTS
he is sure he has a good buy WATERFRONT PROPERTIES Houses For Sale - New Jersey
and the financial ability to k C. B. Arbogast, Realtor pene A palmar Petty
ap the loan ae tO KEP |] ereanr. vLoipa | stxer 1920 | HOMES! HOMES! HOMES!
payments. The GI loan DIAL 30 AT T4440 = se Pula SIZES AND PRICES

is not » gift—it must be repaid by ent—G.1-6 No Bows

he veteran, If he does not do so,| —— _ —— H y NDELSMAN

and the VA has to pay the lender Farms & Country Homes Realty Co, Bkre — Open # fo # BM,
: NYGLA 40210, Na. Teaneck gt228
jthen the veteran will owe the

Orange County
ivemens | Hotes BRONX iaplaie Ave.)

family (3 & § rm npta, 6 oli,
neal tint, garden driveway. FARA
$4.000

FEINBERG BROS, 933-1800

Us. Government the amount

er which it thas paid out for him. | Foe a

The veteran should be sure, ther %
(Continued on Page 23)

NOY
(Wis) 650

; Forms & Country H. 1

OUR SPECIAL | | SAVE $65 on a 44-pe. ‘“Service-for-8" ° y Momes, || SPECIAL CIVIL SERVICE palate Times de AM ote
yah dl SAVE $90 on a 64-pe, “/Service-{or-12" Py aur se County, NY RELOCATION DEPT, : — :
sores SH0.080." AF" OT TO era Abana aep ||) SPRINGFIELD GARDENS &

; wa >. ’ rm sea Detached bungalow plus

ers ey ike. Walden, 8 (BR) " aga

: : CAPITOL HOMES IIE cathe. gorces. on. lend

29 JOHN STREET | ATTENTION VETS! : scaped 40x100 plot, Only

Room 201 o Sani trae |] 1593 Central Ave., Albany $500 on contract.
NEW YORK, N.Y. 10038 es we UN 9-0916

$19,500, OWNER-BROKER
OL 4-5600

BEekman 3-1450 - 1

—|——= BETTER

|] REAL ESTATE SERVICE

| SPECIALIZING IN J A 7]
Homes © Apartment Houses |

© Business Investment Properties

Pe rtrrrrrrrrrterrr rrr fro oe Tet Criirr errs

MODEL IN NEW YORK THIS PALL!

PHOTOGRAPHY — TELEVISION — FASHION

CAMERA WRLGaTA these matoue “8 ei | 159-12 Hillside Ave. ~
Prepare yourself for this exciting : io San, a roe ROOK REALTY 4
glamorous cereer taught with ection teh: ASbaaes, Sax Rid. Aisa eh JAMAICA ¢
modern methods of instruction by | | - q
experianced models, Cereer train ; SS  _ Vind
ing offered only to qualified girls, | "
All classes ere small, assuring
ndividval attention, D no f RT ALBANS Vio giaewe
Increase your confidence and : QUEENS VILLAGE Vie $21,000 Le ae: Binns ne ‘ Gar ae
ability with « Cherm and Per —co L fir. war, Fin baunt, C “

tonal Development Program, RE a n ~
Cans far the é alndecnped — — CAMAMEA INES
HOMEMAKER * CAREER
GIRL * TEEN

PRE-TEEN & CHILDREN
je tuition plant. Approved
Classen
Saturday or
For free personal
analysis or Brochure write te or

Mony other 1 & 2 Family homes available
Miss Elinebeth Cooke,

Seer cocci QUEENS HOME SALES INC.
FIFTH AVENUE SCHOOL of Modeling and Charm —§ Ss, :88.r9ys <0 0 nee mat oe = sete

15 West 44th Street, New York, N.Y. 10036 1} 7.0980 OL 8-7510
Licensed by the Stale ef New York

Ashehidshahedahahalehihahahidihshshelahadehlehsloiaiolahshalehshehahihehidisdalahilalihuheh

_BUTTERLY & GREEN

aA wan00

CALL FOR INFORMATION OPEN 1 DAYS Wren

PET
a al

Page Twenty-two CIVIL SERVICE LEADER Tuesday, November 28, 1967 4

Eligibles on State and cruel Lists

PREY STORES CLK De SUPERVISOR OF FEDERAL AT [13 O'Brien F Troy 8.289 Dever OM Schnectady Sh CIVIL, ENG

1m eneetady nt | Pr ANSINe st [34 arn 2. Semeeotaty 2S HO [ho Soma i Matra es lbs Gr abllelabielsoade
H WO.L | A Sonitiine 15 tow BS t $1 Corte W Albany 44 Bolterieny W elves TIN tase
a ee LS Awe 16 tarnes tA Winston § Bulyn 2. Fitor § os
H ur f 17 Dorfman ar reel M Cnstletan Sowart 4
5 " SUPVOG RNCISH TAN INVEST [18 Fiction 1 Albany ¥ Smithtown Offs 1 a0
8 Otic Waterytie | 1 dotlrn Ww 1) Gives ME Woes King $ Levittown

