Civil Service Leader, 1964 January 21

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Contact Your Legislators

| See Page 14

' \Pressure Groups Map Fig'tt
THE P «, 5 =
E PUBLIC ~.< Rockefeller Firm On Pay

EMPLOYEE

By JOSEPH F. FEILY
President,
Civil Service

.

A Pay Raise, You And Your Legislator

Fike For State Aides As

Legislators Get Budget

(Special to the Leader)

HE RESPONSE so far to our appeal to all chapters of ALBANY, 20—The major battle for State emplo in the 1964 legislative ses-
Civil Service Employees n, to contact their loca} S!o% begins thi bn. Capitol Hilt.
lators requesting support of the Governor's salary-| Gernot | =
retirement program for State employee: nt sy o give State wo a seven) Sta axpa and
generally speaking. However, some chapters have been slow ti OO CIAVEN -DEECENY “Et DAY (Te Acer : , .
n reacting t e { R Ry Ne = Fivesatek: Avatut 1 Republican confer-
in reacting to this urgent need for roots work detail  psmbinaaion ‘wed ¢ 4hgeu BP Gas a emt Kee
IF YOUR ASSEMBLYMAN or does not our benefits program, which} Powerful pressure groups al-| sembly, some opposition to the
direct request for support of this measure and Is besieged commendit ady have b 4 drive to Bre-| pay raise plan has been voiced by
only by those groups who oppose any new benefits for civil et of the plat fis-| vent passage o ¢ rye aki inors. interested tk
servants, he might logically a are not inter- Th will) program, inet nme ch projects as more ald for
sted in the raise ols or more highway funds,
aes eae Although the cost of the pro=
HE ENTIRE program wil ly cost about $43,-/ Cen
ENTIRE 5 am W ut $43.- CSEA Plans Appeal d out in long t
000,000 and this year alone w An expenditure of » the Civil Sers
$13,000,000. It would be well to note here, a ed out in Association, will
torial pages New 1 * Clai ition fr ts
nny new ma n Included nterviewers, Claims some
ab mes: I should Ex £ R Il ti proposed that the
also point out, however, that The ne Examiners Keallocarion t for other pure
in forecasting the fate of various programs included in the ° R e d B K Il po!

All membe of ¢ Legislature
~ oalaagenns Pag cipteanicbi ree vas orosan Bld Rejected By Kelly ee
“black,” because of oppositior some economy-minded a tat : NY ay

i badass , ALBANY, Jan. 20—J, Earl Kelly, director of the Stat wed on Page 3)
legislators. : h Gommoneat baat
: ; 10 lassification and Compens at 3
THERE HAVE been other indications that we cannot?  seapeesskanrnyea Ds pei sai
imply sit back and assume that the proposal w il smooth Lice nao relpeunacpiaay 7 W; Hl tl N
employment insurance claims examiners
rly through the Legislature without the help of all of our, 4"! DIOVIR SIG: RTD Sree arren heads New
Service Employees Asst
members,
te ee cay uaa cnerecorn amr A
PERHAPS IT would be well to explain here, once more, |“ ae he [Pena . a otarttong txt ll ald . a er
: t commit nmedi- | applicatior vositions: la
She Sakeiviat SeAUTes: OF Wie: Dee For the Hime being, 1 led Kelly's decision to| in 1960 (From Leader Correspondent)
is not possible to give the precise amount of the raises for) eee et ie ‘No Change,’ Says Kelly BUFFALO, Jan, 20--John R.
each, individual employee because each worker's rate of | In last week's decision, bs: Warren. & lectuter in e@etas
os ition to the J e ent § pm and tax status rs a hea ast Ser rt
contribution to the Retirement System and tax status diffe The application sought to re-| ® hearing last September, en aiid W clawing and tee
somewhat. However, the program is not as complicated a5) yjjoeate employment 4 Pah We Sie ne ene ee velopment ‘coordinator, re=
* some people seem to fe .@ Unemployment ¢laine. exam ali "I ma y sane ee atly wan elected an the nial
THE PROGRAM {s divided Into two parts: 1) the assump-| jner from grade 12 to stade 14,) 19K Me HMre stale Siler Sb Alama ag es
tion of three additional percentage points of a member's total en t Pedal p aioe Pe ibaa Nie 6 ganized State University of
, ) ti om grades 16 to
(Continued on Page 16 yates and program nomenclatu Buffalo chapter, Civil Service
- our 1960 decision could effectively) Employees Assn.
be es 9 lust in this procecdings: | phe chapter, part of the CSEA
0 SICH or aid, “Appropriate data tend! wooemn Co are ae
to ate that the petitioners) snout 900 employees of the fore
Ie {snot gt thas Deeausel TS ooiaie on mutate cow
‘igs nt salaries are low, re pa. of t tate university $y¥se
rou, I (4 ain i tment has been especially dif P*"
cat This! ficult and ineffect! te rate | ‘ikea iasin
epea e Of enaploree turnover han be hers Eleete
hig Oth s: First vice presi
: : ep. nader i « Wik shaves: ius prseran andlGink Soeke lank: onndl oe
Carlino Emerging Hsaceedicon’ uuan ihave coscies a -eadent. Barua Canrwal Bud
Fi February is the month for new applicant \ during the three years (since th president, Iry Fowler;
As A Champion Of ice Employees Assn, Group Life I ce ser age 50 to g denial) have not made the | fourt ° Dolores
nto the plan without taking the usual medical examination, | ¥°'% Of the average interviewer o siesinyles
Pp bli E | agra sealap ial rpe ua Rade ai laa claims examiner moi cult 0) Robe corresponding
UIC mp ened Ap Bok: Rae Diss more complex they re- | seeretary, Marilyn Hutchins and
3 see eriod Was! totally disabled Hescribed (Continued on Page 16) trea George Mill
i pe powe! » in the | mad P, Feily, president ‘0
State ure who is | of Civi Si te yous ® Double Indemnit 1 the even . —_
giving strong recognit to!“ who sa) are|of secidental deat no adedt-| e
* the size and importance of the | ™4ny ad ; He plan for! tional ¢ as bed In th ew em, ers: ip oa
civil service vote is Assembly i ah bs ,
Speaker Joseph F. Carlino. As| Special Features } © Practivaliy alt claims are pal 4
a of fact, Carlino is) t ‘ bio os or
t aN aT cas jaw tified of death
fast becoming one Of the |” @ no medical examination dur- | n
B) ms of the 1 t dat y 2 1
ng February, 1064, for. applica: To date, nearly 24-miltion dol | ALBANY, Jan, 20-—-A membership goal of 125,000 has
tnder age BO who have not beet lars has been paid to beneficiaries) noon set by the state-wide membership committee of the
Carlino the fh previously rejected for this inwur-| under the CSEA Group Life Plan.| — :
in the Legislature ce On the basis of the medical The continued developn of the| Civil Service Employees Assocation
give unqualified support to « pro- | examination plan ls made possible by ever ine} THe ieee Se me con at | Boost Tuembership in the State
gran Governor Rogkstell © 51,500 Insurance protec> ereasine membership becoming in- | BY ReXt Sep bs ee Se |. {and county divisions of the Asso
that will given pension benvfite| tion for 18 cents bl-w pay-| sured, The total membership of | !st Week in Albany at an organis| oa iioy
and increased take-home pay to| roll period, CSEA is now more than 120,000, | #Honal meeting of the commit. Area Report
Biate workers. And he is giving} © Premiums are waived M you, Sta lice, prison guards, and| tee. The state-wide avoup 4:80] ‘phe 15-member committee,

(Coatinued on Page 2 should become

permanently and

(Coutinued on Page 3) made several recommendations w (Continued om Page 8)
Cmvin SERVICE LEADER

Page Two

Mayor rid Comptiotes Offer Plan

Increased Pension Interest
Sought For 147,000 Aides

A plan that would permit 147,000 New York City employees to earn additional interest
on their pension savings—and cost nothing to the taxpayers — was advanced by May
Wayner and Comptroller Abraham D. Beame t his week.

Legislation will be sought in Albany to permit the increase from three to four percent
on savings on all pensions star

The Mayor and Comptroller said

en aiid — a | the greater benefits will be the re-
sult of increased yields of pension
z i ) : funda, under a new investment
Your Public Pictee meee tee het
1962, when Beame became
; u omptrolier and custodian of the
Relations IQ cope cho
| funds now total about $3.6 billior
By LFO J. MARGOLIN |and new money for inveetment
flows into them at the rate of
. — about $460 million a year
Mr. Margolin is Adjunct Profesor of Public Relations in the} All City pension systems now
New York University Schoo! of Public Administration and is Viee | D4¥e About 217,000 members, Usi-
President, Public Relations, of A. J. Armstrong Co., Ine, der State Inw, about 65,000 recrive
The views expressed in this column are those af the writer anc de | 4 Per cent @ year Interest ot ¢t
Bot vecrssarily constitute the views of this newspaper. pension savings. The rematnin
147,000, having Joined since July
HE Wall Street Journal” solemnly informs us there's |1, 1947, earn only 3 per cent

T

States
civ

a “Civil Servant War"
And, of course.
il servants,

In a story literally close to a yard long, the highly re-
spected and influential financial daily reports “the war be-
tween the citizen and the civil servant rages on.”

The basi¢ flaw in the “Journal's” news roundup
uses up nearly $5,000 worth of its valuable space (at national} Increased earnings of © perioa
advertising rates)—is that the body of the story fails to sup- | investments, during the past two
port the scare headlines. ears, have resulted from the new

We were beginning to feel lik yar correspondent again | #vestment program, It had pre-
when we saw the headlines: "Civil Servant War, Many Amer-|Viouslv been the practice for
jeans Cinim They Are Put Upon By Bungling Bureaucrats,” | CO™MPMONts 10 sell large blocks

of New York City bonds to the

But when we read the small print, we experienced a pension funds.
journalist's sadness at the misfire of a news story, Which} “our City bonds ave excell
was reaching for a war and ended up with a pop-gun, investments of unquestioned

The “Journal” lists six “minuses” for civil servants, but) ty," Mr. Wagner and Mr. Boame
at the same time records eight fat “pluses.” Let's list them | said, “but their yields are ox:
all for the record: | tremely low—not high enoush to

“Minus” No, 1; A Chicago woman was bombarded with | Meet the Interest guar
mailed summonses to settle a string of parking tickets for |" employee members.

“As a result, there have been
her car, which had been stolen months before. annual deficits, totaling $200 muil-

going on throughout the United
it's about the public's relations with

| These 3 per centers will be the
beneficiaries of the proposed tr
islation

‘The Mayor and Compt
cussed this proposed inte
vision with representatives of
major employee groups, before
which | making the announcement

er a

“Minus” No, 2; The Internal Revenue Service in NeW) ion tn the past 25 years. Thes
York dunned a taxpayer with a “sixth and final” notice for | deficits have been made up oy
$250 in back income taxes, then told him he should have ap-| contributions of tax money from
pealed while the other five notices, all misaddressed, were | the Clty treasur
in the mail, As a first step, the practice of

“Minus” No, $; A Cleveland man's sewer connection was | Selling City bonds to the pennon
mistakenly severed for non-payment of a sewer tax on a ‘at M a eet

ince Januar ve beet
house six miles away. ce January 1, ) Have been
sold at public sales to private

Minus" No, 4; It requires seven steps and three months | nelhawe
to get a driver's license in Pennsylvania. New money flowing into the

“Minus” No. 5: The Army made a mistake in the specifi-

cation of a tank part, wouldn't listen to a change, and in- |
sisted on the part being made wrong.
Jinus" No, 6; It cost a Chicago company an extra $2,-
000 in travel expenses when a Federal Trade Commission ex-
aminer adjourned @ nearly-completed hearing because he
had to make his car pool.

Now for the “pluses”:

pension funds has been used to
purchase corporate securitios and
Mortgages, of the soundest, safest
type, which offer ylelds far greater
than the City bonds,

of short-maturity City
jennee by the pension funds, have
been sold to private investors at
“secondary” sales, These bonds
are of great value to private in-
Vestors because thelr returns are

© “Plus” No. 1; The San Francisco Pollce De: ipartment |*
set up a four-man community relations unit to hea: citizens’
complaints. (New York City has this, too.)

| that

As a third step, selected blocks |
bonds |

Tuesday, January 21, 1964

(Continued from Page 1)

this support when the only new man went on to say:

| money proposed

position in the Assembly from
back home in Nassau County, but
he is not letting this interfere

with his endorsement of a State
n indicated
that county employees in Nassau
‘tise this year,

pay raise. He has ev

e deserving of a 5
too.

The Assembly
ognization of th

Speaker's

gan to emerge ms
leader In Nassau.
took over the
Democratic ree!

leadership
ations

in

Republican vote margin
the wane, He urged 1

was on

county officials and when he list-

ed these publicly, new thinking
about the civil service was one of
them
Relationship Established
Tn very short order, Carling

established a 1 relationship
with the Nassau nty chapter
of the now 120,000-member Civil
Service Employees Assn.: proposed
hefty pay increases and saw that
county employees got major pro-
grams voted State employees, such
as a partially-paid health ihsur-
ance plan. His reasons: “Nassau
County has to get with the times

in the treatment of tts civil
servants,"
One CSEA leader in Nassau

County described his dealings with
Cartino in this way: "If you take
him a program or idea that is
logical and feasible he will listen
| to you, If you ean convince him
he should back the idea,
he'll go all the way, He keeps hin
word, once it’s given.”

been reinvested in higher yteld-
ing corporate securities and mort+
gages.

Wagner and Beame said: “It
| ts now estimated that the earnings
Jon all pension funds will be in-
creased sufficiently to eliminate

| funds was stopped. All new issue} the deficits completely by June
| 90, 1964, After that

we look for-
d to the probability that the
w program will result In an in-
| terest surplus, above and beyond
the earnings now guaranteed to
pension fund members."

