Civil Service Leader, 1964 April 28

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U.S. Budget Assures
7syratuse To Be Scene Of h nual

Meeting On October 13, 14, 15,

(Special To The Leader)

ALBANY, April 27—The 54th Annual Meeting of the Civil
Service Employees Association will be held October 13, 14 and
15 at the Hotel Syracuse, Syracuse, Joseph F, Feily, presi-
dent, announced today.

Leader’ On Federal Promotions

Deputy Bureau Chief Says
Normal Promotions Not Hurt

An official of the U. S, Bureau of the Budget last week assured The Leader that @
Budget order asking review of promotion procedures in Federal agencies would not inter-
fere with normal promotions. ; — -

% Eimer Staats, deputy direc. | @ find out if various oon Story Caused Stir

The meeting will be devoted to preparation of CSEA’s 1965 legis- ; were making excessive realloca-| A New York Times story of
lative program; county and state division meetings; reports of offi-| '* Of the Budget Bureau, in @) ion. or tities or creating new) April 15 interpreted the Budget
cers; aeneral business meetings, and training programs ing to Lender Editor Paul Kyer, | positions that were not fully war- | erder as a directive by President
P Said the intent of the order was | ranted (Continued on Page 2)

-

Sowiee.
EADER Conferen

ot
ANT ANVETV
NOTLYLS TOLTA¥O
sei xod Od
owl vaso
NOSNINYAd fF AYO

America’s Largest Weekly for Public Employe

Ae Vol. XXV, No. 34 Tuesday, April 28, 1964

*
Price Ten Cents |

See Pages 3 & 16

Two CSEA Triumphs

, wy
end Yt lalior

PAY, WELFARE BILLS SIGNED

Kotha
Union In Trusteeship

CSEA Gives Wage, Benefit
Program For Rochester;
Asks Official Recognition

Governor Approves Salary,
Minimum Wage Measures

By PAUL KYER

~~
font
Repeat This! |

= ALBANY, April —The most dramatic legislative ses

Readers Asked, Too sion ears for the Civil Service Employees Assn, reached
a successful climax last week when Governor Rockefeller ap-

Leader Polls Dem proved two measures that will raise the salaries of all State

emplo and mandate a minimum
workers in local welfare depa

ees wage for social case-

ents,

County Leaders On

(From Leader Correspondent) hi H | While the pay bill was assured
SHESTE eran ot eee Perilous Passage
ROCHESTER, April 27—All city employees would receive Senate Race C ice of Rocke! ers signature, the} T 1 if _ islation
| | . ! t social welfare legis!

a 15 percent general salary increase under a six-point pro-| aiees “cliff hanger” aspects of the oe eae i Psonic
posed program for improvements in salaries and fringe bene-|(~) PINION polls may not be| social welfare bill persisted until | WMS Uke’ OF Oe ee
fits submitted here by the Civil Service Employees Assn, | the scientific instrument] the last moment. No indication of ist sat ‘a dise “slong: hava ot ak

“ ” = some say, y e y| the Gove itude toward | P#* i
The CSEA “package” would) — oe St | e@ say, but we believe they ie Soren s Dae ia | session, thanks to strenuous ef
also provide One additional week of annual|40 produce certain results eS re oo wr ihe, forts of the CBEA and State Wele
Longevity increments after 10| Vacation for employ with 15/ worth reading, We certainly Nai eerie gicd pees Ae fare Commissioner George K.
e 7 -| or more years of satisfactory do not consider the results 7 Sgnl> | 2
years and after 18 years of eon- | Or 1 0 Sults| cant gains ever made by CSEA| WY™Aan, whose department spon:

tinuous service at the maximum
of salary grade. !

of our own polis a sure thing,

ut over the years we have
had considerable success
| with our style of opinion!
| sampling.
For that

(Continued on Page 16)

reason, The Leader!
has again written all Democratic
county leaders in the State, this
time asking them for their first

(Continued on Page 4)

Capital Conf. Sets
Gala Weekend At
Concord Hotel

The Capital District Con-
ference of the Civil Service
Employees Assn. will mix
business with pleasure and
turn the annual meeting of

the Conference this year into
a@ gala weekend at the Con-
cord Hotel, A, Victor Costa,
Conference president, has an-
nounced,

Costa informed The Leader that |

SOUTHERN WELCOME — state Budget Director 1.

Norman Hurd is seen as he was welcomed to the Concord Hotel by
three members of the Southern Conference of the Civil Service Em-
ployees Assn, where Dr Hurd was one of two principle speakers
addressing the annual Spring Workshop of the Metro-Southern CSEA
Conferences, From left, Issy Tessier, Conference treasurer; Nicholas

Pussiferei, president; De, Hurd, and Charles E, Lamb, seoretary, (Continued om Page 16)

the Conference has arranged ®) Conference; State Budget Director T, Norman Hurd, and

for its local government member-| Sed the measure. A similar bill

ship. (Continued on Page 3)

CONGRESSMAN GREETED — Congressman samuel
Stratton, second from right, was one of two major speakers address~
ing the annual Spring Workshop of the Metro-Southern Conferences,
Civil Servioe Employees Assn., held at the Concord Hotel, He Is being
greeted here by Salvatore Butero, left, president of the Metropolitan
Solomon
Bendet, chairman of the OSEA Salary Committee,
Page Two

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Tuesday, April 28, 1964

Leader Assured On Promotions

(Continued from Page 1)
Johnson to save money by slow-
ing down promotions in the Fed-
eral service. The story threw civil
service organizations and em-
ployees in the State into an up-
foar that produced a flood of }
telephone calls and protest state- |
ments from both employee organ-
izations and elected officials in

Civil Service Committee on
Monday, April 13.

At the hearing it was Indi-
cated that the Bureau of the
Budget had addressed a let~
ter to each of the heads of
Federal agencies employing
more than 100 people, draw-
ing attention to the increases
in average grade which have

both major parties. At Leade

©

press time that week, the situation
was only partially cleared up by

& Budget statement that exoner

ated the White House from any

participation in ordering the| within-grade promotions, that

directive is, regular promotions which

are made at specified, statu-

sree 1 the) 7). explanatory tory time intervals if the em-

text of Staats’ letter to The)  povee's performance is satis-
Leader:

In my telephone conversa~
tion with Mr, Arthur Yates,
Associate Editor of the Civil

occurred over the past five
years as indicated in reports
by the Civil Service Commis-
sion. This letter did not ad-
dress itself to the matter of

factory.
Nor did the letter relate to
promotion of individuals to

fill existing vacancies at ®
Service Leader. on Priday higher level

while I was in New York, I What we are Inquiring into
suggested that it might be is the increases of average
useful to address a letter to grade which result from re-
you which would set forth grading of existing positions
the pertinent faets with re-

spect to the recent newspap-

or groups of existing positions
(usually by the agencies un-

per stories on the subject of der authority delegated to
increas in the average them by the Civil Service
erade of Federal employees. Commissi or the creation
Reference to studies of this by agencies of positions

matter was made in public
testimony presented before
the House Post Office and

at the higher grades, or at
least at an average grade
above the previous average.

Senator Hubert Humphrey

Top Speaker At Dinner

Of N.Y. County Democrats

Hubert H, Humphrey, majority whip of the U.S, Senate,
will be principal speaker and guest of honor at this year's
Annual Dinner of the New York County Democratic Com-
May 14 at the Americana

mittee,
Hotel.

The New York County organi-)

scheduled for Thursday,

tation is especially proud of se-

curing Senator Humphrey. Be- | ¢d in persuading Under Secretary | firemen outside the City of New |
cause of his current duties as\ of Commerce Franklin D. Roose- | York
Noor manage: Velt, ar. the seniorranking of | In disapproving the measure,
ee cial from New York in the federal |th® Governor stated, “While this
ights Bill, the leovernment, to serve as general| Dill seeks to remedy a failure of
any i pee chairman, Jerry Pinkelstein, pub- tg -ssoinapeneye to live up to
y aaallgs ied Usher of The Leader and the New | Aneaae se fs tohonosicaen
: icant York Law Journal, will again be wt De ‘disapproved because i$
lor speaking executive chairman. Mrs. Louis 8.|T8!4l¥ omits recognition of the
une as - Gimbel, dr 1g as the co-|Y®¥ing conditions and eizcum-
te . executive chairman stances from joes from locality to locality.”
Tate of several
hundred a Because ot
week, accord- - the promin-
ing to News-" ence of the |
week Magazine guest of
His appeayance at this dinner jor and ¢ | Diol 518-943 4011,
Tepresents another coup for Mr 5, N.Y.