F Chvietman ¥. Cobleskill |). ” p | 0 Abramowite daw Tahen M Athany '

Biute e comereere 2-5: ‘ et Meni, A. Alany Wilean A Coonan True Delmar

2 Dre L Jordan aah H_ Korhew : OY trae P Dktyn A. Anatrn | Barber J Atbany |

40 Damiano N Middletown | . i Cohan. 3 Rarae F Sehenoitaty

i sh sh LAR TREN BIOLOGY 100 Sporting -D Bhign eo,

WY HY 1 tucheon PF Colne f 101 Hifi M_Utinn

19 Kastinnn L Gansevoort A & Mellor  Pauzhleeeneie 10% Koninalit  Amterdivm

i v Athbany mise py 2 Bath 3 Mlogawskt FP Renawolaer |, | 108 Londen A. waters tit

4 Kellan J Buftate

4 than ¥ Definer

1 Keertayitte

K
15 Werkun DB Myhiietown
18 Jarnot D Cheekiowoen 5
17 Viannery K  Cohoe SH
Langue 0. Troy
Johwnon BD AtbANY 6.65

Bhlve i
47 Minehamion
12 Satire NYE ;
14 Wallore R_ Plishin

r
= fies -M Altanioo..00.s002

Ss Gusatel pen €
8 Githert 2 Baftalo " \ in

Ruttato

Anvorks M'Froy 18 MeKeon 1 Fab NOS | Atemanier V Amherst |. ; 108 Malloy Gm

Dickinson G_ Water [ime | 10 Youre A. Waatertord 21.5.) ath wee : ‘ Petal bre RorRT

Gorwan P ROT | EY Raters Rutale : ITE O'Rrien J Rinehart 2 Kebrer He Atbany

Gvitewm Aver 790/19 Woliliueler M. Colon heater © Rayalite

Alveient A Albany Reitly € No _ nM
Hurkabone @ Collins Cir AR RCONOMIST BCS MESRER Eo tn A 4's wiggly Peredlsap ssf eos
Dechert ¥ Bu 1 Rontan M 01/115 Foley K Albany f Galsute’ F Wuttnot to

 Eringer Ss Alvany 79.0 [TEA Shuvetiert at Sel
1 Lew q

Aasoie SEATISTCN tor TN Keo Tet PX

1 Sarat Albany a 8

t Marnes J Albany

a Kine € en iy

4 Terael Pf Bityn

Richards M_ Athoe :
A Whitesboro | ASSOC MECH ONS ENGR

nye

1St Hatiom D Stiltwater
21 Simpson J Pavilion .., 0.
Sloboda Ro Waterfiynt 1.

}5 Thorsland Ro London
6 Rubio Wo Forest Wille.

« cL)
4

ASSOC STVTISTEN for
Sehoearin BM DeWitt 52.5

peeaatRt’ SRA TeCW tor
Owensreak
i)

Onrits
Feline
Lemke ®
Kentrick P_Sehneernty .
J 130 Amalie @ Phesbine

eNGR pew
COUNTY
{Meet twain

Rourke Wo Delmar e
Glows P Bofialo o.oo.
Nedra EK Auburn oi ycec cess

4 Darmehy Baward
5 Pervevaue G Sohenewtaiy

‘oben ear
Nara ¥ Ones Fei
A Gasining 0022)

Diiehen G Opdemsbure

Campbel!_H Sehnctinty wae

Condon W Albany a @ kina ARCRETARY oF cOMMINSION oF

Wood Ho Menands Aah CORRECTHY : ieee

Honziant Do Rochester ASHE MRE CONS RNGH 1 Woodwark Mt Mutson Al aah

Bouchard Ww) Waters lin 4 Setokwt RE Maley THQ. t Venter Ronsaninne a itis Win) bd in

Weber M Sehenretady my Atte, s T Limb 8 AM |

OPTION ERIN DENTIST sm CLPRK PAYROLL. IDE 124% cater mes sabeate 4 Meney FAN

Grasbiy 8 Bs
$4 tenorete VC Montz Waele w Aonee ve) S341 143 Shall B Conese ee ASSISTANT DIRFCTOR. NURSING
Winirey W Rome ‘Heaton 5 SERVICE, ERIN COUNTY
Later M_ Vonrheeseit J Sein Genres 4 Granaia C minaie, wee
istertam awapyun f ane WMamerh sls ccsseece RRM
Rodd R_Amnstens Re Maweny 3 Glamer Butte me

Anthony $ Schenootndy
Ginter Re Albany

Pace H Buflalo, ;
Loicey Delma g
SE ha Bae bei o OUTH PAROLE WORKER
Reaves MBean ¢ 2

SR DATA PROCESS MACH OPER
ERIE COUNTY

Imtort G Kenmore

Yranceiia P Albany ooo.) e os ‘ :