Under the legislation to be of-
fered at Albany, the City will be
permitted to use such surplus for
increasing the yields on the pen-

sion savings of those who now re-
celve 3 per cent a year. The leg-|
islation wili be effective from

January 1, 1964,

Interest credited to the accounts
of these 147,000 employees will oe

ree-
importance of
the civil service vote goes back
some four years ago when he be-
he GOP county
When Cariino
reins,
the
county were on the rie and the

new attitudes
in many areas tn the thinking of

© “Plus” No, 2; The Tennessee Revenue Department
called in a consultant and began a public relations program
to obtain public cooperation,

© “Plus” No, 3: The Coast and Geodetic Sur office in
Manhattan are the “mostest” in courtesy and intelligence, |
* “Plus” No, 4: The 5: tail in Washington sre a dedi-

cated group, who helped an Ohio Company with an urgent
apitalization plan,

® “Plus” No. 5: The Passport Division of the State De-
partment is a model of efficiency,

© “Plus” No, 6: The Federal Government now
in 15 days, instead of three months,

© “Plus” No. 7; The City of Cleveland has a Ciey Com-
pluint Bureau, which is obligated by law to answer beefs
within five days,

Plus”
ting Customer Relations Service which tries to answer every
inquiry or complaint within three days,

O.K., everybody! Put the bean-shooters away; play nlee, |
don't fight!

pays its

bills

|
No, 8: The U.S, Post Office has a smoothly-opera-

exempt from income taxes & adjusted upward, to within on
feature which ts of no value to| tenth of one per cent of the ac-
the pension funds, because they | tual earning during 1964, and each
Bre exempt from taxes to begin | calendar year thereafter, The rate
with will be permitted to rise not
Private purchasers of these | higher than 4 per cont, but will
jShort-maturity bonds have been| never drop below the present %
$0 anxious to buy them that they | per cent,
have pald substantial premiums,

This same organization spokes-
“Let me

by Rockefeller | point out that we are fortunate
for any program ix for the raise. |
Carlino has plenty of calls on his

on both sides of the political
fenee, We haye a Republican
Board of Supervisors but County
J Executive Eugene Nickerson, @
Democrat is a good friend of the
county worker, too, Nobody tries
to put us In the middle out here.”

Carlino, of course, wants to
get the executive post back under
| GOP control and it will be one
| of his major objectives in the
election next Fall.

State-wide Image

While Carlino has supported
State worker programs before, he
has never done 60 as strongly as
he has in the opening days of the
1964 session of the Legisiature,
Civil Service employees have usual-
ly had powerful friends tn the
Legislature, such as Senate
Majority Leader Walter J. Mae
honey, but they can always use
the good will of men of Carlino’s
stature.

Just how far Carlino will go in
support of civil service goals this
year or In the future ix not pre-
| dictable nt this moment. He does
hot yet have a state-wide image
jas a pro-publio employer leader,
He ts astute enough, however, to
observe the heavy publicity that
other civil service friends have
earned in the public employee and
daily press. And he certainly ts
aware of the nearly 1,000,000 civil
service voters who, with their
families, comprise some 20 pere
cent of the voting population In
the State.

Carlino, although not stating
50, {8 obviously eyeing higher
public office. Enthusiastic sup-
port from the civil service won't
hurt those ambitions, As 1964 un-
roils, he appears to be making
& strong impression in that area,

| Applications Now Open!
Prepare Thoroughly for
| WRITTEN EXAM MAR. 21

New, Higher Salary

158

A WEEK
AFTER 3 YEARS

PENSION AFTER 20 YEARS
Ages: 20 through 28—Min, Hat. 5°8"*

ENROLL NOW! DON'T DELAY!
Practice Exams at Every Class
Be Our Guest at a Class Session

1 pie we hale pm
jon. don. at 80 paw
FAM tn and Bring Coupon

we

HO Merrick MIVd, damaton
Dawe

Addins
Chey

ik

Money realised from the sales—
including the premiums—tus also

OVE SEBVICE LEADIK
Aweriea's Leading y
tor Publis Employees

PUBLICATIONS, INC
York, §.¥.-10007
Telephone? M-Ncekman 30010
Witinied Bach Tu eday

ou aeoomd-elane

TROY'S FAMOUS

Batered
soa

matter ust

SEMI-ANNUAL

toaes “Gnidgepert
e Act of March a,
Autit Bureau ef

Bubscriniion Prive $8.00 Ver Year
Ind\vhinal gopher, tae |

KELLY CLOTHES, INC.

MEN'S & YOUNG MEN’S FINE CLOTHES

62) RIVER STREET, TROY
2 Blocks No. of Hoosick St,

FACTORY STORE

SALE NOW ON

Tel. AS 2-2022

-
Tuesday, January 21, 1964 CIVIL SERVICE LEADER S64 _ Page Three

' Pilgrim State Clerical
” Aides Suffer From Title BroomeCountyC SEAMap Ss

inequities, CSEA Charges BinghamtorManbertisies

ALBANY, Jan, 20-—The Civil Service Employees Assocla-
tion last week protested alleged “title inequities” Involving
clerical employees at Pilgrim State Hospital at West Brent-

(From Leader Correspondent)
BINGHAMTON, Jan. 20—The Broome County chapter, Civil Service Employees Asso-

ioe — _ | eiation, has started a campaign to sign up about 600 employees of the City of Binghamton.
behing a ae Some of the city employees are
The CSEA stand was take nt ation by vir > increms s
Gacchaa. Heacia wabtee: ital Gua Gad Bd ni Three M ° P, oe now members of Binghamton
® grievance hearing before th work load an vsibility re- i Ky tio. sae
, t punell 101, Civil Service Forum,
Rey (elals, Gineratre Anant maiis. tiem thu Rbnetnend (6 QJOF FOSIIONS ALE 009 20. cv coves rorum,
Board in NY. City, It he attendants mit of title—to ¢

culmination of long standing eal work.” He sald, “the

Filled In Correction Dept. i029!‘

/oeeagyrciaae ae jamin L, Roberts of Albany, CSEA
rea i sos "es ; ALBANY, Jan. 20—Three major administrative appoint- field representative
¥ cal Yac conditior Also present at the hearing were PS
4 : fe as Se age a ely Given: seth: a irector ot ments In the Department of Correction have had the side Burrows said a successful cam-
the hospital aa clerical the hospital: Granvill Hills, per-| effect of causing other appointments in the department, | paign would double the member-
A bik hionnt sa Bevo ctiagit ; ft LaVallee, form ship of the Broome County chap-
help in mar soninie cana rator of the De- Oe ean ter, which now has 509 members
Felkel and Rice Appear p ot a HH ; ards | Roberts said the Association has
on by the Appea wander ; z
. A ; : X-| taiked with ton city of-
The employee's delegation at the poard. of th Andrew V. Cle. Auburn by Paul D. McGir
hearing, held in New York City, yy r ; iv av nie, CO@IRISGORIE, Medebacaing’® who has been ficlals about payroll deductions
; ; New mi ’ “\~| superintend of the for dues and for a list of ail etty
included G Pelkel, president Pi ie pa
Pi State Hospital| ~ = journe Correctional Institu employe:
c Marian) Mari . Others receiving promotion=) He said he plans to start talking
Mariar ft were: Harry itz, deputy super-! perse ith potential members
chairman of the clerical works 19 Correction Employees ; erry, Petts, Gemaihy_ mane | personaly with potential Mee
committee hospital; He‘ 5 ndent at the We rxsackle in an attempt to get them to join
z thay x ational Institution; Edward H.| the C8EA.
Davi, commen member, 0d Honored At Woodbourne <...." 2...) ue cota auive i
: : — at Woodbourne Correctional In-| not an attempt to “raid” any other
oe WOODBOURNE, Jan. 20 ineteen em of th tution; Robert J, Henderst ation, He said employees
pits ;
' Oe eee ‘ Woodbourne Correctional Institution were recently honored correction hospital security supe belong to ‘one oF. more or=
for length of service. William A ir deputy superin- | Visor ar Dannemora State zattor
tendent, who retired Au 1963, had served 40 years In“ P. Gilligan, di contended that the Civil
the Department of Correction. wi n Haven; Johti L.! Service Forum is “primarily a
a : Zelker, assistant deputy deri! social organization.”
Others recetving awards. fo 1 orga
at ee Bu A spokesman for thi
tviee were: for W years—Cap- | ficers and George D shinee f
e , , 1 declined
Cha: I Lt. Theodore | erigineer; or 20 yents—G. Allison ont at E e x ats ny
ams, John Black a y i ; 2 aE - number o! mi
mond Johnso: ‘orrectlo I : Wy ‘ titution, and T. Leslie Alexane that organization about
Sa. cers; for 25 yenrs-—Martin O'C MeKeok, gon Brad, Ceistant deputy superintendent | 1800 Civil Service employees. in
yracuse re it nor and m Vredenburg, Neu- owt. iad t Coxsackie Vocational! city government, the city-owned
J 2 jek as owalik | institution Binghamton General Hospital and
Union Assets Up ene ie: the Binghamton school system
Roberts sald the current mem-
ee New Goal—125,000 Memb ri dive
Bass nie meow New Goa , @MMbELS [erie sive nc nine a wen
¢s : | as firemen or policemen,
SYRACUSE, Jan. 20—Mem- (Continued from Page 1) in their particular arew 10 have their own organizations
bership, assets and Joans o I i by Jam L, Adaw It wa com ii
ship, a a 1s of aded b uns, ¢ t was recommended \eld
the Syracuse chapter, CSEA. Peter W. Doran cha of the State division Stn chs aavnesite Future Goals
Federal Credit Union, are all . and 1 Plaumenbaum 0 Col ny ‘thelr aren initial campaign ts not
up this year, James Macklin Services Held chairman of the cou division, or ar to furth toward school-system em-
treasurer, revealed this ¥ POUGHKEEPSIE, Jan. 20 — Pur eard a report from: CSEA) th and to as-| Pl either, he said. That prob-
in announcing details of the a . 1 concern: membership sist in mem-| ably will come later, he added.
fp sage lina Reniveaty ani vecianeelbncareoir halt ne Burrows, the first Negro to head
group's annual dinner mee for Peter W. Doran of Rou an rege Gains Ghasten
" 82, Hopewell Junctias ‘ Another important item ap-| © :
ing. y iH pewell Junet ,, Social Welfare proved by the committee was a(tmployed as a licensed practical
At the meeti set for 6 p.m M ran, 63, Had ve ie Di D ecomme sve. Muse at the Broome County In-
Jan Tommy Del's Restau-| ployed for the ay years wv a Dinner-Dance recommer Bie | eure
3 t ighway light mainter ne 2 senitatto ip
tant, Syracuse—details of the an- | highway tight maintenance ALBANY, Jan. 20—The Depart een aee oe eerie nio comamm| 38 addition to the Broome
nual report will be wd by | Man for the New ¥ x ment of Social Welfave chapter,| (ICine At melnberst | County et there is w Bing-
; Ss ane Ne Reagan ee and chapter meetin
Macklin, Also, two members of the Way Degartm: ; Albany office, of the Civil Servic Tl Was terommended chat one, hamton chapter of the CSBA,
Board of Dirvctors, and two mem-| He & member of th Emplovees A: i held a din- on eye ia i 1 repres Civil Service
bers each for the credit committee | Fishkill Planning Board, the 3 her-dance at rant ERIE ale Re ers who are employed by the
; < mmittee County Improvemen’ we me headquart
and the supervisery comm P last week fink all etioy i in the Binghamton area
Si . f icating all chapters where
will be running for re-election the Dutch Ce John Mag president of the). membership committee had  2¢* Membership totals about 1,800
Membership Increase Firemen's Association chapter, intro ph Rou- ig : ioetieay sai le :
Macklin itisciosed that member-| Hudson Valley Firechief’s Asso- for the} eae «eee meres
apn tayonegeeg esi poe carte acon lee for the| eetions had uot been held 01>: Buffalo B, of E.

propriate action may be taken
The group also heard a suzges- ASKS For Exams
tion that CSEA ask hospital and BUFPALO. n, 20—The Buf-
to write or|falo Board of Education has re-
t quested the State Civil Service
y chapters. Department to conduct examina-
ative date for the next com-| tions “at the riteat possible
* meeting is Feb Subse- | moment for various school po-
meetings are scheduled for) sitions.
22 and Sept, 25, Consultant The Board acted after a trustees,
* committee are Vernon Mrs, Richard A. Slomir polnt-
second vice pr ed out that some school employees

Budget To Contain Pay Program gE teeth

(Contin
and are part

Civil Service Employe
jon and the Rural Letter-
Associ

d to 582 last year,| OF |
fs Assoc

Union inere
* wp about 100 memb
Asseat group tnevensed Cari
from about $64,000 to $93,000, he Served Ms secretary-
said. In 1963, the credit unlor East Fishkill Board
Made 294 loans for a total of | Commissioner
$141,000. compared with 238 Joan: Joseph Jackson, Donald Day
for a total of $98,000 the previous Pass your copy of the Leader | Robert Cozzens and Howa 4
year ‘ Te a Non-Member | Springe:

Airman
8180 Carol Campbell, Rosalle Cannon.
Of Judie Merkin, Alleen Ross, Mrs.
Marie Bell, Grace Spagno!
Ir rt, Dorothy Taylor

© state chapte
county. offic!

als. endor

from
c va

The Governor ts asking fo: Senator Thomas Mac

wfoniyons wow coen eee oe GSEA Group Life Plan Opens

continuation

year to developir program Lit
+ believe will help or hurt them’ economies wh er possible death of Herbert Stanton, a
politically in their home areas. One of the devices expected to senior social wo who was (Continued from Page 1) ) Plan is installed, can apply for

Governor Fir

tal other members who have hazar- | coverage.