County Leader Edward N. Costi-|

ed Pad Made)

a6 ARE ENE PaNesr
Retail $225.00 to $350.00

WIG IMPORTS

UNDERCOATI

Costikyan is
predicting 8

record attend-
ance, exceeding
DIRECT FROM IMPORTER lthe previous
eee MAN Hal record set one
Sold Retail $125.00 |! year aco when "7 Finkelsete

Democratic tional

noted that political dinners

election years succeed in bringing
faithfuls,
particularly in 1964 with « Presi-
dential and senatorial election at |

out more of the party

stake in New York State,

We want the agencies to
have, or to establish, an ade~
quate system of review and
control so that we and the
Congress can be assured that
current actions are justified,
and that future fncreases in
average grade and in num-
bers in top grades are fully
warranted.

In our testimony before the
House Civil Service Commit-
tee we indicated that the in-
troduction of labor-saving
equipment and the increasing
complexity of operations in-
evitably leads to increases in
the number of higher grade
Positions and hence an in-
crease in the overall average
grade. We have some concern,
however, whether all of the
increase in average grade for
example, a 70 percent in-
crease In the number of posi-

tions at grade 13 and above
in the last five years, can be
fully supported on these
grounds. In any event, we
need the full facts and evi-
dence of the management

dgments which have c:
he increases.

We fully believe in the
principle of comparability set
forth in the Federal Salary
Reform Act of 1962, In our
view this is a most equitable
way of fixing salary rates for
Federal employees. If com-
parability {s followed, we will
then have measure by

sed

Minimum Fire
Pay Bill Vetoed

which the increasing pay for
Jobs in the private economy
—srowing in part out of the
increasing complexity of work
generally—can be properly
reflected in salary rates for
employees of the Federal
service.

Tt ts essential, in the inter-
est of equity and fairness to
the taxpayer and to the em-
ployee, that our grade struc-
ture not be distorted to raise

pay but rather be correctly
utilized to meet justifiable
classification objectives,

‘We appreciate very much
your interest and hope that
you will support our currect
efforts to obtain ® compara-
bility adjustment for Federal
Pay now pending before the
Congress.

ELMER B, STAATS
Deputy Director
U, S. Budget Bureau

y a

Miami Beach

and Mats
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Special Discounts
Service Lani

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Completely Ale Conditioned
Wel Pout Gon, Mor.
DIRECTLY ON THE OCEAN AT

19 ST. MIAMI! BEACH

COMING TO THE FAIR?

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(212) CO 5-7700

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to Set, AL 4.0778

yan. Costikyan has also succeed-

chairman |
John Bailey was honored. He also

THE ORI

GINAL 3M RUBBERIZED UNDERSEAL
LIFETIME GUARANTEE

To All City Employee's
Show Identification Card ALL
CARS

Flying A Service Station
13960 ATLANTIC AVE, — CORNER NEW YORK AVE,
7 AM, TO 6 P.M.—-ALL DAL SAT, BKLYN 16, N.Y,
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ONK PRICE—NO UPS!

ALBANY, April

was reached. The bill affected

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Memo:

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Mey 29th to 31st
2 days & 2 night

SPECIAL LOW JUNE
RATES

4. SAUSITO & KON

27—Governor
Rockefeller has vetoed a bill that
would have set an annual mini- |
mum salary for firemen of $3,600,
| with mandated annual increments |
a of $600 until a salary of $6,000)

| Day Wkend
Spec. $10 Per Day Each

$18 Each .2-»:,|

all

FREE

VACATION

: Brochure
on Request

Get Away
From It All
and Just
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ond Rest

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‘Phone 203

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| Rxceltent Promoti

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warren Thoroughl
WRITTEN EXAM Jute ti 13

PATROLMAN

NEW YORK POLICE DEPARTMENT
New, Higher Salary

158

A WEEK

AFTER 3 YEARS
gilngtetee Pay ter

Tattore Altewaees)
| Opportunities
PENSION AFTER 20 YEARS

Ages: 20 through 28—Min, Hgt. 5°8"

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

MANHATEAN: THORS, APRIL, 98

at 1th, Sel or 7:90
or JAMAICA: MON., MAY 4 at

City
Admit WHER te One Paivol

CIV, SERVICE LEADER

7 Dunne Bt, New York, N

Telephone! 212-BKekinan 20010

Published Rach Turday
matter
Oe

Bolered ae second-class
second-clane postage paid,
1099 at the post office
N.Y, and at Bridgeport,
the Act of March 3, 1)
of Audit Burean of ‘Circulations.
$5.00 For Your
Individual copies, 106

Apply Before May 12!—Men & Women—17 Yrs. Up.

POST OFFICE CLERK-CARRIER

Thousands of Career Jobs—All 5 Boroughs
$93.20 to $128 for 40-Hour Week

Our Home Stuiy Book specially

orepared by

Post Ofice experts fer thie type

and Anngal

2 pages of Study Material, Practice Drills a:

Questions, ONLY secs eee

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Bend Mall Orders (NO €.0.0,
person at Dele ‘lt iees
within B days of rocekst tor FU

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nestwala
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Hooks may be velurned
CASH REFUND If not satiated,

THE DELEHANTY INSTITUTE

MANHATTAN: 115 EAST 15 STREET, NEW YORK 3, N.Y.
JAMAICA: 89-25 Merrick Bivd., Bet. Jamaica & Hillside

Y—: jexday, April 28, 1964 cLyvI

of RNASE LEADER

ee

Stratton & Hurd Address
Metro-South Workshop;
Feily Calls For Planning

KIAMESHA LAKE, April 27—State Budget Director T. Norman Hurd last week ap-
plauded the “good faith” in which the Civil Service Employees Assn, dealt with government
Pr F
and Congressman Samuel Stratton followed up these remarks with the comment that “the

p

Federal government and its npn could 1 earn a good deal from Dr, Hurd and the CSEA

b success: argaining.” ees ——
about successful bargaining.” | vies are publicity.” Stratton

‘Their remarks were made at a . i Beretton’ telat
dinner meeting during the annual| He declared that “The most ef-| Congressman Stratton told his
Spring Workshop of the CSEA| fective und productive means of | Audience that “I am amazed at
Metro-Southern Conferences, he'd | Contract with the State Adminis-| the Job done by Dr. Hurd and the
hheve-at the Concord Hotel. tion is to have responsible pro- | CSEA, We in Federal government

5 sie als well documented and pre-| Could certainly learn a lei

Joseph FP. Feily, Employees As-

who spoke at

cor

employee unication and

from what I have heard

nted with good faith by men of
Your president,
d the chairman of your

sociation president,

gotlation
here.
(Continued on Page 14)

ity
Feily, a

Joseph

on on 18TH ANNIVERSARY — wir. and Mrs, Fred Cave, Jy

(he's fifth vice president of the Civil Service Employees Assn.) cele«

brated
Southern Conference
Hotel last week,

of Cs

their 18th wedding anniversary
A Spring Workshop

while attending the Metro-
at the Concord

by CSEA for
year

its membe ip this

In another vein Hurd
warned against parochialism
public employee orga

jevid a vital organization

(Continued from P.
in| had be
He | CSEA
identi-| 7

ge 1)

"n sponsored for years by

nizations

e per

s of the
| and bills
despite opposition
legisiators who wa
for local aid. Howe
posals had the solid backing of
the leaders of the Legislature
from the time they were negoti-
| ated between the CSEA Salary
Committee, headed by Solomon
Bendet, and the Administration
The measures increase the num-

State
ended

m
ne

salary
earlier,

some
money
the pro-

pensior

er

SAMUEL STRATTON

@ dinner following night
called upon more than 300
Conference officers, delegates and

the
the

guests, to pian now for the future ber of contributions to the Retire-
needs of the organization ment System picked up by the
Hurd State from five to eight points.
re In addition, salary increases
Integrity and good faith do not
; ranging from 3 to 8 percent were
exist because of rules or legisia- | ih
granted. The net increase in take-
tion.” Dr. Hurd told his listeners
home pay for State employees