Williams B Bepenectady 5 ala Mine CD batt AdoteRi,  -Attany Bate ah Mobs
ror epee s (| D ho sioner ont tre nang

Rossnblirm 4 Kane tM 14 ane A Alfiwen Fe Athany.

z

Adame J Binch: 15 Bryant Sf ‘Promansini

RESKARCH ANLVST GRE CLASSES 114 Serneiner. J Srracine

NOUTH PAROLE BUEVE | (Suter Atta salam A Tensavete
2 Cor Ht IN Meeine JF Atbwny

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bein S Flowing 74

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sa mevreue s otiamas © ANSany aes
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$s. hee Wi AL Binwhasen se vince S24) 88 Hatick © Rerne § Lennon Ro Delmar

Kaha
Miter Wook Albany A. Cohor

7 Tallman R Roohester 2.102252) 8Rd

MOTOR VEHICE eP aaresie M Atbany es & Lansendarf A. Seleamotady
1 Schwarte A Hantinet x a : North, Mt onawands
2 Cohn J Huntington Sia * ‘ 150 Willlams © Atbaiy : Niaxra Fis
ON ech eer aca ERE SS Bhd Les bin Dae Rey : 17% Young A Sibennetady sy. F waiervitet
£ Wein Westbury EATS aon 9 Veratns 28 timith B Oneanta > i
1 Senmounert FB rials ») ae Aibert ME Athans ; Lo crea i nanan ES
rie0 any : : ins
PRINCIPAL 8 Pile oat Jet Brodeur M. Albany Besimen A. Shin
1 Hovey Troy : Nieeao) De
2 Wer Sebo’ EN SSS 55.

& Buachard G Latham
4 Farkas Ho Albany

ASHT DIR COTTAGE TROGRAMS

ARCHITECTORAL DRAFTSMAN 1 —
ARSAT COUNTY
Oeehiiena No Massapraua
T | 2 Sidiey Schuster
}a Joseph M Cafirn Ekman)
4 Alfred Ke rowan Wo Hes
fh John Bee M
Robert Soh
Karel Avatald

Kayerman Le Be
Silverstein & Abbany |
7a | 35 Goldhamer B Deed Fark
Fa | 20 Bliss A Kenmare

Smith M Hndson
Gaftory K Highland

Hernstcin Be ‘ F: =

Mareano 1 ‘ rel yi Fading me parr @ Sansone eR AY ++

Bice Staats Pee way IT
* : Shame tea -Hawaii i Tour

seuth"®” Avon See ae All-Hawaii Tour

Rett, We Warmine <0 200 020M LAC Marit “ Pig a nl OBC Offered First Time

Friauell B Plovida ‘ . K mictsk  Revenies

Mareleroad * An all-Hawali tour is being of-

O1 Galvin + Oxwero :
“4 absee.s PLANT SUPT A MENTAL HYG
We Motebhine Adams oes eeoes 0 RUA) lia atom Te ‘on «| fered for the first time to members

Toowrantein
Giiftord Bo tnduster 5

‘o dahmntaw : ; r

Bete Sw tesdletown : : br rec Ny Sg] 2 Mutade oH tue 748\ or the Civil Service Emplovees

ae eras Oe See cet rtt 5 Hf i Wanton, 4 Walina aia ae rT conMmCTION Aesn. and their "

$8 Garon RB Rochester ».°+ ++ M uty eae Sines) ee <hpnted ve rie immediate fam.
: Sg RENE: aS ee ee Ae ai ba ut

veveral features avallable only to
CSEA participants.

‘The 16-day tour wil} leave New
York on April 6 and return there
April 21. ‘The price of only
$559, plus tax, includes a stay at
the Reef Tower Hotel on Walkikt
mer visits to the islands of
“Maui and Hawall; the free use of
Pr W MENTAL MG) a Kodak “Instamatic’ camera

‘ while tn Hawall; champagne tet
sight; tour of Pearl Harbor and
other sightseeing.

For CSEA members only, there

PLANT SEPT ¢ MENTAL WG
1 Koch 1 Bereyaluins
$ Yanhuben K Orangebu
A Sehaniy J. Wafta

Wile
¥ Seatin

Bahama Tour i he, EOMRRT MANOR, ACE | | 38: Martie Pecoerie
At Chri FE a tye me | eee See

+ istmas iseae soaoenmen oe a : on Mota
Is Now Open

‘A Syracuse
A Christmas tour to Grand
Bahama Island from Dec, 22 to
‘Dec. 31 is now open to Civil Serv-
fice Employees Assn, members and
thelr immediate families The 10-
day tour wili depart from New
York City and return there a Mol an. WW ks
Included in the price of 9290|% Bod Wassau Sanitary Dist, § — |; Quynh oN 2 | will be a free bottle of liquor pro-
fare round-trip jet transportation, |$ Sirah Aliany ane Aides Gain (0% Boost ip Suckcatbdey vt 791 | vided in every room plus unusual
gourmet breakfast and dinner,|* Dowie M Albany 731!  BALDWIN—It's a 10 per cent! 1 ¢is7 ox FiOS AF W—NRIE Co, surprise gifts.