dous employment usually have to) Applications 1 explanatory
legislators, It was learned that) be a plan to collect 18 months pay additional premiums for life literature can be secured from any
the Goy will stick to his re-| corporation taxes within Assemblyman Prancis MeClos-| insurance, but in the C CSEA chapter or department rep-
commendation vo ¢ ale em-| St next fiseat year, which key, Republican-Nassau, intro-| Life Plan cost to all member resentative or from Association
ployees the pay increase and will begins April 1 duced a bill to provide vesting of | gardiess of employm headquarters at 8 Elk Street, Al-
fight for its passage, It is estimated the plan will ment benefits after 15 years | same bany and 11 Park Place, New York

‘The pay + plan will be the bring an additional $150 million vice at age for those Who Is Eligible | city
Major portion of the Governor's into the stale treasury members in the 55-year plan. Auy members of CSEA, or eligi-| This special offer ts good only
Message, which deals with civil Under the present law, as/ ble employee who Joins, employed | during February, 1964. Members
Pn 4 a Other CS Developme : : x :

service. He has stated that he amended last year, no one ts eli-| by the State or any politic b-| are requested to bring this matter
Will present # balanced budget In other developments this| gible for the vesting benefits until| division or school district in which) ta the attention of fellow em-
Without tax increases, } week on Capitol Hill; | age 60, | tie low cosy Group Life Insurance | ployecs,

tabbed to death by a me
patient at Rockland State H

pit

be proposed as a method of rain
Despite some grumbling among ing additional State revenue w

Page Four - CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Tuesday, January 21, 1964

Where fo Apply |

For Public Jobs | U.S. Service News Items

_ ™
The following directions tel By MARY ANN BANKS i)
where to apply for public joby .
and how to reach destinations in 8ist Birthday |
New York City on th transit Sa a ee

mi san enveme am Chester A. Arthur &

eations Section of the New York

fwvrvomesnem Phe OS. Civil Service

9, N.Y (Manhattan), bh i tw
blocks north of City Hall, just
west of Broadway. acr r
The Leader office

Hours are ¥ AA
Mor
Sat urdnye from 9 to 12 noon him with a 44
Telephone COrtiand 7-8880 4

ma hot July day in 1881, as vi
Gartleld stood In Washington, D.C.'s old Baltimore ¢
to 4 pm mae Railroad Station awaiting a train, a deranged office
iday. # eoker crept up me id is den io i] aiden ally wounded Ns j

liber British “Bulldog” revolver.
helt monte CIVIL SERVICE DAY — sonn a. K. avbott, vice president, ‘
y Abe Beame, the Comp- New York Life Insurance, is pictured with Henrietta Olding, a vice
sistant Seymour Marks President of the American Federation of Government Employees, after

tion-bound President
nd Poto-

Mailed requests for apptication lite
blanks must imecjude a stamped A

presidential oath

self-addressed vusiness-size en- in a dimly-1 room at that "New Yorkers must the unveiling of the Chester Allen Arthur Plaque in observance of
¢elope ana be received uy 123 Lexington New York | tind great sinnificance p tact Civil Service Day, The plaque was installed on the building at 123
the Personne! Department at ieast Ch that President Artiw vd the Lexington Avenue, New York City, where Chester Allen Arthur was

tablished United Sworn in as 2Ist President of the United States on Sept. 21, 1881, after

Servic 1g83, and | the assassination of President James Garfield, President Arthur slaned
xe “Spoils System the first Civil Service Act in 1883, The Native New Yorkers’ Historical
Association and New York Life Insurance Company sponsored the
ceremony, Misy Olding, long active in Civil Service affairs, holds a
bouquet of roses presented to her by Mr. Abbott,

Soc: A MN FD OUT TODAY A I BD

timely re HOW YOU CAN FINISH

“ape “aHIGH SCHOO if 1

caine ha wee ; AT HOME IN SPARE TIME :

olitical problem - If you ere 17 or over ond have dropped out of school, write for F
h

closing date = Last

five days betore

for the filing of applications of
Completes application forms Now

which are flied by inal must be

sent to the Pi

and must be

ima

“No one was more
Arthur in helpin

fi Service Act
inching, on its suce

onnel Department ¢4
narked no lat

than twelve jock midnight on
the day {oll g the inst day ot
feceipt of appliestions pS

The Applicatio
the Personne! {
the Chambers Street
a.
the area These are the
Avenue t
Avenue Li

the meri
employm

mark of

the
MRT Lexington

rfield became president Veterans are responsible for the FREE Lessi
vamped fepayment of their G.I. loans.

Avenue Line stop to use is the | Wa ny wins Utera AMERICAN SCHOOL, Dept, 9AP-33
Brooxiyn § tsb i time Should the veteran default on his 134 W. attad KE, New York 3 Phowe HMkyant 92608 My or Night
Brighton top i City Hall | there stlon Payments and the Veterans Ad- Send me your free 55-page High School Booklet

ang| ministration haye to pay a claim
will owe

to Duane

Both lines ha
Street, one block
sonnel Department

Address —_

i edi —Age
was | tothe lender, the vete Apt
the Government the Zone____Btate.

nount the City
VA had to ay Wo Wm Ww OOUR 6th YEAR OS a om Ol

STATE — First floor ut 270) ), vie
Broadway. New York 7, N. ¥ sits se
corner of Chambers St., telephone | ii) iiss ascot
BArolay 17-1616, Governor Alfred) oo. pnese 1
E. Smith State Olfice Bullding and |). A stnur would
The State Campus, Alb vf fia me
Office Building, Buffalo; State : 5
Office Building, 8} es and
600 Midtown Tow
(Wednesdays only)
Any of these addresses may be! .)! iar a aleg
: gcvelip ery ter A. Ar became t
Btate’s New York City Office '3/).04 successfully taken ;
two blocks south on Broadway LenstaR oa
from the City Pereonne), Depart {ett toward the estapishmens KTO'TA IX.
ment’s Brondway entrance, 60 the | .\6i appointment to this di 3
game transportation instructions |.) Hy gh
= pbipleaictwathee tor foundation of civil servie
Car ates may obtain applica-
tions for State jobs from local Unmarked But Important
Offices of the New York State! strangely enough, the site of the
Employment Service liustailation of th man to the
— very office that enabled him to Nobody likes to think about *
FEDERA*. — Second UB. Civil | #0 the bill establishing the Unit- being sick or injured, but the sad
Bervice Reston Office, News Buitd- | °¢ States Civil Service had fact is that most of us, sometime
mainod marked until

ing, 220 Kast 42nd Street (at 2nd

during our lives, will be forced

Ava,), New York 17%, N. ¥., just | Thursday, January 16, by sickness or accident to stay |
west of th Unies ‘atlons butld I ven ible r by r a h, | out of work, Fortunately, this
R’ xii mn Ave ich uncovered the {nc int | REPS
poh ; Avaia Sean teiieiiea te period is usually short... But, |
mae shuttle | tho Lexington | you can't always count on this,
ee Square to Gr me ~ rar bi ; | You can count on C.S.E,A, Accident and Sickness insurance to pay you a
ae 1 4 feul Association

Pelle ¢ ue sae steady income if you are disabled, Over 40,000 C,S,E.A, members enjoy this
protection—which supplements their benefits under the State Hospital Plan,
Hundreds of members alréady have received benefits totaling millions
of dollars,

on the | led by pre

Gran
Hours are 8:
Monday thr¢
phone number {
Applic

: also obtain-| yen though the Historical As-| You owe it to yourself and your family to investigate the C.S,E,A, Accident
able at main post offices, except | sociation discovered Arthur's resi and Sickness insurance plan,

the New York, N.Y. Post Office | , it 1s a non-profit organiza.
Boards of examiners at the par- ut funds to mark all of
theular installations offering the rk's Historical sites
tests also may be applied to for| Association contacted No
further Information and applica | rife Insurance Company, the com-

lon forms. No return envelopes | pany insured President if
Reger 4 & POWELL, INC.

requived with mailed requesta | ay:

rthur, Ney ife donated 5
n forms. the plaque and planned last week's ! MIU)
—— Civ

For full information call or write

applica
———— —— Service Day program
REE BOOKLET by 0.6, Gov-| ae SCHENECTADY
@rnment on Social Security, Mail) — “S!#nifleant,"" Says Beame : ROWE NEW YORK BUFFALO

only, Leader, 97 Duane Street, In 4 statement read at the cere-
New York 7, N. ¥, 1 in behalf of New York City BART HORTHRORT SYRACUSE

CIVIL SERVICE

LEADER

Page Five

Tuesday, January 21, 1964

SINGING NURSES — siudent nurses

at the cy State Hospital entertained during
the Christmas festivities at the hospital by caroting

enoe.

om

for the patients. This group of sougsters were favored
with Santa Claus serving as an appreciative audi-

Fireman F iling Remains

Open; Start At $6, 355°
emen positions with the are now
for fil The title has an 1 allowance
annum and ten paid holidays y
salary, through increments, rises to
irements 1¢ positior
time of appo 4 t
t in W
For further tntormation an: tt New Y¥ Cit
ment of Personnel at 96 Duane St., New Yor

Director Named [*3

For Health Service
ALBANY, a) D u
Grosse Polr

BELL « HOWELL

AUTOLOAD*
=z=oom

MOVIE OUTFIT

See
Our Low

em oa ae
Halt howe cs Wt reel ae ef

. OpthKleen lens cleaner @ Abbott & Costello rpeco
© 162 piece Title set @ Cartridge and Piste! Grip

Sd ‘
_ LIBERTY CAMERA SHOPPE

‘ Cameras * Projectors * Film * Equipment
| 80 VESEY STREET
NEW YORK CITY

BA 7-6966 |

Visual Training

OF CANDIDATES VOR

PATROLMAN
FIREMAN

THE RYESINT
COL SERVO

DR. JOHN T. FLYNN
% ye AVE. X. ¥. ©.

BW. Cor
MU 9.2333 WA 9.5919

Applications Close Jan 27!

FIREMAN

New Higher Salaries!
N.Y, FIRE DEPT.

158

A WEEK

Kewell Al Opportunities

PENSION APTER 20 YEARS

| Ages 20 thru 28--Older for Vets
MIN, HT, ONLY 5 FT, 6% In,
OUR SPECIALIZED TRAINING
Prepares for Official Written Test
DON'T DELAY—ENROLL NOW
Completely New Course
Now Starting!

Practice Exams at Every Class
Ma Our Guest at on

Sentai Courses Offered To City Aides

City secretarial emp! Classes will meet in the City
can profit from a course to be Hall nelghborhood for ten sessions
given this Spring under the beginning Tuesday evening, Janu
City College Munteipal Pe : ast FSTUNY: RERAETES' PY
sonnel Program, The ¢ :

CC-3 “The Supervising paeahburdviaitiesar

and other courses
ographer and the Executiy tn ae Dean
Ss will be taught b;

290 Browdway

K » Room 200
fes CO 7-8880, Extension 231)
College.

_Toples to be covered Inelide) ahe Veterans Administration
ts pi oe apts nie processes 200.000 initial claims for
ments and visitors. ‘Phere will ule @isability In veterans compensa-
80 be discussion of the problems tion and pension cases each year,

involved in supervising a
graphic unit, ar
ecutive secretary

vnat 400,000 claims
~ from veterans’ dependents,

and an addi

Attention Employees Of The
Department Of Parks!

We regret the fact that heavy snows of
Monday and Tuesday made it necessary to
cancel our opening class for

PARK FOREMAN
OPENING CLASS WILL BE HELD
Tuesday, Jan. 21, at 7 p.m.
At 115 East 15 Street, NYC
will continue ‘Tuesday

Thank You For Your Pat

THE DELEHANTY INSTITUTE

Ant each thereafter,

The DELEHANTY INSTITUTE

MANHATTAN: 115 EAST 15 ST., Near 4 Ave, (All Subways)
JAMAICA: 89-25 MERRICK BLVD, bet, Jamoico & Hillside Aves.

50 Years of Success in Specialized Education
For Career Opportunities and Personal Advancement

anty Course or Phone
GUEST CA

Ke Our Gues Any Deli

and PRE

Immediate Opportunities!

EXAMS SOON! Prepare for a Secure Future
with FULL CIVIL SERVICE BENEFITS
START CLASSES THIS WEEK FOR EXAMS FOR

* FIREMAN— n.Y.F.0 New Higher

Salaries!
* PATROLMAN—Nn.y.P.0 $
* POLICEWOMAN— n.y.P.0 1 F) 8 ws Wesk

After 2 Years
CLASSES ALSO FOR

HIGH SCHOOL EQUIVALENCY DIPLOMA
REFRIGERATION OPERATOR LICENSE
STATIONARY ENGINEER LICENSE
MASTER ELECTRICIAN LICENSE

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

AUTO MECHANICS SCHOOL
5-01 46 Road of 5 St,, Long Island City

Complete Shop Training on “Live” Cars

with Specialization on Automatic Transmissions

DRAFTING SCHOOLS
Monhattan: 123 East 12 St, ar, 4 Ave
Jamaica: 89-25 Merrick Blvd. et 90 Ave
Architectural—Mechenical—Structural Orotting
Piping, Electrical and Machine Drawing

RADIO, TV & ELECTRONICS SCHOOL
117 East 11 St. nr. 4 Ave., Manhattan

Radio ond TY Service & Repair, Color

TV Servicing. “HAM” License Preparation

* DELEHANTY HIGH SCHOOL
Accredited by Board of Regents
1 Merrick levard, Jamaica

ry Co-Kdueational Acad
jal Training Available
ive Supplement, Special
ence aud Mathematics for
ish to Qualify for Technological
and Englucering Colleges, Tth to 12th Grades.

R 3-6900

For Information on All Courses Phone

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Tuesday, January 21, 1964

@ LEADER.