He noted there were many
methods of bargaining—use of in-
flated figures, aggressive tactics, |

at ; '
ranges from 7 to 12 percent
In commenting on the Gover-

nor’s app! y bill,

refusal to accept anything but |

| Joseph F esident
flamborant agisementa, gnoring| BR T. NORMAN HURD | sour) es
of facts, etc fied itself with the whole commu-| we now are deeply gratified to|

his type of bargaining rarely | nity, not with just tts own con-|

have the opportunity not only to
real benefits for either

Produces cerns. “Too much self-esteem or! eommend the Governor, the Bud-
aide,” Dr. Hurd said. “It has been | setf-concern, in the end, suffocates| get Director and all others con-
my experience that responsible | both the growth and the vitality | cerned for the sponsorship of the
negotiators, represented by the|of any group,” he declared } measure, and most importantly,
kind of Civil Service Employees | for the leadership during the bill's
Assn. representatives that dealt, we perilous journey through the
with me this year, not only serve L H J) \egisiative session itself

the welfare of the people they rep- | evi In the last four years, ¢
resent but also enable govern- sive of this measure, the civil se

Ment to negotiate in the interests

vice employees of the state have
had three raises sponsored by the

Go' of them
by

‘Speaker At
Suffolk Meet

Son

| | graded, some of
| BAY SHORE, April 27 —| been flat percentage, but
State Comptroller Arthur Le-| have all been raises and they have
vitt will be the guest speaker | *!! been needed
This salary increase, com
at the annual dinner dance} \ js), se apage
of the Suffolk Chapter, Civil| gaaitional percentage points
Service Employees Assn,, May |
23, at Felice’s Restaurant tae
Patchogue, Li, Joseph F.| [\@ Pilgrim Cry
Feily, CSEA president, will :
install new oMoers Is All Join Hands
‘Thomas B. Dobbs \s up for Come on and join the
election as president, Other officer | Bigg Bank, That 1s the call
pominaiions, are: Seott, | of the Pilgrim State Hospital
dor second viee precident; Edwara |cnapter Civil Service Em-
Valder, third vic dent: Rob-| Ployees Assn, here. A mobile
eh wile; douctn visa oral unit of the Inter-County
JOSEPH F. FEILY Harold Molinelli, fifth vice i-| Blood Bank will be at th
of both the employees and the| dent; Joseph Maliglia, Sgt. at| hospital May 4 for the pur-
} Administen Arms; Felix Livingston, treasurer; | pose of processing donors.
The Bud, Di tor said tha’ Merry Arnott, corresponding sec- | “Remember, one does not have
“Natura t ¥ t ad E K. Armstrong,| to by jong to any organization to
area t disa en executive representative | give a blood donation.” Geo
tions but it is a mark o ‘Our Or- Ticket are available for t Pelke'! pe dent the C A
Banization that \t works hard for | unit president, or can be obtained chapter, urged, Applications for
> What tt has negotiated, not for un | by calling Harold Scott, ehairman | joining the blood bank may be
Teasonable demands whose only! of the annual dinner committ

yy tained fom supervisors,

Ps
| pre

ide

pro’ an increase in salary of
from seven per t to 11 perce
for almost all state employ

will provide an important oppor-

nity for political st
provide a similar ber
missive basis.

We believe that this

bdivisions to
on & per-

ry bill

ses ris nomen An’ Welfare Measures

accompanied by the retirement
legislation, is a most dramatic and
vivid demonstration of Gov
Rockefeller's full and complete
commitment to the cause of
maintaining, and indeed raising, |
the standards of the civil service

of this state. As it has been from
the beginning of his administra-
tion, Gov. Rockefeller has kept his

Arthur Miller Tops
New Long Island
Conference Slate

NORTH BABYLON, April 27
ts hur Miller, of Suffolk
has been nominated
president of the newly-

as
formed Long Island Confer-
ence of the Civil Service Em-

ployee Assn Charles E
Monroe, chairman of the
Conference's nominat-

ing committee, informed The
Leader last week

will be
4 at 8 pm. in Phelps
North Babylon, Other
ug office are Mrs.
Pilgrim State, and
an, Ce’ Islip, first
Gerry ©

y Brook, and
1d State
cond vice
Landonsky
ningdale.
d Park-

The Conference election
Id May
Lane

Park
seek

Thomas
niversity, Pa
Koch, Long
Fekel
Murphy

and

ident
State |

Georg

Isla:

Pe

Geo!
Michael
trea
Nassau County

and
Islip,

ath,

im
Cent
Blanche

R
Feily to Install

FF ident of the
Assn, will
Confer

Joser

pre
Employee
offic
dinner
26 at the
wamp Road
r tt

tall the
first
June

rs at

dance be
Galaxy Ino,
Plainview

event

ence's
held
Round

are $5 pe
Reservations must be made

19 an

person,
not later than June
obtained by writing
Monroe, 26 Paumanake
| Babylon

to Charlie

Ave

nay be

salary committee, Solomon Bende |
demonstrated skill, knowledge and
good faith in thelr negotiations |
with the Administration. T a
mutual respect which brough tt sat
about the fruitful ben 6 gained s

word to the employees of this
state.

Speaking on Governor Rocke-
feller’s approval of legislation
providing a $4,500 minimum wage
for social workers, Feily hailed
the action and said, “It's been a
Jong fight and finally, with the
help of many people, we have
won."

He also praised Wyman for his
unflagging efforts in behalf of the
bill

In approving the measure, Gov,
Rockefeller noted that it was
sponsored by the State Social Wel«
fare Dept. and was based on finde
ings in the 1963 report on the
Moreland Act Commision on Wele
fare

The

new

state law requires
local welfare departments, effec
tive April 1, 1965, to pay their
professional case workers @ salary
of at $4,500 a year

Although 88 percent of welfare
case workers in the state now re=
ceive salaries at or above the $4,«
500 figure, there are 18 counties
in the state which will be required
to raise employees’ salaries.

east

Called Major Contribution

“This bill should make a major
contribution,” the Governor
stated, “to the ability of public
welfare departments in this state
to and retain the most
qualified personnel for the vital
and exacting work of securing the
greatest human benefit from the
Important public welfare pro-
grams in the state.” He also noted

attract

that the minimum salary set by
the bill “follows the sound pre-
cedent established In prior years

to minimum salaries
for public school teachers and pro-
officers in the state.

Wage Study
Bill Vetoed

resp

bation

ALBANY, April 27—A_ bill
which would have required the
state director of classification and
compensation to g la-
ture the finding annual
wage and salary survey was
vetoed last week by Governor
Rockefeller

In disapproving the bill, Goy,
Rockefeller said, “this bill is at
variat ne spirit of the
state jon which places
upon the Governor the responsi-
bility for preparing and submit-
ting the executive budget to the

\ Legislature."*
Page Four

CIVIL SERVICE

LEADER

Tuesday, April 28, 1964

Personnel Examiner

A promotional exam for position
of senior personnel examiner
(examining) 1s now open in the
office of the New York City De-
partment of Personnel.

Annual salary for the title 's) has an annual salary of $9,000 to

99,000 to $11,000.

Research Position
Candidates in the New York
City Department of Personnel may
now apply for a position as senior
personnel examiner (research),
‘The position is offered on a pro-
motional basis only, and the title

$11,000,

Don't Repeat This!

(Continued from Page 1) from the race. Here, in alphabeti-
three choices for the office of | ¢@l order, are the names of the
U. 8. Senate this year to run| men who have figured most prom-
against the powerful and popular | !nently to date in the speculation:
Sen, Kenneth B. Keating On The

Leader ballot will be the paul ee ee ee

Paul Screvane,
| President,

Adial Stevenson, Ambassador to
the United Nations.

Samuel Stratton, Congressman.