alr-conditioned rooms at the) an mesnancn Anatyer | across-the-board increase for em 2 cay tn = Because this offering occurs

A
& Mullady 2 00 ain
® adden P Hyde Pe
10 Delahante J Mittheooke
J1 Spencer J Oxdensbure . 6

PLANT 80)

Asse

ROONOMIST EO
w

Engen Baia entertainment +) sete 5 ane ployees of Sanitary District No, 2,|4 Trott 8 Cheehionass °°. peal ~ pee] teleas we
aome Sehwarts DeWitt ‘The boost a aval le
For reservations end informa-| $ BYKe,4, Albene +. oqmne. la a. package oes pee vepuan strictiy limited and cannot be

hegotiated for the employees’ unit|} fiashine’E tarsvlte
of the Nassau chapter, Civil Serv- Assoc
lee Employes Assn. Negotiators P Brent)

O, Box 43, West wood, Lt,
are now completing a formal, writ New York, 11717--telephone (516)

nr .
We sentra, 4 Dusale “A runamoture see, 09012788693,

exceeded so early bookings ave
cdvised, Write to Mrs, Julia Dulty,

z

Sam Emmett, 1060 Bast 26th Bt, & hiown -K. Woothwves
Brooklyn, N.Y. 11210 Lena 3 Kaen 9. Wacker
i

after S pm, ds (212) 253-4488, gackell DB Randonvitie

& temmann J Albany.

IN DEFENSE Roe
WA

n
a
|
6 Wolf D Alb
tion brochures, write at once tq, 9 oll 2 Almur
*
ry

creme sORUOREN SECU aioe Dcnetd

d Tuesday, November 28, 1967 €IrvVib SERVICE LEADER Page Twenty-three
17 ‘stance in helping the veteran) loan permits the purchase of Ur =
VETERAN'S COUNSEL OR obtain a Certificate of Eligibility. |tarm and a farm residence which | 4. ory vo grave wonuume
THERE ARE TWO types of |) 10 occupied by the veteran per-|I ow art wenteat ixsvacwmers
(Continued from Page 21) _, the terminal date of the veteran’s| guaranteed farm loans. The first|*°Mtlly as his home. He may or VON MUSTO CENTER
that the loan will be a benefit! entitlement, It is important, there-|i© somewhat like a farni-business | ™*¥Y Not conduct farming opera- |] se coneMmtA #T,, wme NO. P
and not « burden. fore, that the veteran obtain a| loan. The veteran can purchase | "0S. If farming operations are| AVRANY — HO 2.0948
f KOREA WAR veterans may ob-| Certificate of Eligibility so he|term equipment and machinery |‘ be the primary source of the
tain a GI loan to purchase a home,| will know when his entitiement| for farming operations or land on borrower's income, then it note |
a farm, or business, An appraisal| expires, He can then make sure| Which to conduct farm operations, | M¢ ¢stablished that the venture
| om the property or business will|the lender knows his terminal| vt both, In such cases, he need not | "8% # teasonable likellhood of | ARCO
have to be made. It should be|date and that the lender submits | live on the farm but must ac-| cess, If the veteran plans toj] CIVIL SERVICE BOOKS
membered, then, that the VA tne loan application to the VA) tively supervise the farming op- use the residence but has a source all tests

ct ned ther than f th
appraisal report can indicate onty | vefore the deadline, The fact that| erations, Tt must be established In {income other than from the} PLAZA BOOK SHOP

y

& price which is reasonable for|/® veteran has obtained a Certi-| these cases that the farming ven-| {#"™, which will be the primary |
source of Income, then the farm-| 380 Broadway
he veteran to for the prop-|feate of Eligibility, or signed a| ture has a reasonable likelihood e fare pre pre
aty at the time an appraisal js|contract to purchase a home,| for success, This type of farm = operations need not be con- | any, N. Y.
j made, It cannot indicate whether |ferm, or business before his en-| Joan can only be made with a sidexed. || Mail & Phone Orders Filled
the purchase Is wise or unwise ent expired does not meet | suaranteed loan from a private |
' MATE a ;
t ot what the resale value may be equirements of the Inw. The | ender MAYELOWER - ROYAL COURT)
st some future time, or whether,|VA must have the ap APARTMENTS — Purnished, Un

ation be-| pay)
farm or bust-| sore the entitlement expiration | -
epay | date

COND TYPE of farm
n the

ness loa
elo sm earnings or the THE NEWLY RE ee
bh the Joan rhing ' STATE VETERAN Counselors pone er Gemoueeee |
arm or busine: Advice concern) and Veterans Service Agency D =8 s
he possibilities of 0 ‘| rectors, located in every county a %
uecessful farming tion can| 4, ¢ A i f
in the State, are available for as- |
ne secured ' ) BOOKS

n the County Agri 1054 Madison Ave., Albony if
cultural Extension t in the

vounty where the farm {s located Learn While You Karn
and, of course, so

* gna the local Chamber of Com WINTER TERM
SPECIAL INTEREST ond — —_ reasonable

«hick yay etek apa EVENING COURSES *
DEWITT CLINTON CORRESPONDENCE COURSES Just a “hopaway”

from State Campus

© of &

furnished, and Rooms. Phone HE

the veteran ¢

——}| +1994, ‘Albany?