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

Vablished every Tyeslay by

LEADER PUBLICATIONS, INC.
97 Duane Street, New York, N.¥.-10007 212-BEekmon 3.6010

Jerey Pinkeloavin, Polisher

Poul Kyer, Editor i . de, City Editar
Jones T, Lawless, dovriate Bditer Macy Ane . Assistant Editor
N. HL Mager, Business Manager
bch hea Representatives:

ALBANY — Joseph T. Be » Manning Bhd. TV 2ath

KINGSTON, NY Charles

10¢ per copy, Subscription Price $2
Service Employees Associtaion.

2i9 Wall Street, Heer Le)

to members of the Civil
5.00 to nonmembers,

TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, L964

Irresponsible Taxpayers

NDER guise of pro

general public for its own
of private citizens using one form
tion “taxpayer” in thelr organizatic
on several fronts attacking any pension improve-
ments or other fringe benefits for public employees.

To date, we have seen no evidence from any of these
groups that their protests have any other basis except thelr
belief that civil servants should not y more money for
anything. They have presented 's that public
ployees are pald adequately, let too much
of the more irresponsible organizations charge,

ting the pocketbook of the
ifare, numerous groups

another of the deserip-

we

raises,

get

no

proc em-

alone some

What is even more irritating is that none of these groups
have bothered to deseribe what service y feel the
public could do without in order to keep dowr so-called

ever

e

the

tax burden. At this very ment, most State, County and
City imatitutions are understaffed, top personnel are
leaving government service, needed new ‘ams are being
held in abeyance because of lack of fund protecting
the publi¢ welfare?

Above all, these taxpayer vigilantes sverlooked the

working n of Ne

contributes

fact that over 20 percent of the
York State works for government and

populs

therefore.

over 20 percent of the taxes collected he year. In the
Albany area, for instance, public er ees comprise over
50 per cent of the tax paying population

When these citizen groups seek logical economies in goy-
ernment they will find u responsible publie empl

io not fight such It would seen a
justified with s thelr right to a
responsible taxpayer groups

organizations avi
when civil servants have
better livlihood fro! vernment

would support their cause.

- <==
&.. Veteran’s

4 | Counselor

By FRANK V, YVOTTO

Diessiaw © w York State Division of Veterans’ Affairs

sscesecieearececomerreeree

tscouus om Welerans’ and servicemen's rights will be an-
swered in this column or by mail by the State Division of Veterans’

Affairs. Address questions to Military Editor, The Leader, 97
Duane Sireet, New York 7, N. ¥.
VETERANS FIGURING ir Federal income taxes need
not count as income any ney have received for
veterans benefits, siuce these payments are Wholly tax-free.

ans have received in 1963 on thelr GI
exempt from tax reporting.
TS for benefits are free

Dividends which vete
insurance policies

ALTHOUGH

also

PAYM

ire

and

need not be reported on 1963 Federal income tax returns,
juterest earned in GI life insurance dividends left on deposit
is not a “benefit” and is taxable

STILL TAY

FREE are the proceed

the dividends th:
BENEFITS which need not be reported on Fed
eral Income tax returns include

ofa GI
maelyes,

life insurance

a) Education and training allowances for veterans
of the Korean canflict period who are in school or train~
ing establishments under the Korean GI Bill,

b) Subsistence payments made to disabled veterans
training under the Vocational Rehabilitation Acts,

(Continued on Page 13)

ul titles are now busy |

_MEHEEIN HHH EH HEEIHEEIHEY 4g

LEADER
BOX 101

Letters To The Editor

"Promotion Problems
Box 101

In reference to your editorial in
the January Mth issue of The
Leader I feel that it ts about time
for pmeone to sound off on
present policy and prac
ter-departmental prome

In the pa:
taken five ¢
awaiting the 1
it is the other

x
=

eee o

tice of Ln
fons

wo years I have
ms. I am currently
ults of three but
two with which T

am concerned. My marks on these
two exams are extremely high. {n
fact I am number two in the City
ot New York and number seven
statewide, on one of these

De this I have had only one
canvas for a job and then the In-
terviewer turned me down for be-
ing too young

On the other

{ fam on T have

not even been canvassed once and |

was forced to take
exam ove han
the Hist was establi
intend to sup
with a new one

the
wet year after
ed because

same

they

This been my first
I finished school
less I am now in the
looking loyiment

industry ¢ T am ambitious

nd have x remain-
I ask you exactly what 4s the
point of studying, taking exams or
> civil service If

ate in one lowly

ou have

a lucky brea

Mi cannot base

Hone
JUDITH GREE
Brony, N. ¥.

This Week's
Civil Service
Television List

Television programs of inte
civil service employers are
broadcast daily over WNYC, Chan-
nel 31
This wee
over Now
nelude

“res

Ye

Tuesday,

2:00 pm.—Nu

NYC Dept, of He
ig care

ur Report."
2:30 Army Special

or the U.S. Army,

Around the Clock

training prog

Jan,
sing

2
Today —

series on
Change

of)

pm
about
4:00 p.m
Police Dept
Law of
5:00 pan
ition
ba

Film

am.

Nut
Bureau
‘a Premo,
6:30 pm.
Films about
8:00

tlos and You
erica with

B

* Story

ore,

pan tion and You
Nutrition Bureau series
8:20 p.in—Army Speclal—US
Army film series
30 pm.--Operation Al t
Dept. of Labor literacy

Wednesday, Jan.

3:00 pn —
NYC Dept. of Hos r
ing care—“Change of ‘Tour
Report.”
4:00 pm.—Around the Clock
Police Dept, training course.
Ww of Arrest.”

5:40 pm.—Nutrition and You
Nutrition Bureau series,
6:30 pm—Alr Force
US, Alr Force film series,
7:30 pm-—On the Job — Pire
Dept, taining course, "Siamese |

Story—

| Civil Service

LAW & YOU

By Stanley Mailman
(Mr, Mailman is a member of the New York State bar.)

Due Process of Law

ARE CONSTITUTIONAL rights violated when a govern-
ment official acts as judge in a disciplinary case he started
himself?

TWO WEEK AGO I noted that Federa} laws and regula-
tions permit this conflict of functio In New York State,
Section 75 of the Civil Service Law virtually requires an
agency or institution chief to decide whether the cnarges
he signed were sustained. The question remains: Do these
statutory procedures measure up to the higher Consiitutional
test?

BOTH THE NEW York State and Federal Constitutions
provide that no person shall be deprived of his life, liberty
or property without due process of law. These due process
requirements apply to disciplinary or “adverse” proceedings
in which penalties have such harsh effects.

DUE PROCESS |s an elusive concept; it defies pat defint-
tions. Its requirements vary with the kind of interests or
rights at stake, But basic Is the idea that the process or pro-
cedure must be essentially fair.

IS THIS STANDARD met by the accuser-as-|udge-situa-
tion, so often presented in disciplinary or “adverse” actions?

ONE ANSWER WAS given in Studemeyer vs, Macy (321
2d 386, cert, den. 84 8, Ct. 337) orted In the last column,

1ere, the Federal employee complained that his dismissal
was ordered by the very officer who brought the charges.
This argued, was unconstit 1 as a basically unfair
procedure, The Court of Appeals for Washington, D. C., up-
held the adverse action, finding it “not so unreasonable or
fundamentally unfair as to be violative of due process of

MANY WOULD DISAGREE for reasons best ¢
in the majority opinion In Re Murchison (349 U.S,
137) as follows

A fair trial in a fair tribunal is a basic requirement
of due process. Fairness of course requires an absence of
actual bias in the trial of cases. But our system of law

ys endeavored to prevent even the probability
of unfairness. Such a stringent rule may
trial by judges who have no actual bias and would do
their very best to weigh the scales of justice equally be-
tween contending parties, But to perform its high fune-
tion in the best way “justice must satisfy the appear-
ance of justice.”

It would be very strange if our system of law permit-
ted a judge to act as a grand jury and then try the very
persons accused as a result of his investigations, Having
been @ part of that process a judge cannot be, in the very
nature of things, wholly disinterested in the conviction
or acquittal of those accused, Fair trials are too impor-
tant a part of our free society to let prosecuting judges
be trial Judges of the charges they prefer,

IN THE Murchison , a criminal contempt conviction
as struck do’ by the Supreme Court because the trial
judge had himself signed the contempt charge.

BUT THE PRINCIPLE applies in
It is recognized.
Justice,

law

ressed
136-

ometimes bar

er areas of the law,
ample, in the Uniform Code of Military
which bars the accuser, the convening officer and the
investigating officer from acting as a member or a law officer
of the court martial, Similar Federal law disqualifies a
speclu inquiry officer from conducting deportation hearings

for

in & case where had other functions,

THE CIVIL SERVANT js not entitled to less than the
soldier or the allen, Due process gives him the same right
to an impartial judge,

THE Studemyer CASE ts a setback, but there ts strong
teason to belleve that the courts will ultimately recognize

tis fundamental defect
Meanwhile, there

view to revision,

in present personnel procedures,

is no reason to delay thelr study with a

and Gates" Film series on the US, Air Porce.

10:30 p.m,—Operation Alphabet} 7:30 pan —On the Job— Fire
—Lubor Dept, series promoting | Department training course,
literacy “Pirst Ald.”

Thursday, Jan, 28
2:00 p.m. Nursing Today—
NYC Dept. of Hospitals series on
Hursing cave; “Change of Tour
Report.”
6:30 pm—Au Force Story—

10:30 p.m.—Operation Alphabet
—Labor Dept, series promoting
literacy,

Friday, Jan. 4
4:00 p.m-—Around the Clock—
(Continued on Page 7)

Tuesday. Jannary 21, 1964 CIVIL SERVICE LEADER Page “even
7:30 pm—On the Job—Pire
b : ‘ Part * .
Allegnany County This Week's Civil Service Telecast List Dept. training program, “Pra
ad (Continued from Page 6) | Saturday, Jan, 25 “The Law of Arrest.” Ad
Gets Good ting Police Dept. training program.! 7:30 p.m.—On the Job—Fire! 5:30 pm.—Career Development| 8:90 p.m.—Career Development
“Law of Arrest.” Dept. training course. “First Aid."|—Police Department—Police De-| Police Department promotion
(From Leader Correspondent) | 5:09 p.m.—Nutrition and You 4.00 pam.—Citinenship Eduea-| Patient promotional course, Sgt.) course: Bia Edward = Rybak:
BELMONT, Jan, 20 — State|.—wutrition Bureau sertes, | tlon—Pitm lectures on qvie stu-| ZAward Rybak: “Robbery” —| “Rebbery"—Furgery,
examiners have given a good! 4:00 pm.—The Big Pieture—/ dics Forgery 10:30 p.m.—Operation Alphabet
rating to Civil Service opera-} U.S. Army film series 9:00 pen—The Big Picture — Hae aelion ~Alr Force Story— aaa Dept. series promoting
, tlons in Allegany County after) 10:30 p.m.—Operation Alphabet U.S. army film serles = = = +
reviewing the 1962-63 work of /—Labor Dept. series promoting Benday, Jan. 28 —
the County Civil Service Com-| 'teracy. vere if cli iis we SPECIAL LOW RATES FOR
mission, ae p.m. izenship Eduea- STATE EMPLOYEES AT
5: ton—Pilm Jectures in civic stu-
The Commission administers) four yours experience in relating dies produced by the New York The HOTEL
personnel matters for 1400 civil) work, oF the equivalent. The du- state Education Dept
service employes, most of Whom) ties of the position Include per-
ae 4 iH 9,00 pan.—Tt ie Pict
are members of chapters of the] forming technical work in the In- yg. amy fila ete sitiaeeat
Civil Service Eniployees Asin spection of steel, concrete or ca 8:30 p.m.—City Close-up- Bey-|
= Minor Criticisms | tron ao viene Mie wepur® N, Biegel interviows Charles | 88 DAILY PER PERSON
ances to determine if purehas or Cie tity |
The State survey listed (WO) gontract specificntions are ful- y, City Administrator © Right ot
minor criticisms: that applications | ged and performs related work Monday, Jan. 27 |
are sometime received after | For further information and ap- 2:00 p.m.—City Close-up—Sey-
polniments have been made and! pieation for et the New mour N. Siegel interviews Charles}
that some town and villaze hleh-! york City Department of Person- Tenney, City Administrator |
Way dopartments classify person-' net wt pg Guane St., New York. 4:00 p.m.—Around the Clock—| ciate ppaelon yy teal
hel as Inborers when they shoald! xy yo007 Police Dept, tralning program.| Bhosle
be motor equipment operators ian
Allegunes County elvil servies | —— - — — $$$ saeseae ai
+ commissioners are J, Whitney |
Shea, B. Harvey Palmer and Leslie
Swarthout. John J, Powers is ex- |
age g : |
Positions Open Now;
$6,750 Per Year ;
The New York City Depart-| Blind Man S Butt
ment of Personnel fs now of-
fering positions as purchase
inspectors (pipe and © ngs)
+ until further notice. The po- an Be A ostly fame
sitions have an annual salary
range of $6,750 to $8,550 with
annual and longevity incre-
ments of $300, |
Candidates are required to have —When it comes to
;
| A
HIGH SCHOOLT doctor bills!
|
o1PLOMAa
si cavgr 13, 70m, can
lisa
You need 20/20 vision to search out the hidden gaps and loop-
NROE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS 5 A i :
pce aes aa ae holes in today’s health insurance, Before on a program for
KI 2.5600 5 5 ;
- — — = doctors’ care. ask yourself these basie questions:
|
SPECIAL HOTEL RATES || © DaGathawbanweovtla ie benehiecwi scbite nlaeeren
FOR STATE EMPLOVEES || Does the plan provide it be ne fits without extra charge
over and above the premium? :
NEW YORK CITY
AND * Does the plan cover the cost of today’s many kinds of
‘ ROCHESTER bers remeey ,
specialist services ?
NEW NOR Oi * Does the plan assure coverage of the full cost of an opera-
' tion—regardlss of how difficult or extensive the surgery
might be.
F * Does the plan concern itself with the quality of eare ren-
dered to you?
* Can you continue with full benefits if you leave your
employee group—regardless of age?
M I s 3
ONLY ONE HEALTH PLAN — HELLP. can give a “yes” answer
8 to all these questions,
*In HLP.'s group plan the only extra charge 1 $2 for a home call between 10 P.M. and TAM.
me
Nochester's Ingest, est located hotel. eee
Yuin with petvate bathe teed tallé Sang
‘it cendtloned.
rom moanvarons ar as Mange Ht
ee HEALTH INSURANCE PLAN OF GREATER EW YORK
pany Se sa atte
maces prone)
OO ee 625 MADISON AVENUE NEW YORK 22. N. ¥, « Place 41144
FREE BOOKLET by U, 8, Gov-
ernment on Social Security, Math
™ only, Leader, 97 Duane Street,
New York 1, N. ¥ — -

Page Fight

CIVIL

SERVICE LEADER

Tuesday, January 21. 1964

To Improv ve » Morale

Liseral Party Outlines
27-Point Civil Service
Legislative Program

A 26-point pre to improve the civil service merit system and working cc
for public employees in New Yor e has been announced by the Liberal Party
1964 New York State Legislative Session.