Deadline

Our deadline for the poll is
Wednesday, May 6, and we will re-
port the results the following

City Council

STATE

-WIDE

INSURANCE COMPANY

ADDITIONAL DISCOUNT 10% To Qualified Safe Drivers

State-Wide Insurance Company

(QUEENS —90-16 Sutphin Boulevard, Jamaica 35—AX 1-3000

Mos
VALLEY STREAM—LO 1.7800
BROOKLYN CL 89100

Wed., Pri. 10-7 Tues, Thur, 10-8 Set. to 4

BRONX —— KI 7-8200
MANHATTAN — RE 2.0100

end i be the names) smascador, Week, The deadline applies to both
of those men who, to date, have the county leader “pros” and our
figured most in the spectilation on eNiieeg Antuso, @upreme Court | ee Dent folget that if your
who would win that nomination. | vi choice doesn't appear on the
There will be a space for write-| Ralph Bunche, United Nations) woo, et you can submit his
ins as well. diplomat, name anyway. Address all votes

While our list will include sev-|_ James A, Farley, former US. |to “Dont Repeat This." Civil

Postmaster,
Averill Harriman, U. 8. Under-
secretary of State,
Frank 8. Hogan,
District Attorney,

eral names, only the top three
choices will be reported In fair-|
ness to those prominent possible
canidates who have neither indi-|
cated they were seeking the post
nor are conducting a campaign Arthur Levitt, New York State
for it, officially or unofficially, | Comptroller.

We are not asking that the wat | Robert M. Morgenthau, U. 8

lots be signed and they are to be| Attorney
|

Service Leader, 97 Duane St., New
York 7, N. ¥., and mail in time
to beat the May 6 deadline.

Manhattan

Keane Designated

ALBANY, April 27 — John Mi
chael Keane of Binghamton has

returned in sealed envelopes to| Prank O'Connor, Queens Dis-|been desighated Surrogate of
The Leader next week, The votes | trict Attorney. Broome County to fil the vacancy
will all be opened at one time| Otis Pike, Congressman. caused by the death of former
and counted by a canvassing com- | Pranklin D, Roosevelt, Jr, Un-| Surrogate John H. Weidner. The

mittee consisting of Leader Pub-
lisher Jerry ein, Paul] Howard J, Samuels, industrialist
Kyer, editor, and N. H. Mager, |

business manager. F 8 How To Get AM

dersecretary of Commerce. post will be filled in the general

election this fall.

Want Reader Views, Too orate
As in our last poll, our reader cipher
sin our - poll, our readers orig ey
are invited to let us know whom | Todividoal 1
they think is the most popular man Instrnetion Diploma

, Shoppers Service Guide »

E

for the race. The voting civil ser-
vice population in the State is, at
conservative estimates, some 20 per
cent of the total voting public and |

Or Equivalency Certificate
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MURIEL NOVINSKY
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LU 68-0683 (167th)

deal to say about who fs ele
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Enrollment in the CSEA Accident &

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‘The program includes coverage for total disability resulting from occupa~
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EAST NORTHPORT

BUFFALO
SYRACUSE

Tuesday, April 28, 1964

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Clerk-Stenos,
Machine Ops.
Needed By IRS

Positions of clerk-stenogra-
pher (G-4) on a permanent)
basis and of calculation ma-
chine operators on a tempor-
ary basis are now offered by
the Internal Revenue Service,
Brooklyn District Office. |

The starting salary for the

FOR MOTHER'S DAY.

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(Burke, Green
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BUFFALO, April 27—Alexander
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Ray Greene, are candidates for
1964-65 president of Erie Chapter,
CSEA. The election Is May 6

The Chapter includes 11 units
with about 2000 members, repre-
g a Wide variety of muni-]|
government in the Buffalo

Other candidates: First vice

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Wanted by City of New
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Extra Pay for Set.,Sun, & Holidays

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Clerk-stenos is $4215 annually, president—Neil Cummings and |] operation ;
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operator positions can be obtained fred Nerl; treasurer, Adele Hana- ee

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15 East 15 St, nr, 4 Ave., N.
dimit FREE to Class for M.
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van: chapter representative, John
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FREE BOOKLET by U.S. Gov-
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CIVIL

SERVICE LEADER

@ LEADER

America’s Largest Weekly for Public cogent Wéilty toe Publte Reaphyest
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations
Published every Tuesday by
LEADER PUBLICATIONS, INC.
97 Duane Street, New York, N.Y.-10007 212-B£ekmon 3-6010
Jerry Finkelstein, lesan!
Paul Kyer, Editor Joe Dex

Arthur B. Yater, Associate Editor

City Editor
ant Editor

Advertising Represe: i
ALBANY — ‘agony? T. Bellew — 303 ig Blvd, TV 2-5474
KINGSTON, N.Y. lee Andrew Street, FEderal 8-8550
100 per copy, Pri embers of the Civil

Service Employees Association, $5.00 to non-members,

President Johnson Can
Find Top Talent In His
Own Government Offices

HILE urging a salary increase for Federal employees,

President Johnson has spoken frequently of the need
to find highly talented people to fill the top jobs in govern-
ment, We have some suggestions as to where they may be
found.

At present, the Federal Government {s continuing a
hiring policy for top echelon positions that, to a large de-
@ree, has diminished in other jurisdictions and that is to
constantly seek executive talent from business and private
industry, The result is that career employees in Federal
service find themselves on a dead end street when the most
challenging and important jobs with government become
vacant.

The lack of career appointments from the ranks appears
to us to be wasteful. Surely, few people in private employ-
ment can bring to these top jobs the experience and know-
how of the men who had been not only training for but also
advancing toward the top positions, And these men, unlike
those who enter the business world or who come to govern-
ment from the business world, have announced their inten-
tion to stay in public service to their families and to Govern-
ment. This is their life.

Tn addition, there is a great reservoir of executive talent
in public employment ranks outside the Federal service. Here
in New York State for instance, there are men of talent in
State, City and county positions who are not only capable but
dedicated to a career in government service,

There is an old Latin saying that goes “If you seek a
Monument, look around you.” We suggest a paraphrase of
this slogan to President Johnson; “If you seek talent, look
@round you.”

Every June 1 Should %

Be Civil Service Day

HE war on poverty, the fight against cancer, the educa-

‘tion of children, the building of our highways, the pio-
neering in space—these and hundreds of more tasks which
contribute to the maintenance and growth of our American
‘Way of life are, in the main, the jobs of legions of dedicated
public employees,

Too often, the only civil servant that interests the press
@nd the public is the wayward one. The accomplishments of
the great majority of public employees—which involve every-
thing from the saving of lives to keeping up pure water sup-
plies and clean streets—are simply taken for granted. Yet,
Gespite being underpaid and limited in promotion opportunt- |
ties; despite suffering the image of being considered second
class citizens, most civil servants would not dream of work-
fing for any other employer rather than government,

A host of teachers, scientists, engineers, mathematicians,
medical men, clerks, attendants, administrators and others
could earn more money and more quickly advancing careers
4n business or private industry, Why do they stay? Because
public service is not only rewarding in terms of serving the
country and its people—it is exciting and challenging in a
Way not to be found in private employment,

AS an expression of appreciation to these dedicated civil
servants, The Leader is sponsoring “Civil Service Day” on
June 1 at the New York World's Fair, We propose that
President Johnson, Governor Rockefeller and Mayor Wagner
from now on set aside every June 1 as “Civil Service Day,”
It is a tribute the public service has justly earned,

LEADER
BOX 101

Letters To The Editor

‘Lousy’ Tape

Editor, The Leader:

On Friday, April 17, I along
with other applicants, participated
in the practical part of the ex~
amination for Senior Shorthand
Reporter, conducted by the De-
partment of Personnel. This test
consisted of legal and financial
matter dictated on a tape re
corder at 160 words per minute.
‘The recording was completely un-
intelligible, inaudible, and just
plain garbled. This was a dis-
tinct disadvantage to any appli-
cant hoping to pass thie exam-
ination.

I believe in order for a steno-
typist to pass an examination of
this type he must have a live
dictator to conduct such a test, |
If the City of New York is de
sirous of obtaining competent
help, they are not conducting
these tests in an atmosphere de-
signed to produce favorable re-
sults. I am calling on your fine
paper to bring this to the atten-
tion of the Department of Per-
sonnel—as I have— and to remedy
this situation,

Gerald Mets
Brooklyn, N.Y.
Anyone For Tea?
Editor, The Leader:

I want to thank you for your
cooperation with us and for the
very interesting story The Leader
Published relating to our staff
aotivity.

Sometime during June we are
Planning a tea to honor our
adoptive parents and children, and
are hoping your staff will be able|
to attend. As soon ns plans ar
completed, you will be receiving
@ formal invitation.

Please know that your interest
and help has been greatly appre-
ciated.

Mrs, Miriam P, Allen

Thank You
Editor, The Leader
Please accept our thanks for
the support you have given to
our legislative program this year,
We are particularly thankful for

the prominence you gave our
cause in your April 7th edition.