of all. publish

|e $ BOOK SHOP

Bureau should be consulted Koos —8
revice concerning busine Register Now Through Dee. 9 Parties of Any Type
Classes Bexin Dee. TL From 20 te 400

"Our Only Business Is Parties”
GI LOAN application: be DEGREE - DIPLOMA - ly Business Is Parties

a Phone IV 2-268
Biaived by the oa be hates CERTIFICAT:
tecelved by the VA on or before ie wee * Dancing Saturday Nights *

STATE & EAGLE STS. ALBANY Write or Call for Brochure TROY'S FAMOUS & Downtown Albany.
; A KNOTT HOTEL and tnformation
| | oASARTEIE ated [|] connnune eoucation FACTORY STORE “ae
SPECIAL RATES FOR ener Americana atmosphere
N.Y.S. EMPLOYEES HUDSON VALLEY

Luncheon from $1.45

BANQUET FACILITIES AVAILABLE | Pescara saat ecLrornes J al — Men's Entertainment Nightly
cain Linabls ime Clormes Famous SILO Girls
Call Albony HE 4-6111

& THOMAS H. GORMAN, Gen. Mer SPORT COAT SALE NOW Silo is perfect for
: Help Wanted - Male 621 RIVER STREET, TROY Tel. As 2-2022 lunch & dinner
oe Help Wanted \ TURS, THUNS, & PRI, NITRS UNTIL 9, CLOSED MONDAYS. parties. Banquets too
REAL ESTATE GUARDS-ARMED_ §f|- : Your host—Bruce Meli
SALESMEN/ WOMEN GOOD PAY - BENEFITS

‘ aia i DAY SHIFT - STEADY =

“ aboubinbe WORK

D $15-S20,000 » 7 ry sa ” =

The world is at your
command, whether you go
by air, rail, bus or

aise aN? TRSRA TUT aaa hip, the
Shoppers Service Guide « vi —
Individual... Package | ALBANY
Group Trips or Tours : BRANCH OFFICE
WITH EVERY 15 IN GROUP—1 FREE FOR INFORMATION regnsding advertieog

Werk ly while .

FIRST- MET REALTY

| Mr, Schiff OL 4.5400

‘the distinctive one
8 Western Avenue
Many, N.Y

‘ Get The Authorized CSEA License Plate fis."'%, “Tewerae |

{by tha Cieit Service Employers Aam. fe that which le sold throngt: CSA
s Elk St. Albans. The plate whien elle for | an sine be ordered throug x . write or call
chapier eMoere Just about any fravel ad listed in any newspaper I JOSEPH TE BRLLEW

0% 80, MANMIN
DANY

BLYD,

or magazine in the East con be booked at Bytner
for the exact same price .. . even for less,
Before you book any trip why not call,

CEMETERY LOTS

| Beautiful non-sectarian memorial park |
} in Queens One to 12 fouble lots, Upstote’s Lorgest and Most Modern Travel Agency

wie awe ee BYTNER TRAVEL

write Bor S4i, Leader, 97 Dua
fin Family Trevel 21 Rep

N.Y. 10007, N.Y,
to Serve You
Open Daily ¥ te 9

SPECIAL RATES

for Civii Service Employee

Speciali.

Do You Have @ Fortune 105

9 Central Ave, — Next te Maylair

In Your Racket 463-1279 Albany, N.Y * -
ine inthe =
Guaranteed, 5 | } Black Bor dl | ~
ALL LANGUAGES |
TYPEWRITER CO. = =
Neves nana ys HOTEL ¥
219 W. Tht SR, NEW YORK t, Nw E) | Wellington
~~ Help Wanted - Mole Y ; ‘| NEEDED AT ONCE! DRIVE-IN GARAGE
dKKS. PoreTine, Mullis Mon! Help Wanted © Male 500 PART TIME OUTSIDE BYTNER REPRESENTATIVES. MR CONDITIONING + TY
A ileal Mien UH, 91.80) oe Crone Eager 0s, ¢ wo 10] LIBERAL COMMISSIONS. ALSO TRAVEL BENEFITS. Pav rong A
BM, 3 eve Yah ik & del. Pec. | Albany's lorgeet
Help Wanted - Male with
ILE Moss Morn & Ath Lite Albony’s only dsvota
ow. at St A Might up. Pooper: You'll like the com

if t wanted
Service with No
Service Charges--
d contact...