The program sta that the civil ser merit system in New York State isn't on a
high level, but that tt room for improvement. “To develop er system.
to secu and retain trained and e jent personnel of high m to ne standard of
living ¢ vil servants and th prove the public service gen the party made
the following commendations.

Merit System
Condon Wadlin

f the

adherence to the p

© merit system t

ation

ent and prom
In Service Trainnig

2, Improvement
training prog

of modern techniqu

P lu
~ Leo SeTtR
" . v ; 4. Pre 0
t

‘ Time and One Half

fiers}

: A 5, Enactme

; 1 Hens | th 1 compe

‘i

Preset TEGAN soTiCw

j 1 We AL. re

" i } 4

; i

: " ; HAN, ENE X

‘ HEINER, 1 A BP

o K WHMEDY >

i 4 ¥

i : Mie ‘ I
1

; wa

: ‘ i ,

i i x y

SPECIAL RATES

' for Civil Service Employees

; ntER 9

Y ot ;

) & Z
= y ? Py
si »

; 2 oe s
cs HOTEL

‘ Wellington

. DRIVE-IN GARAGE
‘ AIR CONDITIONING » TV
t Ne porking
problems at

QPPONTE STATE CAPITOL
hee pour trinndly evel ggent

SPECIAL WEEKLY RATES
FOR EXTENDED STAYS

i!
Eales” Conrt

com-

ing
| time

time
pe

Comparable Salaries
6. Provision
every
1} elud!
tor

ule
paid fc
tn business and

positions
| parabje with sa
ilar positior

“| dustry in the same com

Vested Rights
1 the
Retir t Law

pension right 1

»| (Continued on

New York City

DEWITT CLINTON

STATE & EAGLE STS.. ALBANY

A KNOTT HOTEL

A FAVORITE FOR HVER ae
YEARS WITH STATE TIAA ARS

STATE RATE
$8 sincte

$13 pouste

TY of RADIO AVAILABLE
Cocktail Lounge - Dancing Nightly

BANQUET FACILITIES TAILORED
TO ANY SIZE PARTY

FREE TELETYPE RESERV VrHONS
TO ANY KNOTT HOTEL, INCLUDING

YOUR HOST—
MICHAEL FLANAGAN

PETIT PARIS
RESTAURANT

BUSINESS MEN'S
11:30 TO 2:30 — $1.00

SUECLALIZING, AS ALWAYS, EN
PARTIES, BANQUETS & WEETINGS.

COMPONTARLE ACCOMMODATIONS
PROM 19 TO

OPEN DAILY EXCEPT MONDAY,
SUNDAY AT 2 P.M.
PRE PARKING IN AKAR
1060 MADISON AVE.
ALBANY

LUNCH

Phone IV 2-7864 or IV 2-988)

In Time of Need, Call
M. W. Tebbutt's Sons

176 State 12 Colvin
Albany Albeny
HO 3-2179 459-6630

420 Kenwood
Delmar HE 9-2212

Over 119 Keare of
Distinguished Fuveral erviee

EVENING DIVISION | :
ADULT EDUCATION
CLASSES START FEB. 3

One ond Two-Year Diploma Courses

BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION ACCOUNTING

tary accounting, law, cost accounting,
tax and auditing included

. EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAL . .. shorthand, typewriting
dictation and transcription

18 and 36-Week Certificate Courses
CLERK-TYPIST for beginning office personnel
Typing, machines, bookkeeping, filing
TYPEWRITING for beginners, advanced typists
E

$ and machine transcription.

SHORTHAND REFRESHER inciuding re

principles and theory, Dictation

vib 18-Week PUBLIC RELATIONS SEMINAR

al course emphasizing PR concepts

techniques.

view of

Phone or Write for Evening Division Bulletin

ALBANY BUSINESS COLLEGE

130 Washington Avenue Albany, N. Y. 12210
Phone HO 5-3449

1401 COMPUTER CLASSES:

A MUST FOR MANY STATE EMPLOYEES

* In mony N.Y. State departments rapid changeove
systems is now in progress. All data may soon be handied this wey!

* Is your job protected? Will you be ready? You will with WARD
treining, Choose the course you need.—Evening Courses.

@ COMPUTER ORIENTATION — Start JAN, 30
(Full Understanding of Computer Methods)

© 1401 COMPUTER OPERATION — Start FEB.13
(20 Weeks — Operator Training)

@ 1401 COMPUTER PROGRAMMING — Start FEB. 13
(30 Weeks — Comprehensive Training)

INQUIRE NOW!
Budget Poyments Up To 24 Months Available

CALL MR. RICHARDS — IV 2-2607

RD SCHOOLS

r te computer

537 Central Avenue

Albany
- — Sal
Se ALBANY
the TEN EYGK totei|| BRANCH OFFICE

UNDER THE NEW MANAGEMENT
OF SCHINE HOTELES WILL
CONTINLR FO HONOR

SPECIAL RATES
FOR N.Y.S, EMPLOYEES

PLUS ALL THESE FACILITIES

R civit SERVICE. EMPLOYEES 4

NOW FOR THE FIRST TIME

“STAY AT THE BEST
FORGET THE REST”

Machines
© Free Use of Elect

Shavers

Make Your Reservation
Early By Calling
HE 4-1111

OPPOSITE STATE CAMIOs SITE |

nome
ae

7AM
rae

COCKTAIL LOUNGE — WITH
ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY!

fun Motion I 5 At Adjacent
ry oun tie Premises,

* OFFERS SPECIAL NEW
| LOW RATES
TO CIVIL SERVICE TRAVELERS

$700 2 IN A ROOM

In N.Y.C, Call MU 8-010
SCHINE
TEN EYCK HOTEL

State & Chapel Sts. Albeny, N.Y.

fer Person

ARCO
CIVIL SERVICE BOOKS
ond all tests
| PLAZA BOOK SHOP
380 Broadway

SINGLE OCCUPANCY

ss

Write OR PHONE 459.3100
OR RESEMVALIONS

Albany, N. ¥. MAYFLOWER, - NOV AL, count
Mail & Phone Orders Filled || turmisied eed’ oom, pine wae

«laid, (Albany),

Tuesday, Fonuary 21, 1964 ETVILC SERVIER TRADE Rr Poge Nine

ELIGICLES ON NEW YORK CITY LISTS

wll, benvarce Matton aie ciate : Adult Education Program |
row 975, Edwin Otivic Willin i
. Aneo Joseph A. White: 817, Dat | 4 HUNTER COLLEGE
Lives peereiess Stenotype Court Reporting
mare { 1065, ‘Richard High Speed Dictation
Bir } Hayold A B Legal Secretarial Training
mas J. Aik
883. Chi i fean TERM BEGINS FEB, 6
eph G. Am: erta: 1070, G Register by Mall or in Person
886. Da alee 1 1071, Prank
Kalin; 887, Alfred Pett Sisdeis Yee ; Rm, 241, Park Ave. & 68 St.

Michae} J
E

Jr; 889

y Pagano, | 1030, Anthony Defranc
#90. Ralph C

991.| Windsor C. Pediford

1074, James
1075. Thomas White

STATE-WIDE

INSURANCE COMPANY

Phone BU 8-7210

mon E. Bladdeil: 1033 ‘
pe eo; 1024, Richard Lb, Can-
892 tila; 1035, Willlam Raspovic

ward Ma
£95, Do
holas P. Stellate Jr

1036, Den A. Mert 1037

Bernard § an 38

W. Hewson P. ‘ris
Ribisi: 908 1040.

we Farge a 1041, Willia:
! 000 | Mich

bianea
900. Saiy
901, William J. Elia; 902. A
old L. Breinberg; 903. W
Moore; 904. John F
Michael Verb! J
H. Dav 7, M
Melvin C. Odum; 909.
10. George Hah

Patrolman Police Dept. Group 14

= ee flag ast on AUTO ae ore

Sie asta.” . _ Positions With City cn

6, Donald J, Kai

thony J. Maltese: 928. Stephen ive trainee tit n New York City NASSAU 5 gsoe BRONX _ 11863
aesoaty nin Pt sare of mare than 10 per week, The Ming period fr the QUEENS snes 971 BROOKLYN 12626
pm Open a FULL YEAR PREMIUM for ¢
: z ; ‘ nent of inel, 94 Duane Si, hes (or Wigher limits oF il you
, fi : » New Ye NY wy

D326. Ria i ‘
997, Joun J. M ' ua. Highway Construction
lon bie? hie 1 sai Stump : 9. Foreman Positions VALLEY SY8EAM 12¢ event
John Mattera; 9 sam zt |
tondo: 941 } slo a A: pen mpetitive xa MANHATTAN — 12 Poreme New York

1
for highway H me 28108
Raymond \

peua BOORLYN-2346 amusy Ave Begobiyy 34
cl eaite
(RGME— 1540 White Pars Re, Beare OF

1 xan J 00
te panic —90 0 won 38
are ten WV se}
April F c
1 joa Ce

| Thriftiest FRIGIDAIRE
2-door Refrigerator!

© Big 100-Ib, zero zone top freezer has its
own door, Freezes 40 cubes extra
fast! Two Quickube trays.

* Automatic defrosting in family-size
refrigerator section,

© Twin Porcelain Enamel Hydrators keep
nearly ¥% bushel of fruits and
vegetables dewy fresh.

Preyare For Your

$35— HIGH -s35
SCHOOL
DIPLOMA

INS WEEKS

© Roomy storage door has the exactly
perfect place for everything from eggs
to bottles tall and small.

© Every shelf full-width, full-depth,

© Economical, dependable Meter-Miser
Is sealed in steel, doesn't need olling.

SEE US

Model FDS-137-2 FOR YOUR
13.24 cu. ft
4 colors or white LOW, LOW PRICE

Imm mT
ROBERTS SCHOOL Hi
517 W. S7th St., New York 19]

| tant
HT nA
Peans beens es

cin i J. EIS & SONS

105 FIRST AVE., NEW YORK CITY GR 5-2325

——— —— —-——--—
Page Ten ieee ES SERVICE LEADER _—_ Teesdday, Jannary 21, 1964

(Continued from Page 8) [ice up to 12 years of servies,jand other local governmental A ents Farn 16 90
vested after 15 years of service.) 1/24th of the average annual sal-| agencies upon the same basis as)

Such vested pensions are now pros ary for each of the next 24 years) presently applicable to employees}

vided for New York State em-|of service, etc of the state. Treasury enforcement agents are now being sought by
ployees Increased Interest Cross-Promotion | the Federal Government. These positions require three years
Ling of Duty Injuries 11. Provide for an increase from! 15. Enactment of a law permit-| of criminal investigative experience, three years of account-

$ Provision for disabil and! 3° to 4% the interest credited to| ting cross promotions through | ing or auditing experience or a college background,
th benefits to all public em-| contributions by members of the | Competitive examination, so that These positions, which have annual salaries of $4-

de
|
ployees injured of killed on the} New York City Employees Retire. | Civil service employment will pro-! poy foe Gg-5 titles and $5,795 for GS-7 titles, are offered
career) With the Internal Revenue Service, the Bureau of Customs,

Job, where such employees are not) ment System appointed since 1947 vide a service-wido system instead
the Bureau of Narcotics and the U.S, Secret Service,

covered in this respect under ex-|and the New York State Bmploy-| of ® lmited depart
mt Retirement System appointed | System

Stine | » oes peep al a Retirement Each of these positions is now open in New York State.
9 cuiinate tse ath gambl Z Workmen's Compensation 16, Establishment of a non-) College experience is substituted on a nine month for one
9, Eliminate eath gamble _

under the City Employers’ Pen-| 12. Amoudment of the Work: contributory retirement plan, with) sehool year ratio. For further information and application

sion System whereby beneficiaries| men's Compensation Law to in| kUsranteed benefits equal to 1/40th| furms contact the Board of U.S. Civil Service Examiners,

Jost out if the employee dies in the | clude all public employees not now | Of Thal average salary for each) thternal Revenue Service, U.S. Treasury Department, Room

year of service.

nmtal

service afier he became eligible for | covered Health Plan | 1107, 90 Church St., New York City.

service retirement, t 17. Establishment of a non-con-|~ LnGan oTICe z.
Death Benofit | h benefits! imntory health news pro-| cedure be adopted to resolve mat-| ws

10. Provide that the death bone- 9 BY PTO- | am ters relating to wages, hour ano oranios

fit: > to be paid to the benefict- ssjornafesiege ah ehkaay Accrued Leave | working condition of employees. | fj;

aries of New York City empl of equal contribution by Gov-) 44 pasment of accumulated Competitive Appointments — | |

be the same as the death benefit mont and the employees. sick leave credits to employeus, 23: Lesisiation to require the a

now provided in the York Unemployment Benefits {upon Febie death or separa. | Civil Service Commission, when- |,

on

State Employees Retireme
to wit, 1/12th of the aver
sal salary for

Law,| 14. Amendment of the Un
ge an-| ployment Insurance Law to
uch year of sery~ clude employees of muntetpalttic

* Shoppers Service Guide = no.