John J, Corcoran

President,

Uniformed Fire Officers

Waiting Two Years

Editor, The Leader

Would you use your good paper

wet us some information on
the above? We have been waiting |
| patiently (almost two years) for'|
| the release of the supervising |
stenographers list

Apparently nothing can be ac-
complished in the civil service
without agitation. Surely, if the
Personnel Department is that
busy something should be done
about increasing {ts staff. In {6
| fair to keep us waiting so long
for an earned promotion; and in
the meantime provisionals fill the
vacancies?

The City is actively setting up
examinations to draft recent
graduates; have they told them
how ft drags its feet wt promo-|
tion time? |

“Long-Sufferers”

FREE BOOKLET by U.S, Gov-
ernment on Social Security, Mail
only, Leader, 97 Duane Street,
New York 7, N.¥.

Your Public

Relations IQ

By LEO J. MARGOLIN

If They Only Knew

QUIETLY AND WITHOUT FANFARE, the composite pic-
ture of the civil servant is undergoing a radical change.
Unfortunately for the civil servant's public relations, hardly
anyone knows it.

TODAY, THE COMPOSITE PICTURE of a civil servant
comprises generous pieces of trained professional, scientist,
doctor, skilled researcher, knowledgeable technician,

ALONG WITH GRANDMOTHER'S bustle and grand-

| father’s sideburns, the picture of the civil servant as a clerk

now belongs to the ages—and to the ashcan.

BUT HOW MANY PEOPLE who should be aware of this
drastic changeover, know not only that it Is happening, but
that it Is a reality? Regretfully, very few.

TO THE MANY other tasks of civil service organizations,
must be added the job of telling the story of this wonderous
change. In less than a generation, the civil servant has been
transformed from a pencil pusher to a button pusher — on
a giant computer.

AND DON’T LET ANYONE tell you that no skill Js in-
volved, It requires several years of training to be able even
to push the buttons, let alone to have the technical skills to
make computer repairs.

AS AN EXAMPLE of what computer technology has done
to civil service, look at the Veterans Administration, It now
handless 6,000,000 insurance policies with 3,000 employees
instead of 17,000 {t took In 1950. In the process, the VA has
reduced operating costs from $9.03 a year per policy to $3.88,

BY 1966, computers and magnetic tape will be * “eyeing”
every taxpayer—and some who aren't, but should be, The
Internal Revenue Service says that few If any deadbeats
will escape the computer's magnetic eye and memory.

SO GREAT HAVE been the inroads of computers into
government operations that by last July, 1,248 computers
were at work for the Federal Government, some on a 24-
hour, 7-day-a-week schedule.

THIS REVOLUTION has resulted in a sharp upgrading
of civil service skills. Computers do not replace brains
because computers don't think, One gets out of a computer
only the information which results from facts put there by
human brains, But computers have reduced the number of
those in the lowest Federal civil service grades from 240,000
in 1958 to 180,000 today.

IN ADDITION, 165,000 engineers, scientists, and techni-
clans outnumber typists by 2 to 1, Yet, typists continue in
acutely short supply. Blue collar workers in government
dropped 12 percent during 1957-62, while engineers rose 67
percent; physicists 60 percent; chemists 29 percent; biolo-
gists 28 percent; and educational personnel, 24 percent.

BEFORE WORLD WAR II only a trickle of college grad-
uates came into civil service, Today, civil service, thanks to
aggressive recruitment, wins about 15,000 a year from the
college campuses,

AND ALL this while the number of Federal civil servants
has increased only a fraction of the nation’s population
growth, The next time you read “facts” attributed to the
U. 8S. Senate's best known apple-grower, Senator Harry
Byrd, that Federal employment is up again, we suggest you
shout, “Applesauce,” and turn quickly to the comic page.

if

———
EXHIBITION — Five paintings by members of the Civil

Service Employees Assn, decorate the reception room of the G.E.X,
store in Albany, The store is open to all governmental employers—Stale,
Federal or municipal—on a membership basis, Employees of private
corporations deing a large portion ef business with governmental
encles are alse welcome,

Tuesday, Aprit 28, 1964

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Cost of Living Declines

‘The consumer's cost of living
declined one-tenth of one percent
in February—the first drop since
December, 1962, the Labor Dept
hhas reported. The Bureau of Labor

SUMMER

VACATION PLAN

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EN 9-3700

Page Seven

Statistics explained that rebates |oline prices were the main reasons
on gas utility bills and lower gas-' for the decline.

SPECIAL LOW RATES FOR
STATE EMPLOYEES AT

The HOTEL |
|
SQ vainy Per Person

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HOTEL COMMODORE 42nq st. AT LEXINGTON Ave,

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NOTICE OF NAMES OF PERSONS
APPEARING AS OWNERS OF CERTAIN
UNCLAIMED PROPERTY
Held by
COLUMBIAN MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
of Binghamton, N. Y.

addresses are set forth

gzttust 52

the State
w of the

This is New York State’s
No.1 airport...

The John F. Kennedy Airport, formerly the New York International Airport, covers
4,900 acres at Idlewild, Queens, It has the largest air cargo center in the world, and is
the hub of jet air service to world-wide points, Nearly 800 aircraft land and take off
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the world’s most beautiful examples of coordinated modera architecture,

i

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More than 485,000 State employees and employees of many local subdivisions of
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Page Fight

inted
nee joa April 27—Harold D. | the State Bridge Authority for

Spencer of Dutchess County has!@ term ending Feb. 1, 1969

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AT STATE RATES!

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|been reappointed a member of '

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Notice of Names of Persons
| Appearing Owners of Certain

Unctoim Property Held by
THE EQUITABLE LiFe
ASSURANCE SOCIETY OF

THE UNITED STATES

Important Notice to All Civil Service Employees
in the Albany and Buffalo Areas:

eligible

to join the
| thousands who are
“now saving at G-E-X

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|

India Bound

ALBANY, April 27—Dr. W.
Leslie Barnette Jr,, professor of
psychology at the State Univer-
sity at Buffalo, has received a

will assist the U.S. Ed
Foundatic India in

ing an ev center

dian students, who plan to come
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and cocktail bar, Headquarter
Ithaca for State employees. State

rates, State vouchers accepted,

RS ) EE 8 EES 6 EE 6

DEWITT CLINTON

STATE & EAGLE STS. ALBANY
A Knorr HOTEL |
FAVONITE FOR OVER 80

YEAHS WITH STATE TRAVELERS
SPECIAL RATES

FOR

N.Y.S. EMPLOYEES

TV or RADIO AVAILABLE

Cockteil Lounge - Dancing Nightly
BANQUET FACILITIES TAILORED ||
TO ANY SIZE PARTY

FRER TELETYPE RESERVATIONS
TO ANY KNOTT HOTEL, INCLUDING
New Weston, NYC

Call Albany HE 4-6111 |

| ® Free Indoor Parking

THOMAS H. GORMAN, Gea. Mer. 9]

SPECIA
for Civil $

HOTEL

Wellitteton

DRIVE-IN GARAGE
AIR CONDITIONING + TV

iy drive-in

g2r0g8. You'll like the com
fort and convenience, toot
Fomily rates, Cocktail lounge,

136 STATE STREET
Srrosire stare capitan GUND
See your friendly travel ogeat.

SPBLIAL WEEKLY RATE.
FOK EXTENDED STAYS

SPECIAL
RATES
FOR STATE EMPLOYEES

MAYFAIR
INN MOTEL

wm want) OF DOWNTOWN BYRACUM

SYRACUSE, N.Y.

© Air Conditioned
© Restouront ond Coffee Shop

© Free TV

State Lodging Requests
Accepted

666 SO. SALINA ST.

Tuesday, April 28, 1964

Fireflies

Due to the closing hours of
the bill signing session of the
New York State Legislature,
and the heavy amount of news
affecting all civil service em-
ployees, the featur
Fireflies has been omitted t
week. The column will resume
next

week

Buy WhereVourAttowa

NEW YORK STATE
CORRECTION H, SAFETY

‘ERS

NEW REG. UNIF. OUTER COAT
$68.75

DEPT, APPROVED eG.