The Keesovilie Nathonal Bank
Keeseville, N. 804-153)
Member ¥.D.L0.

-~

“a.
es 196 STATE ST
| —_— (@PPONTE STATE CAPITOL
hee pow friendly travel agent,
SPECIAL WESKLY RATES

The store that cares...about you! ani a ER

Use Zip-Codes to help speed
your mail,

” More

Page Twenty-four

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

4

Tuesday, November 28, 1967

Troopers’

For Salary Boost

(Continued from Page 1)
sick leave credits and cash pay-
wents for said credits upon re-

firement, CSEA related to Kir-
wen that the Michigan State
Police presently pays 50 perceat

and that this is more econbmite! |

and practical than the using up
of sick leave.
@ Review of rules and regula-

tions which affect terms

conditions of employment prior
w thelr promulgation, Kirwan
suid no to this because, under
she present .setup, he prepares
the rules and submits them 10
tne Governor for approval.

yeelded to the point, how
tivat this also could be a nego-
tiuble item under the new ba
Shining setup.

@ Assign two men to a car
while on night patrol without
eaception during the hours of
midnight to daylight and in areas
when there are existing extra~
ordinary conditions, at all times,
Kirwan said he would take this
Proposal under study as to its
feasibility.

@ Assignment of personnel wo
rot more than one tour of duty

1/60th Report

you know that “as a
‘bs employee, one of your
greatest financial assets may
be your equity in your Re-
trement System?” Do you know
that “your Retirement System can
not only provide security for you
snd your family bu\ can also help
Meet unbudgeted current expenses
£8, loans to provice money for
tuition, a new car, medical costs
and some other necessity?” Comp-
troller Arthur Leviit tells us this
in his publication, “the State of
the System” issued June, 1966.

Yes, the Retirement System pro-

ides the State employees with
everything exeept adequate re-
Hrement pension, which is the
witimate purpose of a Retirement
System.

In his booklet, Comptroller
Levitt points out that the New
York State Employees’ Retirement
System is one of the largest in-
2titutions of its kind in the United
States, larger than all but a few
of the 1700-odd life insurance
companies in this country.
de not doubt thal tye Retirement
System will grow larger and
Varger. A system that consistently
Meburses leas than it receives,
must be necessity grow and grow
Will be said about this tn
our next column,

But how about those “whos
song years of service and efforts,
whose contribution.
this system!" How about these
Joyal employees, now flad
‘homselves in the status of second-
civil s¢rvants ‘The non-
eontributory 1/69th Law must be
made fully retroartive. ‘The
‘rement System mwust be
into & system that provides
retirement benefits for all
not illusion

Join the fight Jor a Just 1/60th
Pension Law! Write for your 1e-
tivrement figures! We weloome ail
sugwestions and ideas to achieve
success in the battio for full re-
Woactivity of the 1/60th law,

who

cine

full
em-
pioyees,

and

| eens

We |

helped build |

|
Re- |
made |

Demands

% & 24-hour period, unless they
ere paid at overtime rates, Kir-
|wan said the work schedule has
® great amount of flexibility and!
volt it was up to the supervisors |
4c revolve. +

@ Implement and adhere to a
rtPiet 40-hour work week for all

Thomas McDonough Awarded $750
From State Suggestion Program;

Second Highest Grant This Year

ALBANY—Thomas McDonough, president of the Civil Service Employees Assn.’s
Motor Vehicle chapter in Albany, has been awarded the second highest suggestion award
won by a State employee this year, according to Mrs. Ersa Poston, president of the New
York State Civil Service Commission,

| members of the State Police
| Kirwan stated that he would wel-
come a 40-hour week schedule
would not affect coverage ot
impair performance and would
aive such a schedule considera-
ton if it seemed workable and
easonable.

@ Permit

CSEA chapter offi-
to bave chapter materials |
approved for display on troop
bulletin boards. Kirwan said that
presently, any meeting notices
must be approved by him first
before they can be posted. He
stated that if CSEA wished to
hyye a bulletin posted, it must
have his prior approval, |

Dr. Wenzl also announced that
CSEA has retafned the services
of Max Weinstein to make an
rotuarial study of the State Po-|
hee Retirement plan.

Members of the Special CSEA)
Committee attending the session
vere Milton K. Remback of Troop
G committee chairman; Charles
Stewart, president of the Troop T
clapter; Dominick Aquillo, pres-
ident of Troop K; W.A. Thomp-
son president of Troop B; |
Bruce Payne, president of |
Troop D, and Michael Bonney,
representing the Troop C chap-
Iter,

CSEA officals attending, in ad-
dition to Dr, Wenzl, were Joseph
£ Lochner, executive director;
Seth Towse, counsel, and Thom- |
as J. Luposello, program specialist

Mental Hygiene
Overtime Pay

(Continued from Page 19)
(disruption of transportation ar-
rangements or outside employ-
ment) or institution inconvenience
if the rescheduling and reshuffling
of many other employees were
| Necessary or tf such adjustments
would cause coverage of staffing
problems.