20, Legislation to require the
Help Wanted - Mal

Budget Director to stat

tion’ from: servi jever @ non-competlt .
to make a finding | dingent
not the

position

Subdivisi becomes vacant
as to whether
can be filled ¥
amination before the vacaney Is
filled

lexislation allow-
bdivistons to provide

fine benefits to their em-

compet

Automation

0 4 are tintenown nul en
ttre ithamn x he manertnimedt

mont of a Commix-
udy and report on

& Female; Business Opportunity

rie effects of automation te «iatribaiete of Mary. Watts,
ORGANIZER WANTED BY UNION i's TRUE! voto of salary | * 5 Mp ee A ‘‘ ves .
Are you a retired city employee Waray, title reolassifieation | Service Employees and the re M
who would like te werk es en ore x \ | approved by Director of Classi-| ‘raining of personnel displaced by t
janixer for a fast growing union va : Tena ttiet’ eis exes . technologic ances for other|inown art
eerie pres ‘ fication and Compensation or by \ ;
Wek wae WA ik 8 ic |the Civil Service Commission. xf| ¢™ployment milar pay scales.) “wing the
either on o full or part-time oa y: veto ts due to alleged lack of fund Escalator Clause lar wt 7
age or sex no. barrier, H HUT. the Budget Director be requlrec atic pia \\
fox 107, The Leader, | 1 iS caatieal a atric Legislation to provide, on a
t NY. 7, NY, | : : avert lolent | funds continuing basis, adjustment of
Your letter will be held in strict | fortheoming budget for realloca-| ponsio ” retired employees by | x
confidence, f tions or title reclassifieations #0) » ¢ 1 ot t
< -|_ a t t waw Yor Clr) | vitned a formula which will tak t
count the effect f
Help Wanted - Male | Applionce Services Civil Service Meetings | con living abd incre '
PARLE MAL — i Aalen Serve Rotrign ’ Legislation to rvquire the! wages of employee ‘
Ot U0 PEAR Maite a Y ner i Service Cominission to p rvice
Call RY Ae ao Bt . Ne Oe Y
- — rear ’ i” and spe- Sulary Seb
Y IveR TARGAING eS lon forth ( x
‘ ¢ t
‘ ti ‘ Auto Emblems mi 4 and that such b ; f Sait
— | O9BA i public record .
Instant Beauty r ari } : w oot Witt
f t a ns co y hers 4
na urd tak c
\ y
‘ i i t f
its of . Ra Ba = tat Caure
ang ve deemed to pub- A veteran who attends sehool d ant a pi
an full time under the Gl, Bill may th : "
Working Conditions receive a training allowance of as all ee
An appropriate formal pro-| much as $160 a month from the| Prorat raf ote
{ ‘

hutiva: veces tmonu worice Veterans Administratoin, if he has

* two or more dependents agreed cr gh
Typewriters $ i ; ; al Korn
Mimeographs ‘e ob i — —_—
Addressing Machines ) f
’ vm -

ALL LANGUA JES :
TYPEWRITER CO. mt

CHeivee SHON i 1
Ue Wo ote st NeW donm AS YP SOW DON Y

If you want to know what’s happening | ook Seer Pea

to you "and ny on
to your chances of promo "are_“anknen mer ft
to your job Jarenona terete ds" eralors, “gate
to your next raise wnerrice ly the sate of RNR CANY

tof O10 Went Sih

and similar matters! 1K

FOLLOW THE LEADER REGULARLY! |

i] Here ts the newspaper that tells you about what ts happen-
ing im civil service, what is happening to the Job you have and
the job you want.
Make you don't mist a single Issue. Enter your sub- |
ion now
The price 1s $5.00. That brings you 52 tasues of the Civil | the
Service Leader. filled with the government Job nows you want. | NARD A. PINKIE,

a

You can subsc “ . | net Wilt'and Tostainent
You can subscribe on the coupon below cement | THOMAS, Tenis pot he foal

the’ foe at BENSAND A
Tor legal mervione reminren
fixed ahd ailowed ta the
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER st dure
97 Duane Street

New York 7, Mew York

the person or
tor and why
the Court
ee whould mot

1
WMONY WHERKOP
veal of tn Sutra

1 enclose $5.00 (check or money order for # year's subscription
to the Civil Service Leader. Please enter the name listed below:

shoot iy @
full color movi

your first, easy to-load rd J) »

have

Exrtridge of ‘ira

DUMONTS CAMERA EXCH.

150 EAST 34th ST., N.Y.C, MU 9.2500,

b
Wresias,  nonom ane
NAME (L9) SAMUEL Di PALCO,
ME .steceresnercower sone s semerme . Pale Of O4F wall county, wt
County wt New York, the 2

ADORDRE chstenskesosenssansannness Ee “tan on tounge |
unten

al |

Daal
Gere of

Tuesday, J

REAL ESTATE

LONG ISLAND

Long Island

4 | INTEGRATED

OFFICES READY TO
P tS SERVE You!
‘all For Appointment

DETACHED

LO CASH
TO ALL

BRICK

2-FAMILY

$25 Week
LAURELTON, 5 down, 3 up
finished bosement, 2 cor

garage, wall to wall car
pet, $900 Cash

CAMBRIA HGTS.

-| | 7 ROOMS $12,500
NO CASH G.I. — OTHERS $370 DOWN
SPECIAL opportunity to own elegant home with many
desirable features and extras, such as modern kitchen
and bath, full basement, private grounds for the safe-

ty of children at play, etc. First $10 deposit takes it. $22 Week
9 8 ROOMS, 4. bedrooms,
HURRY! Hollywood kitchen ond
both, garoge, party base-

ment.

OWNER LEAVING STATE
CAMBRIA HGTS.

2-FAMILY $17,990

4 down, 3 up, Stucco, oil

heat, modern as
Must fe Sold To Se

HOMEFINDERS, LTD.

fi 1-1950

widens Bibvilas St, ABI

IL 7-3100

103-09 NORTHERN BLVD.
CORONA

“MOVE RIGHT IN LEGAL 2 FAMILY |

2-FAMILY 12 ROOMS $15,000 |
TWO 5 ROOM APTS.
WALK TO SUBWAY

$110.45

PER MO. PAYS MTGE,
NO CASH G.I.'s
CIV. $300
ON CONTRACT

JA 3-3377

159-12 HILLSIDE AVE, tes 19 ROCKAWAY BLVD
JAMAICA SO. OZONE PARK

BETTER REALTY

6 AND BATH UP, & ond both
down, Must be sold at once te
bnycr whe needs nice opt, for

himse!f and enjoys income from
ether opt. Civilian only $450 |||
down. G.I. no cash.

JA 9-4400

Farms & Acreages
Orange County

ALL 5 OFFICES OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK $500 CASH
FROM 9:30 A.M, TO 6.30 P.M
es N NEW HI-RANCHES
SPLIT LEVEL | VACANT MOVE IN
$14,500 |RANCH $11,490
| $395 TOTAL CASH TO ALL
Gi NO CASH DOWN CHARMING home for gracious sbi jaaght
a Beouti
MAGNIFICENT HOME set bock | 0109 0" Ineettmett eee AMITYVILLE
on 1/5 acre plot in fine sub- oi heat N. AMITYVILLE
urbon neighborhood, features $72.92 MO, PAYS ALL AMITY TERRACE
3 large bedrooms, finished ploy 4)., .aies of mew ond re- WYANDANCH,
room, 1'; baths, garage ond! cole homes with little or no BUILDER
modern eat-in kitchen, cash down. Trades accept- (516) MY 1-8400
| ed. Rentables evailable, (516) 5983608
|] NON-VeTs $290 DOWN Coll ne.
277 NASSAU ROAD 17 South Franklin St, JAMAICA, 517,900
ROOSEVELT HEMPSTEAD 8 Ronin Ronee

1 VAQEY st8p00

.|| BETTER REALTY

| au 5 OFFICES OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK; 9:30 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M.

Ao NEW Ee
Taviity Maines

ADDIF REALTY

1 INTEGRATED

HOLLIS ESTATES ST, ALBANS eral AX Ri 1661
$16,990 $13,990
7 2-Family Only $790 Needed CO GOGDOODHHOO®D

nly $690 Needed

SOLID BRICK

MLMANS, 4

&

Gl's NO DOWN PAYMENT rs
‘ NO CLOSING FEES! rs

BUTTERLY & GREEN

168-25 HILLSIDE AVE, JAMAICA
JA 6-6300

°
°
ry
°
°
.
.

Ho 4.7630
STRIDE REALTY

® 199.24 Hollis Ave.
© ove N. vig

DDOD@OSOSOOSS

Exam Study Books

to help you get @ higher grode
on civil service tests may be
obtained of The Leader Book:
New
ec

GREAT NECK .

‘ cy yie AIVEMSIDE DRIVE, 1% © 9% private
avarinente Interracial, Furnished The
talew T4LLe

WA t10

Hempstead, L, I.

bon

b10 EN &

amHer Bunk mae

_ CIVIL SERVICE — LEADER

Page Bleven

VALUES

Long Island

Springfld Gdns

$15,990 Hollis Proper

$16,990

St Albans

$18,990 Richmond Hill $21,990
aide

MANY 1 & 2 FAMILY HOMES AVAILABLE
G.I, OR FHA $690 DOWN

QUEENS HOME SALES

HOA AilIsHEe Ave

OL 8-7510

damalen

CALL FOR APPT. OPEN EVERY DAY

MOVE RIGHT IN ——— Z

VACANT ...NO WAITING

SPRINGFIELD GDNS. QUEENS VILLAGE

$16,600 Take Over High Gi Mtge. |
DETACHED Colonial, 7 large ANYONE CAN BUY
rooms, modern kitchen, tiled $119 MONTHLY pays all, Ne ||

both, 4 mester bedrooms, party
bosement, garage, large garden,
FHA ond Bonk opproved, Only

$700 NEEDED 40x100 plot,

Exclusive With Exclusive With
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK — 9 A.M, TO 9 P.M, i

|}JAXMAN AX 1-7400

——________ 169-12 HILLSIDE AVENUE, JAMAICA |

closing fees. Terms, Detached,
6 room bungslow, finished base-
ment, gorage, landscaped

2-FAMILY WALK TO SUBWAY

NO CASH DOWN G.I.

$13,500 11 FULL ROOMS

Oil Steam Heating — All Extras included.
$400 CASH FHA No. 132
JAMAICA

iii "AX 7-790 i MMIII

HOLLIS © AM

143-01 HILLSIDE AVE.

G.I, NO CASH DOWN!
VHA KMOO

4 Duin, Bhe, Wallen, SV, ThtNpee

NO SECURITY!
ST. ALBANS VIC.
1 og] LONG ISLAND HOMES

5 b pat
HOMEPINDIES, LPR, FL beteae

For Sale - Florida
North-West Section Miami

ROOSEVELT |

For gracious living or invest:
ment, located in o beautiful
neighborhecd, 3 bedrooms, 2 SPLIT LEVEL

boths, concrete, brick and stucco, | | BEAUTIFUL builders model, 6
fully furnished plus additional | || years old, corner property of
room for extra bedroom or| |ilarge 75x100, deluxe recrea
study. Cerport you con make] |l\room, landscaped preggers oe
additional room 14x24, beauti- || oil hot water heat, modern clec-
fully landscaped, awnings and|/|\tric kitchen, all storms, screens
sprinkler, Good transportation, and venetian blinds, A steal et
Asking $24,000. Terms. Call ||1/$17,990, Seen by appt. enly.

SOS BRICK — BRICK

1-FAMILY, 6 rooms, finished bose-
ment, extra large corner plot,
97x180, 3 bedrooms, Holywood
bath and extra |: bath, 2 vane
burning fireplaces, front end rear
terrace, ultra modern kitchen im
bosement. Can be used as mother
ond daughter set up, A dream

Suffolk County, L. I.

house ot $22,000
HAZEL B, GRAY

ALBANY

ATTRACTIVE 168-33 LIBERTY AVE.
HOMES | JAMAICA
CALL | AX 1.5858 +9

W. F. BENNETT

Multiple Listing Photos ;
1672 CENTRAL AVE. ] volte
ALBANY UN 9-5378 t
by

2-Family - Huntington, Ll.

ur met
The Leader, ¥
¥

eT

Page Twelve

CIVIL SERVICE

LEADER

Tuesday, January 21, 1964

(Two Social Work

B us D r i ver Titles Are Open

Questions

The New City Department

The Veteran's Counselor
(Continued from Page 6)
c) Disability compensation payments received by
by veterans for service-connected and non-service-con+
nected disabllities

jof Personnel, in an effort to d) Grants to seriously disabled veterans for homes
|fill social investigator trainee | designed for “wheelchair living.”