$59.85

UNIronMs

Contaet our Looad Key. a

Quality SLOAN'S Uniforms

CATSKILL, NEW YORK
“FOR QUALITY AT A DISCOUNT

YOUR HOST—
MICHAEL FLANAGAN

PETIT PARIS
RESTAURANT

BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH
11:30 TO 2:30 — $1.00

SPRCIALIZING, AS ALWAYS,

PARTIES, MANQUETS & MET

cCOMPORTAML YDATIONS
vRO!

OPEN DAILY EXCEPT MONDAY,
SUNDAY AT 2 P.M.

— FREE PARKING IN REAR —
1060 MADISON AVE,
ALBANY
Phone IV 2-7864 or IV 2-988

ALBANY
BRANCH OFFICE

FOR INFORMATION pv
y

warding advertising,

> ROYAL COURT

APARTMENTS — Furnished, Un-

| furnished, and Rooms. Phone HE,

41994, (Albany)

the TEN EYCK Hotel

UNDER THR NEW MANAG
OF SCHINE nO
CONTINUE TO HONOR

SPECIAL RATES
FOR N.Y.S. EMPLOYEES

PLUS ALL THESE FACILITIES
© Free Parking

L

© Free Limousine Service frem
Albany Airport
© Froe Lounderinn Lounge

© Free Coffee Makers in the
Rooms

© Free Self-Service Ice Cube
Mochines

© Free Use of Electric Sh

Make Your Reservation
Early By Calling
HE 4-1111

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

State & Chapel Sts, Albony, N.Y

ARCO
CIVIL SERVICE BOOKS
and all tests
PLAZA BOOK SHOP

Albony, N. Y.
Mail & Phone Orders Filled

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

12 Colvin
Albany
HO 3-2179 459-6630
420 Kenwood

Delmar HE 9-2212

Tuesday, April 28, 1964 CIVIL SERVICE LEADER Page Nine

Craig Colony Open House Is Planned | fede said. Williams Named tes Retirement System,
A, April 97. te Col | 4 Dr. Vi 2, Bonafed “Tours emphasizing institution ALBANY, April 27 — Herbert b. For 18 years, Williams served
BSONYEA, April |—Craig Col-)11 a.m., Dr. Vincent I, Bonafede, 7 , Apri — Herbert L, ‘ z
ony and Hospital will conduct an| director, announced today services, patients’ activities, and/witinms has been named to a|%* Tes! estate and trust officer for

Open House, in conjunction with} “Approximately 450 yisitora are | exhibits are planned,” the €xee| newly created position of mort-| he Central Hanover Trust Co
Mental Health Week, tomorrow at| expected to attend," Dr. Bona-| added gage officer for the State Bmploy-| and has been in private practice

| W hen | You Buy an AMPEX

| You| Buy the FINEST!

e YOU ARE LOOKING AT
S E E THE NEWEST THING

| T RY IN 4-TRACK STEREO RECORDERS

e BUY
e One of the

e AMPEX
e F-44 Series ary

IT’S

ad TAPE THE NEW

¢ RECORDERS AMPEX | F-4.4 |

[PRRRRPLER PPP PRLS 5
Of course
you can

CHARGE IT
EASY TERMS

WITH NEW: FEATURES/CUSTOMIZED PERFORMANCE/
INDIVIDUAL SPECIFICATIONS/1-YEAR WARRANTY

Features like dual, quick-comparison VU-type meters .. . hysteresis syn-
chronous motor ... 2-knob mode-to-mode controls and indicator lights
+.» multiple sound-on-sound,

Customized Performance through individual adjust
tuning that gives each F-44 its own peak-of-perfor
Individual Specifications that give you the actua
quency Response/Signal-to-Noise/Flutter.W
. 1-Year Warranty to assure continued quality perform

ts, alignments and
ice.

t of your F-44's Free
Rejection,

ice,

Above (clockwise from lower left): 4460-Portable/4470-Portable with built-in
amplifier-speakers/4452-Unmounted, mike inputs on top/2044-Speaker-/ upli-
fier/4450-Unmounted, mike inputs on side/4450-in optional Walnut Cabinet,

MARCONI ELECTRONICS
824 Lexington Avenue ,New York, New York RE 4-2020

Page Ten CIVIL SERVICE LEADER Tuesday, April 28, 1964
Roets Re Flected Employees Assn, Other off- Arthur L. Roets; delegate, May-) Miss Florence Lang, Mrs. B.|Wins Scholarship

cers are: nard Litzenberger, Madelina Kaminski, Mrs, Made-| Albany, April 27—Dr, Marvin L,

. ‘The officers were installed April) line Masseo, Mrs. Bvelyn O'Delle,| Gliedman, nesistant professor of
President Of Vice president, Mrs. Marie) 25 in the Chez Ami Restaurant | Joseph Sarrow, Rudy Sipcich, Mrs.| surgery at the Downstate Medical
Trautman; treasurer, Mra. Jud-| here. Mary Young, Thomas Mineo,| Center, has been awarded a $30,<

Buffalo Chapter {th MoFadden; secretary, Mrs.| Executive Council members are:|Louis Hancock, Mrs. Maynard !000 scholarship in academic medi«

Litzenberger, Genevieve Wittiecns one by the John and Mary R.
and Edward Bertozzt. Markle Foundation.

+ Real Estate Best Buys +

BUFFALO, April 27—Ar-
thur L, Roets has been re-
elected president of Buffalo
State Chapter, Civil Service

. ke
aa en FREE GOLF! FREE use of ¢
cor llow mileage cherge only) + lalallala alae! LETT Ty
1964 PONTIACS FREE self-porking. TV in every “30 of 1 SPRIN P
| & TEMPESTS room, Supervised TOTS’ PROGRAM, te ~ | G SPECIAL
rocco gaunt ox xosr [[- TEN FON AOU Ens” Hau ii yy ROOSEVELT $17,500
SPECIAL OFFER Sc eu oaths ’ itis ONLY $200 ON CONTRACT: G.I, NO CASH
Being 4 Yowe Mentitication For | 4 Jerry Gronger, Mag. Dir, ‘ 3 Rooms Down With Enclosed Heated Front Porch.
IMMEDIATE CREDIT KE artinique ON THE OCEAN AT 64th STREET Living Room, Dining Room, and New Kitchen, 3 Bed-
iis daca “avinlion OF" Osee ¢ A || s Hotel MIAMI BEACH : rooms Up and New Bath, 2 Car Garage plus Cyclone
ACE PONTIAC 7 “= : Fence on 60 x 100 Plot.
2 4 Ask About our OPENING SPECIAL
LET derwme Ave, Brome. CY t44tt @ For Houses in Suffolk County, Call (516) MI 3-7817

(nem | NELLY CLOTHES, INC. i

CHEVROLETS MEN’S & YOUNG MEN’S FINE CLOTHES
wien “FOS AT A SAVING TO YOU
COMPACT....Mon. thew Thurs, 621 RIVER STREET, TROY

2 Blocks No. of Hoosick St. Tet AS 209022 || asuereoon Tae

Ail
| ow Wome 10, LORETTA Wy
Woet Beeatwood, Ll. New ¥

STABLE REALTY CORP.

219 So, Franklin Street, Hempstead, N. Y.

IV 1-8965 i
Ly

You'll Always De Better at BATES

Ca

Farms & Acreages

| 1 Greene Seer
Mrrmactiv ‘
AUTO RENTAL Corp, = a tein bua Mt Fin S008.
+ 4 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS + BIT eo nie For Sale- Florida
| ae _ —
wed Me Sai | New from | FISHER Harun i Aeteaser | North-West Section Miami

Poe Garage 187 St. at Grand Cone. For gracious living or invest-
BRONK CY 5-0674 : in @ beautiful
; 3 bedrooms, 2
concrete, brick and stucco,
fully furnished plus additional
000] room for extra bedroom or
study. Carport you can make
i 14x24, beauti-
awnings and
Good | transportation.
Bunzaiow Asking $24,000. Terms, Call
vole Keone || CO 69920,

| Oe ge County

| New For You... Ee ee
| The FISHER 500-C feeb

: Summer | Homes + Ulster Co,

CAR RENTAL eR. N.nt
NO MILEAGE CHARGE

Beau Park Garage 204 W. 101 ST.