Lagatt pointed out that if an
employee works « substantial
amount of time beyond his normal
work day due to emergency con-
| ditions, unforseen absences, or

work load, such extra time worked
should generally be paid as over-
time unless the employee express-
es a desire for a schedule adjust-
ment within the same work week,
and such adjustment can be made
without inconvenience to the in-
ttution.

“Serious employee moral prob-
| lems can develop,” Lagatt said, “if

employees working overtime (be-

yond thelr shifts and on thelr
| norma! pass days) are arbitrarily
given sehedule adjustments as a
matter of polic

“Overtime compensation shoula
be recognized as a positive tool to
perform needed services in areas
where there are high vacancy
rates or In emergency situations,"

The overtime issue was one of |
the first orders of business taken
up at the Oct, 10 meeting. At
that tne, CSEA presented the
department with a proposal passed

McDonough, serving
term as chapter president. was
awarded $750 for his suggestion
that the code which is used by
the Audit Section of the Depart-)|
ment of Motor Vehicles to desig-|
nate the counties of the State
be preprinted by computer on
the punch card registration form
The Department said this meth-
od would make it easier to com-
pute the fees due the county
to be looked up and entered by |
hand on the accounting forms,
the department stated.

McDonough, who lives in Gran- |
ville in Washington County, is
also first vice-president of the
Capital District Conference of
CSEA and a member of the State-
wide Board of Directors,

MeDonough’s award was one of
92 made during October, the high- |
est monthly figure in the history
of the State Employees Sugges-

his fifth

tion Program, inaugurated in|
1947,

In addition to MeDonough's
award, others cited included;

A joint award was given to
Victor Boye, and Robert E. Craw-
shaw, both of Loakport, both
with the Department of Trans-

| portation, for their suggestion to
| eliminate the

items which re-
quired frequent maintenance and
replacement on the hopper
spreaders used to place sand and
salt on the ‘highways. Another
$100 award went to Harry J
Ferares, of St. James, chief baker
in the Department of Mental
Hygiene, who proposed wrapping |
two loaves of bread in a single
package to save both time and
expense, Patrick Punch of Stater:
Island, Workmen's Compensation
Board, was also awarded $100 for |
his idea that the subpoenas for
the production of records needed
by, the Workmen's Compensation
Board cases be served on hospi- |
tals by mail instead of in person
by investigators. This will reduce
costs by saving investigator time
and travel expenses.

Helen M. Kehver of Albany, De-
Pariment of Agriculture and Mar-
kets, received $75 for proposing
issuing blanket orders covering
nisht quarantine of dogs to re-
place countywide orders which!
had been the practice.

Reciptents of joint awards of
$50 were Margaret M. Whelan.
and Justina H, Garela of the|

Bronx, both from the Department | Brooklyn, and Edith Bloom, of the |" he Association's negotiating teams

of Motor Vehicles; John J. Guay
of Watervliet and William J, Kil- |
gallon of Troy, both from the}
Department of Taxation and Fi-
nance; Donald Healey of Schnec-|
tady and Georgiana Verpitiot of
of Albany, both from the Depart- |
ment of State, Rose M. Putia of
Albany, Department of Taaation
and Finance, also received a $50
award |

Thirty-five dollar awards went
to Madelyn Mullineaux of Latham,
Department of Taxation and Pi-

| nance; Edith M. Polmsbee of Troy,
| Department

of Motor Vehicles;
and Melvin B, Sedgwick of Hills-

Address them to this column, care) by Mental Hygiene Department | dale, Department of Transporta-

of The Loader,

delegates tn September,

' Yon. |

| partment

| $10 each.

“A joint award of 30 was pre-| Everett G. Ford of Reiiaselaer,

sented to William G, Tilton
Pulaski,

ot
and Kenneth R. Cor-

| sette of Constantia, both with the

Department of Transporation.
Twenty-six grants of $25 each
were earned by Robert B. Streeter
of Tribes Hill, Mrs, Rose A, Hol-
mes of Albany, both from the
Department of Health; William

| H. Williams of Golden's Bridge,

Joseph J. Gentileore of Moravia,

| Anne M. Green of Camillus, and

Robert J. Haynes of Watertown,
all from the Department of Trans-
portation; Catherine A. Panisz-
czyn of Troy, and William Lenko-