Qwsions 76 to 81 in Column T Column Il and recreation leader posi-| ¢) Grants for motor vehicles to veterans who lost
ar he names of A) hart tions, is now conducting bi- their sight or lost the use of their limbs 4
ph in New York Bi B examinations In f) World War I emergency officers’ retirement pay
wi ituated in one of th © @ these two title 2) Death benefits to families of deceased veterans
four boroughs listed tn Cal yeas D) B r also are exempt from taxation, They include death com-
Po name in Column T sele ‘ mye . » F ; surance
hath Her ie aiivie Answers pensation and pension, indemnity and all GT insurance
ted from Column I 18 fray cow feet os Acres

6. ‘a aL v L ) 7 -
Column | paid experience in recreation work, Since pension payments are
ie 4 of the 1964 World a result of the stepped-up examin-| jy tou of the required mujc made by the Veterans Administra. ,
Be Mss Te Final Key For ation dulo, vacancles for s0-| Interested candidates may ob-| tion at a monthly rate based o
Hudson Terminal F Chal cstigator which had) tain full details from the y anticipated annual income of
Sash deominul Gang oreman numbered over seven hundred! york City Department 0 claimant, any change in this anti
cage 2 have been reduced to 42, In a sonnel, 299 Broad < cipated annual income should be
M Beach . inel, 299 Broad vk | elp
Gs cceiewa ceca Prom, Exam tion, hundreds of provisional s0- | 19907, Cortland exton- reported immediately to the VA.
Idlewild Airport The New York City C fon 336 ee: 5
ce Cone —_ —| Korean G1, Bill education ben=
= the ofinal sae , FREE BOOKLET by U. 5. Gov- | efits for veterans will not be
i D t of Parks vacancies ernment on Social Security, Mai) available after January 31, 1965,
motion examination to gan . 1965,
Socialized Training eee eee eae penal ony erage rang none boggy Bie aa AS
sus hall an er, 3 oe wey |New York 7, N. ¥. warns.
figur presents normal | =
Dies ad By Delehanty. Sse ts —_—___——
1, Di 2, B; 8, A; 4, A
Lack of yecialized train A 4 10, A rked success of the re-
=genuncainie oa “cesci.% | FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY
ne is one of the major rea- :
19, D
sons for unemployment,” ac- oa BROOKLYN'S
cording to Alexander Froh- 28, A : ?
lich, vice president and voca- ; ae i be
tount training direc st The c Dp: 39,, th and third Tuesdays of
42, C: 44, @; |each month, Starting salary for
De uty Institu rohlict h positic 0 per anne
Hass D: 47, D: 4g,| each position 50 per ann
went on to point out that aaliaater traliee can- te
while official figures on un- t possess a baccalau- ||]
employment continue to be - ~ ) any major, and BRINGS YOU THIS FABULOUS
discour there are thou-| FREE BOOKLET by U. 8. 6 re candidates are
sands of jobs advertised in the |etmment on Social Security, Mail | re a
7 ly. Leader, 97 Duane Street, | wit nysica! educa-
“Help Wanted” columns week |” physical
Help Wan! . ‘ New York 7, N. ¥ tion majors, of six months of |f}
atte ek
rn is: ems are | |
BOE t with Tf lis
anil ittle or nothin
u ved and it weed .
il : eae ; stereophoniec performance
; man ¢ al COMPLETE
He Sins ta ; equalled only by the finest consoles M Ovi E x
ny sod del can in the most compact system OUTFIT
) dina ¥
ve : . \
it utional yet !
ie in olthor full time d
ut
ele '
«
¢ nt, F I ve The KLH Model Fifteen Compact Phonograph System . hp
' d hi Nothing with such sound quality was ever so compact | Bell & Howell
: Bes : : Mertontonie Misi COIS ha | SUN DIAL CAMERA
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Deloha c . ORIZED — no tubus
: tt . ¢ . er Aolid state pre-amp/ampiifior
; is . ATS automatic ¢-apeed record changer
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LENS LLUSTRATED. © FILM
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ny 4 4 TV |
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Fireman Answers B & A CAM FRA
ty the questions which Tt | See Our Complete Line Of Records,

a f m |
thi for the ta hi '@) U S c Tape Recorders & Photographic Equipment
teat ie} s wiven by th ‘
Yor) y Department of Person 620 5th AVENUE bel
Dante mere 147 EAST 76TH STREET
al Me are 4

Soe a ae NEW YORK re 7.8766 || BROOKLYN, N.Y. SO 8-1521

+ 49.0, 50,0. .

| Tuesday, January 21, 1964

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Page Thirteen

, Eiastive April 1
State Judicial Conierence

Board consisting of three mem-
bers shall be appointed by the
Administrative Board for such
period as it may determine. The
decision of the State Administra-
jtor made in pursuance of subdivi-
J ston (a) of this rile shail be final |
unless within 30 days after notice
of the decision nloyee shall
appeal to the ation Ap=

The Woman's
Angle

| By MARY ANN BANKS |

peals Board whi hall there-
upon review the decision of the
State Administrator and deter. City, State and Federat civil
»Sets New Personnel Code 2 2022203
he appropriate fiscal or) Women’s Editor of the Leader with
: all be mottled | news of interest to women in eivil
Employees of the State's unified 1 come er the jurisdiction of a a from this prowahuve, | Service, Deadline for this material
new code of rules as of April 1, 1904, ac ent announcement by the Ad-| Rule 4, Certification of Payrotts: | is Thursday at noon for pubtica-
ministrative Board of the New Y State Judicial Conference, Certificatior 1¢/ thon in the following week's paper.
z A Unified Court Syst
“hidden adonntciat tli divided itive | OF ANY political subdivisior Big business men usually have
Board ‘ Brigid ey Vo ‘ fn 4 in He t an able wife to handle their social
McCoy, who is also besa AdMIN-| petitive, tabe 1 any notivities; New York Cliy lias NINA
Poshiest 9 bt a n a x : D administra RAO CAMERON,
eggnog Coust t or ative seteating | MBS. ¢ yi Assistant, to
peals, chairman; Justic xamina- The Adm: Commissioner of Public vents
ard Botein, Gvors } ‘uhh 0 impractic- P Rule 5, Examinations Richard C Jy, spends
Francis Bergan, and Alg - mimost all of the year
‘ ail Pre Fustione °of t tlve c making members of the Consular
he Appellate ms of . eae Me ab i fe at home in ¢
Tow dopar c t is foun a | by ny col
The nine topies cow ! Board te f er boss, Comm.
es are jurisdictional ¢ a- | practica ain the s Maye $ Chief of
b t
“+ on classifientic ! ir bs col, she f charge of or-
iow ot ehasatt certitien- rh incsongs AD - , New York City’s recep-
nie are EN and hospitality program
evar P ‘ competitive 1 for UN delegates and their
ake Yea ay bi scribed amilie
City cour : iN wail < As Director of the Consular
a Corps Committee of the City of
Preamble a New NINA CAMERON or-
ian f t ized 32 funetior whieh
f more than 1,700 members of the
Col ps were en ained
y 1 during 196%. She has also d-
- ed 225 receptions including din-
! the Y luncheons, and cocktail
y the ze . pi s given by the diplomatic
sr stnoganher Spey ‘ corps in New York City.
x n-competitive , But New York City's number
Jurisdiction Classifiea- me hostess and her two secre-
, taries, BEATRICE cH
Th of the Unilied SON and ROSE ROMAN,
>| and now busy preparing for 1964's
a guests, imagine
service | Staea’ a du a ‘s Pair ¥
{ Judge | te ss =
wits: shatt |B its judement the erevance © Use postal zone numbers on
consist and positions volves a mutter affecting state-|your mail to insure prompt
€ not inc unclassified the (Continued on Page 15) delivery.

GET THE ARCO
STUDY BOOK

FIREMAN
EXAMINATION

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Other Suitable Study Material for Coming Exam

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O,0.'s 308 extra

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

Be wre to include 4°) Seles Tox

Please send me copies of books checked above,
| enclose check or money order for § —-= BELL & HOWELL
' LEATHER CARRYING
Neme ee ee sneer CASE
Address seeeereeeeres PTTTTTTRT TTT j
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3-6436

Page Fourteen CIVIL SERVICE LEADER qT jesday, January 21, 1964

For Positive Action On Civil Service Bills, Write Legislators |

The New York State Legislature is now in session and
in the legislative hopper are many Important bills affecting
civil service and its employees

The approval or disapproval of these b
depends on the support

, in ma

yen each bill by

stituents, A show of strength — witnessed by letters, post A
cards and telegrams, as well as by personal contact is Senatorial Districts
ne sary to age of each bill which will improve

civil service lee

king condit
nw riting to representatives, it is important to give
me of the legislator who introduced the bill as well
as the print and intro. number (Senate Intro. 1234, print
14, Smith) or (Assembly Intro, 4221, print 4321, Jones.)
The names of » State Senators and Assemblymer
your be found in the map and chart or
S all mail to both and a
the State Capitol, Albany, New
Next week, legislators from
be Identified by geogr:

the na

this page
senators
York

the New

hic locale.

semblyr

York City area will

35- YEARS — pr. Arthur Schmidt (right) is shown at a recent

ement dinner held in his honor by members of the Education
rtment, Dr, Sehmidt, the former assistant
School Finance and Administrative Service in the De

ommissioner for
t, had

ime

li ny cases, |
a legislator’s con- |

New York State

Inset shows Long Island Counties

GOVERNOR

SENATE*

Nelson A. Rockefeller

STATEWIDE OFFICERS

(my LIEUT, GOVERNOR

STATE LEGISLATURE

Malcolm Wilson

pleted 35-years of State service, Shown at the dinner with Dr a -
) were: . heii ea heaniaee 1 Elisha T, Bar ) Walter Van Wiggers ny (R
ehmidt » left) were 8 E, Allen, commissioner of Educa-| 5) Elisha Ts Barett | 1t eee in
tion, N.Y, State and Mrs, Allen, and Mrs, Sehr 35 hdsaen bark a 43 Henry As Wine a Ht
onal | Esneat fs Motlield ia 44 Lewrence M. Rolison 2) a
. (0) 45 Cohn He Hugh (Rn) (R)
Guard Supervisors | Serra Named pen (R 46 (a) : (R)
The U.S. Civil Service Commis ALBANY, Jan. 0 — Willi Ww. (9) a7 (my 56 Frank J. Glinakt (0)
‘ ting for th (R) “ (A) ST Richard T. Cooke (Ry
ston corulting for the i-| Serra of Belmont has been ap- (R) 49 Williom Te Smith R) «58. Jeremiah Je Moriarty «Ry
tion of guard supervisor at the! pointed Allegany County Judy
New York Naval Shipyard in by Governo: He will) ,SseEMBLY (by Counties)*
Brooklyn. The title has an an fill the vyacane ted by the PUTNAM
ALBANY Willis Me Steah
salary of $7,030 and requires v esignation of Jud Norman B. 1 Pronk Con to) GENESEE Ve HM. Stephe: (Ry
erans status. For further informa-| Pitzer, who recently was named to 2 Harvey My Li feet (9) joho Ry Jehases n RENSSELAER
tion contact the Board of Exam-|the Supreme Court, Judge Serra! ALLEGANY GREENE Resales Sakon (ay
cape : Den 0. ¢ s ® Ciorence 0. Lone z ROCKLAND
iners 0 East 42nd St., New/is a graduate of City Coll :
¥ ¥. before Feb. 4, t ‘ k and’ from St, 3 Broome Joaeph FX, Now (a
sake ORSIES SED: ” = Ore. BN bad pan 1 Deniel §, OF som, Ite (®) . a ST. Lawre €
filing da rsity School of Law 2 George Le Ingalls (R) PES Verner Me | (R)
nin ~~ CATTARAUGUS Orin 5. Wileow iid SARATOGA
dames Fe (R) Lewis Stanley Le Van Rena: oy
CAYUGA Dwight Ny Dude ® SCHENECTADY
TEST AND LIST PROGRESS NY C aaiten tre ©) gee a ar oe to
—Wt.u&. | chautauaua Ken R, Willord ® SCHOHAIRE
As Brvee Manley PW eae Russel Selkirk (
| cHemune Harold |, Tyler a sch
a Hahouut 1 ‘ Ly Richard Marsha R) monroe 4 @
Aiwviins i \ i 4 CHENANGO 1d. Evgene Godderd 2 Sene
rN ’ Guy Le Marvin ay 2 §, Williom Resenberg M4 ww
* 2 Paul 8, Honks Jr, 2
A : 4 INTON 4 Charles F, Stackmaiater 3) STE
Avs : Reber J. Feinberg oT) c «@
“ : ig COLUMBIA ay SUFFOLK
, Willard Cs 0. a) Pe (R)
‘ 2 ia
‘ ‘ ‘gig ; a) R) de wo
‘ i f R SULLIVAN
¢ is ‘ Hymon E, Minte (wm
Is ; i
bee ‘ * qa
, vr ' ‘ B ONONDAGA
' 4 ‘ ; 1 Reberr Match, dee a
. ‘ t (D) 2 John H. Tarry a ir
* 1 2 (a) 2 Philip R, Chase ie uLster
i AN 4 2 (9) ONTARIO Kenneth be Wilsan a
mu t ' 4 (0) Fred hy Warder @ WARREN
y } ' $ (0) Rukia
, H 4 Albert dy Housbeck (9) ORANGE ished dy: Baritone (®)
5 u ' 7 Julius Valker a 1 Daniel Becker (a WASHINGTON
Water Gi a 5 William Sadler a) 2 Wilsan C, Von Duser (a Lawrence E. Corben, de R
' fn ‘ ESSEX ORLEANS WAYHE
: ‘ , Gront ¥. Jehaaen ww Alonse L, Waters w doaeph Cy Finley qa)
k \ FRANKLIN Osweco WYOMING
® ‘ Fs Hayward Plumedore 3) Edward Fe Crawford ( Morald Ly wy
3 f FULTON AND HAMILTON OTSEGO YATES
s Aifish dail : Joanph Ry Younglave to) Paul be Tothor oy) Paul Re Tar @™
’ « ‘
Tuesday, January 21, 1964 é CIVIL SERVICE LEADER Page Fifteen
Kapiicalien’ Cie due; tii Att d t F ili REPORTERS EXAM ||
pa np gga bias en an | ing | PREPARE FOR APRIL REPORTERS | vapiors ACCENTS
vs: POLICEWOMAN aM se ene

A WEEK DEMARS LEGAL SECRETARIES ||

ne e INSTITUTE : Your Own Boss!
Se FG Artin 2 veans J an 27 ] n Cit tay. yi aoe ns raw | [ Stearate mow wo
ce ing AHawaner) e Ch 66330