MANHATTAY AC 2-5440
Hridgeway Garage

W, Bway at

MANHATTAN sw

pp RDESWALD—LYAM—CASHE 92.500 CAPITAL DISTRICT

SAMALOY Es famous Area tte

SPECIAL WEEKLY RATES

~ Brooklyn Your Necta We Witt Nance Hinerary
Low Dally & Weetend Rates, Too! raviiicmsburgh, So, 2nd St, JAMES W. PERKINS
3 1001 Washlogton Avenue + Albany
metracar Owner: Ch ‘7.3311 — bE" 1.1749 PLN Bes oie
PL 5.4616 | NOTICE OF NAMES OF PERSONS
ami all THE FISHER 500-C APPEARING AS OWNERS OF CERTAIN
75-Watt FM-Stereo-Multiplex Receiver UNCLAIMED PROPERTY
= —_ a : " Held by
—_—$—  —$_ $$$ With These Outstanding Features
= 5 OO gees INSURANCE COMPANY
MOVING TO THE | © STEREO BEACON instantly signals and automatically
CAMPUS? switches 10. stereo or mono operation, using a new sili- THE JOHN HANCOCK MUTUAL LIFE
con diode switch for completely silent operation, @ Pow- , Boston, Massachusetts
erful 75-watt audio amplifier will drive the most ineffi-

cient speakers to full room volume. @ New FISHER
GOLDEN SYNCHRODE front-end for noise-free FM re-

Philip E. Roberts, Inc, cep free of image or spurious signal interference.
1525 Western Ave., Albony The FM front-end is the inost sensitive ever designd for
Phone 499-3211 a receiver, @ The FISHER DIRECT-TAPE-MONITOR system.

oe ———— @ CONT

OLS for the FISHER 500-C: Speaker Selector
(SPEAKER 1, SPEAKER 2, SPEAKER 1 + 2, EARPHONES),
| Bass, Treble, Balance, High Filter, Low Filter, MPX Filter,
| Tape Monitor, Loudness Contour, Tuning, Volume (AC |
| OFF), Selector (TAPE HEAD, PHONO MONO, PHONO |
STEREO, FM AUTOMATIC, FM STEREO, FM MONO, AUX- |
TAPE.) @ CONTROLS for the FISHER 800-C: Speake
lector (SPEAKER 1, SPEAKER 2, SPEAKER 1 +- 2, EAR-
PHONES), Bass, Treble, Balance, High Filter, Low Filter,
AM Bandwidth, (SHARP, BROAD), Tape Monitor, Loud-
ness Contour, Tuning, Selector (TAPE HEAD, PHONO

For Your

$35- “HIGH $35
SCHOOL
DIPLOMA

iNSWE MONO, PHONO STEREO, FM AUTOMATIC, FM STEREO
— FILTER, FM MONO, AM, AUX-TAPE PLAY), Volume and
AC OFF, |

is featured at

|
FISHER, the finest receiver |

ERTS SCHOOL

) Sith St, New York 19}
Via 1000
d

| MARK ELECTRONICS |) =222%

1171 FLATBUSH AVENUE
BROOKLYN, N. Y. BU 7-8922

ty wilt be pald om oF be
atistaction Weir clglst to te

Set mext to

property will
- i Whereupon
conse. 49 be, Hable thenmtor

40MN HANCOCK MUTUAL LOPE INSORANCE COMPANT.

=

Tuesday, April 28, 1964 CIVIL SERVICE LEADER Page Eleven

REAL ESTATE VALUES

Long Island LONG ISLAND CALL BE 3-6010

2 GOOD BUYS
ONE FAMILY SPECIALS LEGAL L TWO FAMILIES
sihaiar oa 2 ved-|||[IE Spofield Gdns $15,990 “Hollis "Gdns $18,990
OFFICES READY TO saleal set NER LEAVING TOWN sanuerien acco
SERVE you! |] wiring, new roof... Only $12,800
Call For Appointment va hie gs : 2) = Ee
L-FAMILY, 6 rooms, finished bose-| St. $17,990 Ramer beat Re Pet
Biren Le space e nl 7 adrgoma sited TUDOR HRICK . P
. relten area, rench style

k, spacious 6 room &
G1. move in for
fees. Civ $700

™
LIVE RENT FREE

RE 9-1500
168-16 HILLSIDE AVE

JAMAICA , JA 9-4400

————— | 135-19 ROCKAWAY BLVD
EXCLUSIVE SO. OZONE PARK
No Cash Down G.I.
Small Cash Civ.

Detached, & rooms, 1), beths,
full bosement, oll heat, 2 cor
te school,
and bus ot |

section. Call for infor available.

i h
HAZEL B, GRAY BXACTLY AS ADVERTISED
168-33 LIBERTY AVE. GINO CASH FHA $690 DOWN
JAMAICA MANY 1 & 2 FAMILY HOMES AVAILABLE

AX 1-5858 - 9 QUEENS HOME SALES

2120-18 Hillside Ave. — Jamaien

OL 8-7510

Call for Appt. Open Every Day

FLUSHING $13,500

| Nice eres. No dow
|for Gl. Others $450 down,

Owner's Socrifice
HuRRY |

IL 7-3100 JA 3-3377 )

103-09 NORTHERN BLVD. | 159-12 HILLSIDE AVE. |)
| CORONA JAMAICA i

BETTER REALTY

ALL 6 OFFICES OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
FROM 9:30 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M.

ROO! EVELT + THE BEAUTIFUL *
. . . THE GLORIOUS

The suki House
CORAL ESTATES

+ ALL WELCOME
Jf} $390 | adsne 14,790

AGENT Fi A184 TOTAL CASH FEES COMPLETE
Cambria Holents

3 BEDROOM insulo wall en

BOOK REALTY
| 517 So. Franklin St.
Hempstead
]

WW 1-2919 WV 11-9226

$500 CASH
TARE OTER RORUSAOF | Gann Fo California

, | Opportunity ef © lifetime, bey A) RAISLEY P
this ettractive, oo |

Only $100 cash for G.
fe bank per month,

Big selection of new ond
homes with little or
down, Trades ec-

per th
ing. No red tope.

cepted,
ij SEE IT TODAY
IV 9-5800 MA 3-3800 | LIVE THE GOOD LIFE TOMORROW
17 South Franklin St. 277 NASSAU ROAD i DIRECTIONS: Southern State Pkwy, to Sagtitos Phwy
HEMPSTEAD ROOSEVELT | Nerth to Exit $-2 to traffic light (Crooked Hill Rd} turn

tight '/p mile to model — OR — Northern State Piwy.
te Exit 44 (Brentwood) to Segtites Pkwy, , South te Exit
S:1 te Crooted Hill Rd, (to Brentwood) left I'/ miles
te model.
(516) BR 3-9145
Soles by BLAZE REALTY

i TWO FAMILY
i You get full ownership
with only $500,
10 Rooms
ST. ALBANS SOUTH
Decorated &
New Kitchen

AX 71-2111

E. J. DAVID

REALTY
159-05 Hillside Avenue
Jamaica
Nr. Parsons Boulevard

ALBANY LONG ISLAND HOMES

ATTRACTIVE
168-12 Hillside Ave., Jamaica
"169-12 HILLSIDE AVE., JAMAICATIIEI HOMES RE 9-7300

CALL
TT ine RATED [HHMI 2

LET'S SWAP W. F. BENNETT __Suffotk County, Lt, N.Y. | Unfurnished Apts, - Brooklyn

WEVERLY fi
Multiple Listing Photos Oh car | MEVERLY. We M
YOUR HOUSE IN ANY CONDITION FOR MY MONEY IN . :
GOOD CONDITION.

1672 CENTRAL AVE. ; 1 Giliseustela MAEM
CALL TODAY - SELL TODAY

ALBANY UN 9-5378 —|— —
v 143-01 HILLSIDE AVE,
lS es es Vie JAMAICA

Forms & Acreages | Farms & Acreages
Tohe Hid Ave. "B Tralo to Sulphio Bind. Siation. OFEN 7 BAYS A WEEK

Dutchess County Orange County
ULANUILOUNAONOULAALLIOLJUO AX 7-700 JAAOONLOOLALULALOOALOOLAOLATE

BETTER REALTY

Aué & OPO OPEN 7 DAYS A WEE!

“DOUBLE FEATURE” SPECIALS

museum si2.990isumien $18,990 |
rge living

SACRIFICE SALES!