| wsky of Brooklyn, both from the

Division of Employment; Harry
S. Miller of Brooklyn, and Jean
Minnis, of the Bronx, both with
the State Insurance Pund; Jesse
Kuttner, of Manhattan, Hilda
Spector of Kenmore, and Caro-
lyn A. Bielawa of E. Greenbush,
all from the Workmen's Com-
pensation Board; Ruth Saland of
Merrick, Martin De Jesus of Ja-
maica, Arthur E. Baltruweit of
Plattsburg, and Linda Bartholo-
mew of Schnectady, all from the
Department of Motor Vehicles.
Other $25 winners were Ernest
S. Baker of East Freetown, De-
partment of Conservation; Kath-
ryn E, Mayo of Latham, Depart-
ment of Taxation and Finance;
Theron §, Smith of Hunt, De-
of Mental Hygiene;
Michael G. Coyne of Mechanic-
ville, Office of General Services;
Elizabeth M. Reddish of Albany,

| Department of Audit and Con-

trol; Joseph A. Vespi of Albany,
Department of Civil Service; Jon
E, McNeal of Rexford, Thomas J.
Ryan of Troy, and Claude &,
Face of Niverville, all from the
Department of Agriculture and
Markets.

Two State employees earned
$20 awards: George J. Syrett, Jr,
of Voorheesville, Department of
Motor Vehicles, and Helen M,
Burns of Albany, Department of
Civil Service.

Awards of $15 each went to
Anne R, Gonyea of Albany, Diyi-
sion of Youth;
of Horseheads, Department of
Transportation; Max Stenzler of
Flushing, Division of Employment,
Ambrose C, Babella of Schnec-

Eugene D. Parke |

Department of Taxation and Pie
nance; Grace MeKeone of Pat-
tersonville, Department of Civil
Service; Thomas J, Ryan of
\North Troy, Department of Agri-
culture and Markets, and David!
Gelb of Manhattan, Banking De-
partment,

Those receiving a Certificate of
Merit without cash grants were
Robert A. Jones, Kenneth W,
Ward, Nicholas P. Barbera, Helen
Chico, John Treyz, Jean Bur-
roughs, Adrienne L. Rothbiatt,
Richard V, Gibson, Aaron Nath-
an, Louis Schafranck, Max Feh-
der, Anne Sklar, Paul Stevens,
Phyllis L. Bebernits, Sylvia Gel+
man, Marcia L, Holtermann,
George Scheck, E. Noah Gould,
Clara E. Yukie, Richard W. Saake,
Veronica F. Kupack, Madeline
Bradt, Kenneth Rathbun, Ken-
neth FP. Belanger Nathan Rubin,
Kenneth R, Hill, Lucille M. La-
Pointe, Hyman J. Eisenberg, and .
Garry A. Braddy,

Pay Negotiations

(Continued from Page 1)
of Operating Engineers and tno@
Safety Officers Benevolent As-
soclation—were heard, along with
opposing views from CSEA's
counsel and, representing the
State, the attorney general's office,

The Board directed both sides
to submit written briefs by Nov,
27, following which it will make a
determination on its right under
the Taylor Law to issue the re-
quested stay order to hold up
CSBA's negotiations. Hearings on
the main Issue, recognition of
CSEA, will resume on Dec. 4,

Dr, Theodore C. Wenzl, CSRA
president, commenting on the
most recent development said,
We are gratified that the State
édministration has reaffirmed ‘ts
luitentions to proceed with nego-
tations in accordance with the |

{

“We intend to go all out in |
pushing our demands for higher
sularies, improved fringe bene
Hits and better working conditio:
sox all State employees,”

Heading CSEA's  negotiatin}
team will be Dr. Wena, John GC.
Rice, CSEA's Counsel, and Solo-
mon Bendet of New York City,

tady, Department of Taxation
and Pinance; Roselyn Israel of

Bronx, both with the Workmen's
Compensation Board; Pamela}
Ross Kaplan of Manhattan, Divi-
sion of Youth; Robert Diaz of}
Manhattan, Department of Motor
Vehicles, and Mary A, Grant of|
Rensselaer, Department of State

‘There were eleven awards of
They were given to
Arthur H. Israel of Albany and
Gerald Lefcourt of Brooklyn, both
from the Workmen's Compensa-
tion Board; Prances B, Sussman
of Albany, Department of Motor
Vehicles; Deborah Stafford of
Manhattan, Doreen Prout of Buf-
falo, Max Phhder of Woodside,

and David Rubin of Brooklyn, all| full eredit for this socompll

from (he Division of Employment;

member of CSEA’s Board of Di+
sectors, who has been a member of

or the last several years,

Suffolk CSEA Wins
|Reclassification Fight

SMITHTOWN — The Suffolk
chapter, Civil Service Employees
Assn., has won 4 fight for reclase
sifteation of two motor equipment
operator tiles in the county Mos-
quito Control Commission.

As a result of the demand
pressed by the chapter, one tile
was upped to labor foreman and
another to heavy equipment p=
eva Richard Champlin,
president, sald “CSEA can

Metadata

Containers:
Reel 11
Resource Type:
Periodical
Rights:
Image for license or rights statement.
CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
Date Uploaded:
December 22, 2018

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