“Gy 158 PeriodOpen He ee re

of Duties ae |
formed in January 27 is the final date for the attendant position
Street Attire io ; , = ACCOUNTANT
How reomeriovar oproatt sinins | for which the New York Clty Department of Personnel is now Prattones | R | Fs Li |
PENSION AFTER 20 YEARS | recruiting. The position has a $3,500 to $4,800 salary range | ,,,,.amm? uh 884 FH eal Estate License |
aT ™ through TH— Min, Met, at ay Wes Ie

with annual and longevity increments. 1H FM: Resistor New
OCR NPRCINLIZED TRAINING | Pormenleni sc C 0 J 30
Prepares for iat Wren Tet The resulting eligible lista trom this exam may also be || cay warms, AT are ||| WOU OG UPON Ud.
ENROLL NOW! DON'T DELAY! i a
Practice Exems at Every Closs | “Wed to fill the position of m The Winter term in “Principles
or Guest at & Class Session! server. and Practices of Real Estate,”
Ties er ides Civil Service Prep ashe |] for men and women interested
Wed., Jan. 22 at 6:30 P.M. The closing filing date for this position is January 27 and Kineaeesiee |] in buying and selling property

DELEHANTY INSTITUTE | the exam ts tentatively scheduled for May 2%. For further nn hertiee Jan, 30, at Eastern

senger, Watchman and process _——

roadway, N.Y, 3,

195 East 15 St, N.Y. - GR 3.6900 INformation and application forms contact the New York City Prat ereean nee 29, This 3 months' eve-
mg ‘ . ‘ 7 Qt : ning course is approved by. the
| Departmen: it of Personnel, 96 Duane S8t., New York, N.Y., 10007 Prey ra ee oi state ‘Diviaion of Livensine Ser
> - — ———— _— —ae mie Kawa Tnel, Methods for Solution, [|] Vices @& equal to one year's ex-
" 7 perience towards the broker's
FREE BOOKLET by U, 8, Gov- oe ae MONDEEL INsrent te fee
ernment on Sociat Security. Mat New Jurisdictional Procedure te WHE SE GT Aue) coe sano HI] Heese
only. Leader, 97 Duane Street, | J
New York 3..N. ¥. ‘Set For Court System Employees (=
—__ (Continved from Page 13) vil service Coaching City Exam Coming Soon Por

City, State, Ved & Pew
wide policy, in «

Divi
to the Admi
| determination

which case the
mn may refer It
ative Board for

ACCOUNTANT

Wednesday Mernin eve |
Rule 7, Annual Leave in Courts TRORMAL ENTRANC I BNAM | INTENSIVE COURSE

COMPLETE PREPARATION
Class meets Sat, 9:15-12:15

Tuevday, Thurvday, Worn

Within the City of New York: x & Kvening

[ STOP WORRYING. ABOUT
YOUR CIVIL SERVICE TEST ieee

be entitled to ed vnc
Personal business and i
holiday leave of not less thi

work days if on staff seven y
or long GF Rob lees) the:

” A
:
i
work days if on staff lew than sauMONDELL insTiTUTE || este va these
even years. a bh ¥ Lng | Proadwas. § snene ®t
t e Rule 8, Terminal Leave in Courts LU SSS Freeing Ti] tease write mn fren aul the

Within the City of New York: me are ee ACOOUNTANT conrse,
Terminal leave may be allowed

at the discretion of Administra. | ADMINISTRATIVE pas pl Nes aun
tive Judge; or if there be no A¢ a eevee
[eapeetae Judge, at the disor .

Sib
ar

aS)

; | tion of the Departinental Director
H {Jjof Administration, of the depart-
, Civil Service Arithmetic & Vocabulery ...... --- $2.00 |]| ment involved, computed at
$3.00 | rate pel one Bo th for ever, y
. . a, cee if | years of total service, to the exten:
Cashier (New York City) .... aia | of funds made available therefore | i
i vetenee peceeees eve S iy the appropriating authority. | Ll
Civil Service Handbook Rule 9 Sick Leave in Courts Prof. IRVING J | surance License
Clerk GS. 104 ...c ccc cere cee eeeerens coceees $3.00 | wine the cy of New York: rot. ls 9
{ Sick leave of or 7 th
b FD Clery NV.C. cescecenee eee vesvecees 118300 ff] of rermouth | GHAYKIN, €. P. A. || COUFSE Open Jan. 29
| i z
Federal Service Entrance Examinations ..........$4.00 | Offers a Coaching Course The next term tn Insurance
1 For The. N.Y.C Brokerage for men and women
f Fireman (F.D.) .. cee peeeeeees +++ $4.00 pnb who want to qualify for state
Seat)... scaises vere e $4.00 HT ave beer ACCOUNTA T EXAM License opens Wednesday, Jan
lh School Diploma Tes: Ill to illness, additions N . at Eastern School, 721
! Home Study Course for Civil Service Jobs .. S495 able to future earne Broadway, N.Y, 3, AL 45029
| may be allowed In t Lectures will be given each ||
{ Patrolman ... dsicneneeeae wae $4.00 ff) of the Adminis This evening course 1s ap
5.00 there Ay no Adm Thursday, beginning January |] proved by the state New
Personne! Examiner cesaweawe none $5. ! ais “tion 30th, 1964 at 4:15 PM, at Hl York, erney (uit
|) i $3.00 | ns eet ing th mente for admis-
Postal Clerk Carrier agence sees 130 West 42nd St., N.Y.C. sion to the state examination for
le t L} n one Y insurance broker's Heens No
Real Estate Broker ones fee have HEY ne TER, ni ce ccatia other experience or education is
needed,
| School Crossing Guard aeibeh $3.00 PE 6-7679
y
R Senior File Clerk davaikediediewsicaenwaibses SOM: Bl made eallanis = 3 - —
Appropriating authorit: |
Social Investigator - re a This prgeert ve TRACTOR TRAILERS, | Gara Your
:, . golr Nav
Social Investigator Trainee $4.00 | on Decanter M4. 19 the Aa. | TRUCKS’ selon. fee | High School
* ‘ ¥ } ministrative Board of th tT
by || Social Worker st eee. fl Senses apurian cio Arice|| 4, for Cie 12 Henan, | Equivalency
. LY.C. : ee | VI, Section 28 of the Constitution|| Model Auto Driving School |)
Senior Clerk N.Y.C. }| of the state of York asd || CH 2-7547 148 W 14 St, 10AT Ave) |) Diploma
Stenotypist (N.Y.S.) Syeanaes seers ess $300 lf] Chapter 684 of the Laws of 1962,|| Open Dally 8 A.M. to 10 P.M
c $3.00 || inicudicna Incl, Sat, & Sun P tor we waitin |
S$. 1-7) eeepnccensenene sees . for personal satisfaction
— ape ' to $4.00 | INTENSIVE TRAINING Tues. and Thurs., 6:20-8:30
ice ine POTOF 6 cee ee eeessvevecse ae wah Tn ig “)
"= og 130 W w w rg A Write or Phone for Information
i You Will Receive an Invaluable |) = er aa
r 8 a E | New Arco “Outline Chart of HIGH SCHOOL sig Eastern School AL 4-5029
New York City Government.” Nino Meglnner 721 Broadway N.Y. 3 (at 4 8t)
© With Every NYC. Arco Book— | || Equivalency Diploma vn Hexion Fics sasan ina doe epains ee
Sievers Trowday, Thursday. | Cane & LOA Schoo! Equivaloney Claes
10 AML M. Abe G00 Feat
| anneal Special Saturday Clas Mea PM » SINUS: RVRNENG i
ORDER DIRFCT—MAIL COUPON qn osm eee Ae hee. :
15k Wot Me Ge Ae) OM anaH
SSe fer 24-hour special delivery | : ~
€.0.0.'s 40¢ extra |
LEADER BOOK STORE Electrical Inspector
97 Duane St, New York 7, N. Y. New Ob
Please send me —___._ coples of books checked ebove. 2
Henclose check or money order for § a Now meee
. 7
Name ssenmnomnncossnensnns me Et SP so || ON Senet COUN |
| —— ns ‘use ot
Addi Perrier IeeUeeT Cree Tee Tere r ere ee terrier rire bbs si! Daya ne «lowe ae
snd FREE BOOKLET by U. 8, Gov re Ta, Colina
City Pee ernment en Social Security. Mall ADELPHI eration,” Wiig “a its Ait tee X
srseaneeesers scarce veseucss Sale ssoseorseee Henty Leader 07 Duane isons, | SUSINESS SCHOOLS SSRN (ach shorhagh. RL” to Gh
7 nel uni K fay Bye Pur fikizn, (Newt to Avalon
New York 1, N. ¥. Poe ate EE lieu wineoia EE et ous & LAMM wepeian, Gb O-6008.

Page Sixteen

CIVIL SERVICE LEADE = Tuesday, January 21, 1964

DE Aides Lose

Reallocation Bid :
(Continued from Page 1) cla) curt tisabilr xatit=
t r erformane Kel Refering to D nior examiners i
ork th inv t memorandum and F t th class-

| capable of assumin I a 0 Affected
nm The dec mn affec tr 2200

:

ter, This year a check for $82 was presented to the

ANNUAL GIFT — tic east Hudson Cardinal McCloskey Home at White Plains, Re-

Parkway Authority chapter, Civil Service Em- ving the check is Sister Rosalie, representing

quired knowledge and

ployees Assn., recently initiated a program in which the home, from Emil Dorin, president of the chap~| 1. Giaims examiners ar sel OF hel is nea ge Z
children’s homes or homes for the aged In their area ter. Others are James J, Lennon, secretary (at) oi aig rairty allocated x iam Blom end Thoitis
will receive a gift at Christmas time from the chap- left), and George Hunter, vice president (at right). | 15 jseother with suct Kaci seneatah atthe
e ——— } as compensation claims ¢ ited the ete
com pens m1 lewing exami ym int vers and Robert
unemployment reviewing examin- Gaudette, claims examiner

The Pay Program

(Continued from Page

contributio: to the Retirement System, effective April
1964, and 2) eases in bast lary, from three to eigt
percent, depending on grade effective October 1, 1964. The ¥
two ta ther will amount to a seven to 11 percent neb
pay uke! } State employees this
| yea
| SO FAR WE have only been able to g t ‘8
designed to explain the three age points p
program, in ce, tra
previous pol program Into what could be
med a ‘ olnts program, An important

(second from right), chairman for the chapter, to oe
CONTRIBUTIONS — Members of the Mrs. Helen Dubensky who represented the sociat) PP" 'n
Psychiatric Institute chapter, Civil Service Em- service department. Observing the ce employee
ployees Assn. recently presented a $30 check for Dr, Lawrence C, Kolb, director (left); Ronald Cor-

emonies are

Christmas collection for patients, Presenting the  settl, president (center); and Victor Ziajka, rep-| Gift nC o fur »
cheek at ceremonies at the hospital Is David Scott resenting the business office ,
LET'S LOOK AT total contribution of
a f alary to the n prior to the State's
aS. of the points several years
At Hudson River State ago: was i the gree
€ of these contri i ate change
hat his salary was in cent and his
uaenTs ve n-ine-Jo tual contribution of gro to bwe
| points. Now, ur t esent Ul pick
| up these last t additional
ote) ervices raining © ES toward the employe program. In other
word: Ps ce c 1g of his own salar
ALBANY 20—Twenty-nine stu ts have j eted I e of toward fb ment, with no reduction in his
tate-sponsored ©: e-job tr srog ram t , Dr, Pg H. Hoc und wil one sins
ioner of Mental Hygiene, yunced 1a co o his retirement program, At
Ir ation at R — the same time tting back in his take-home-pay
Sta I 1 é { 1 » positions vaca ate hos-| the two pol ibuting toward retire-
Tra g F , us| ext at another tr 0 ¢ ed by | ment. Thi two percent actually to about
tevelc » Y F u li na yea id con €| three percent becau I not be bject to any further
Depa N it he F Servic course, Employr 7) 168) tax dedu
© iY t N Y also it ra kitehy
Stute Depa of Labor a Selection c un § employee who at the present
ca Stat 1 ¢ ‘ 1 Y itons and in ate awe ent of his gro. lary toward
wn t at \ ) 1 1 mila
um en three percent, 2
Manipo' D att trainee, the loved pi Varied Backgrounds nAncennteiiile
Tra A 1 da 1st pa a A 4 nee
" RIG } y ws en refit
nitals. ate. to 1 bor |¢ ; pense ulary of
a Var ormer occupa
School For Skill r 4 area x e nach . nly of the
4 N K t t and futu ; : the entire
4 a 4 ‘ 7 i \ ne train. the d tior
yep: nt i . é bathe
e e } é S by \ tentation IT IS anticl 4 hat employee to con-
t experi \ i Ba uaauisy,| Hue their contributions to the Retirement will be
nioved ‘ 1 $0 assista 2 2 a ritted to d so much for the re portion of
eh a ie program
emp! A yaratio: Tau 1 qual 0 : W t 1 rease
tne f Renamed Member pre : hati THE COMPLETE breakdown of ctual salary increase
by y Resgedep a antag A sane A be kno of the bill to be
s E ; f ab) . § d to t the entire sche-
y { Buildis ( Tra ‘ the jon of program, which will boost
w« ae " k Cc b Ap ib 1 1 pha uaries ir " m three to elght percent, will be
or » 120 7 G I sam n ye 1 1-| printed Lr > Leader
course 0 of m h a tecm:end: opportunity to. pat. what he has IN THE MEANTIME, I again urge you to do all you
train 1 mont nt Hudso iny 1968. Members of t len. 4 » practi oy a 1@ | CAN OF local front t ire this program's acceptance
River Sta Hospital, a eevlve $30 a day for|in the kitchen of another institu. | and implementation by cor ting your own legislator for
include both theory and practical!» $5.000 & year tion support,

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Reel 10
Resource Type:
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CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
Date Uploaded:
December 22, 2018

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