ST, ALBANS noms

BRICK TUDOR
DUPLEX DOLLARS & SENSE!

o
5 extra large rooms, modern |”,

extres,
NO CASH FOR ALL
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK — 9 A.M, TO 9 P.M,

| JAXMAN AX 1-7400|

ETT]

West Hempstead |, ,,,,,.WEAR FISHKILL mK WOO

ez

’ ae THe ¥
FISDERS mn base Brinsie Waslian | Greenwood &
Page Twelve CIVIL SERVICE LEADER Tuesday, April 28, 1964

i

MARY DIANE COLE PHYLLIS MONACO NORMA KIRKTON PHYLLIS BENDER JULIE KAZES

Veterans Administration Suffolk County New York City New York State New York City
New York Police Dept. Dept. of Persomnet Dept. of Health Transit Authority
Electronic Techs Wanted at $5,795 hegee Executive Secretary, ,
‘The US, Naval Training Device | tronte development technicians at | U8. Civil Service Examine
Center ds Point, Washinton, | $3,795 to $7,030 a US. Naval Training Device Ce pt
New York, is recruiting for ele For further information, write | ter, Port Washington, New ¥:

LEGAL NOTH
NOTICE OF NAMES OF PERSONS
APPEARING AS OWNERS OF CERTAIN

Foren, UNCLAIMED PROPERTY

HAN. Mani iaLbien Held by

thelr helms at aw GOLDEN EAGLE MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE
CORPORATION

the decedent

ta 105 Court Street, Brooklyn, New York

| 4-TRACK STEREO

ext of hin,

bt HELENA
wae at the
Meat of

|  RECORDER/PLAYER = | '

‘ookiyn, New Yor

CITATION. — THR PROFLE OF THE
STATE OF NEW YORK
Of Gel, ¥ and

INSURANCE CORPORATION

New York and i shall thereupon cease to a

GOLDEN EAGLD MUTUAL LIVE

IS ONE-OF-A-KIND

Each has been individually adjusted, aligned and
tuned to its own peak of performance,

Each has its own Individual performance specifl-
cations. (Frequency Response, Signal-to-noise,

fe ow a : Wow-Flutter, Crosstalk Rejection), The actual
ee nm the chart for your F-44 is yours for the asking!

' f

i vk or the | Mode! 4450 — Unmounted

ous ald ‘ Model 4470 — Portable with built-in amplifier-speakers
© 1 t ro Model 4460 — Portable, can be removed from case
Pe Tees HON PH A. @OX : Model 2044 — (Not Shown) 10-Watt Speaker/Amplifier
h cA en AMPEX SEE THE F-44

Pulp Clerk of the § MAGNIFICENT STEREOPHONIC HIGH FIDELITY BOUND d \ |

= ——— AND CABINETRY trom SYLVANIA — ey TODAY AT

to Beautiful, euthentio French Provincial styling high-

} lights this Sterwophonic High: Fid

YLVANIA, Professional compo
arrard Custom Deluxe 4-spe0d changer wit
mond stylus, high compliance ceramic cartridge and = |

record preserving “cushion ection” tone erm, two  I|
matched independent apenker systoms (6 speakers)
Deluxe integrated AM, FM, PM Stereo (mul >
tuner with 22 walt peak power amplitier. feo
tures include 6-position ‘velvet touch" control center

with flywheel tuning, remote speaker and headphone
‘accessory jacks and record storage space. Custom
yratted cabinetry In a choice of Antique White of

y PAULINE

| Cherry genuine veneers and hardwood solids 33 UNION SQUARE W. NEW YORK
aah fia, hh roum canorr is GOOD AT"
Sissi" wice Atal || TEX APPLIANCES & FURNITURE CORP, OR 4 4320-1
HON. JOSEPH A. COR, Surrogate, Now 2266 THIRD AVEI Bet. 123d & 124th Street)
wo Philip 4, Doaahus, Clerk NEW YORK, WW, Y, . ENright 91177

Tuesday, April 28, 1964

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Page Thirteen

Card Party Set

‘The 25th Annual Charity Card| 93rd St., Manhattan, on April 25.
Party and Reunion of the Priends| This Silver Jubilee honoring the
of the Sisters of the Blessed Sac-| Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament
rament will be held at 2 p.m, in/ will give recognition to these mis-
the Penn Top Room of the Stat-!sionaries whose work extends

Jer-Hilton Hotel, 7th Avenue andj across the U.S.

O.H. at Governor's Island | livers, Army exhibits, guided mis-

sile displays and admission to Navy
‘Tickets may be obtained at the] The U.S. Army, Governor's Is- | got ers, Admission and ferry

door or by contacting Miss Jo- | land, opens its doors to all visitors | ride to the Island are free.
sephine Praetz, 74 Cornelia St.,| May ® from 10 a.m, to 5 p.m. The |~ pass your copy of the Leader

Brooklyn. \open house event will feature sky

To s Non-Member

FISHER

THE FIRST CHOICE IN FINE COMPONENTS

| (an all-in-one Fisher receiver)

She wants the best of everything. A neat, un-
cluttered house and, at the same time, the finest
in stereo. She is all for components—but
please, no ‘electronics’ all over the house! Un-
reasonable? Not at all. Any of the integrated,
single-chassis Fisher stereo receivers will meet
her wifely specifications. In only 17'/2 inches of
shelf space, she can have the tuner, the control-
preamplifier and the power amplifier—all on
one chassis and all of the highest Fisher quality.
Fisher stereo receivers are available with FM
only or with FM-AM.

“amg aoe grit
i oe ba

(a Fisher loudspeaker)

No matter how good an amplifier you own—
even if it is one of the new Fisher stereo ampli-
fiers—you will never realize its full potential
unless you feed its output into a loudspeaker
that 'knows the difference.’ Very few loud-
speaker systems are genuinely analytical, re-
vealing all the nuances of inner detail in those
complex musical passages that only the finest
amplifiers leave unblurred. The most remark-
able systems in this distinguished category are
the revolutionary XP Series free-piston loud-
speakers by Fisher.

(a Fisher tuner)

Not even the most sophisticated multi-element
Yagi antenna will give you completely dis-
tortion-free, low-noise reception of the new
FM Stereo broadcasts in a difficult area, unless
the tuner it feeds has exceptional sensitivity
and genuine wide-band circuitry. The Multiplex
method of FM Stereo transmission makes un-
precedented demands on the receiving equip-
ment. Fisher FM Stereo Multiplex tuners meet
these demands on the most advanced level of
FM engineering in the world today.

(a Fisher amplifier)

Even if you own one of the world's finest FM
tuners—in which case it is undoubtedly a
Fisher—you will not fully appreciate the unsur-
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without an amplifier of the highest caliber. Not
many amplifiers can preserve a totally undis-
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‘veil’ of distortion in the reproduction—enough
to remove that ultimate feeling of presence.
The Fisher X Series stereo control amplifiers
are faultless even in this critical sense.

Metropolitan’s
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SOUND REPRODUCTION

34 NEW STREET NEWARK, NEW JERSEY
MI 2-6816

Page Fourteen

civic SERVICE LEAD

Tuesday, April 28, 1964

Metro-South W orkshop

(Continued from Page 3)
Stratton said he was impressed
by the sensible and responsible way
in which Dr. Hurd and the CSEA
negotiated alary increases

should not depend on pressure from
employees,” he said, noting that |
New York State had even made an
outside survey (the McKinsey Re
port) to make sure it had a proper
soale for measuring the wages of
public employ ith thelr coun-
terparts in private Industry.
‘Government Is one of the finest

careers that can
unfortunat t
eareer that i

be chosen
is not always
properly rewarded,”

a

Stratton said. He told the audi-
ence that the Johnson Admini
tration hoped to make ¢r
strides this year toward improving
the status of career Pederal work-
ers and that he still hoped to se
Congress pass a Federal pay b

Seymour Shapiro Selected
As Nominee for Reelection
To City Chapter Presidency |

Seymour Shapiro of the
has been selected as the nom
re-election as president of the

Srvice Employees Associatoin. ) __

The nomination made at
the chapter's meeting last week
in a report submitted by Solomon
Bendet, chairman of the commit-
fee. Other members of the com-
mittee included Samuel Emmett,
Irving Levine and Bernard Eisner

was

| this year “Pm not voting a raise problems,” he declared, He said

for myself, however,” he said | that one major problem facing
smilingly, The reference was to|CSEA was space at headquarters
the pay bili that Congressmen | at 8 Bik St. in Albany.
voted down recently because it Seve! plans for expansion
included a $10,000 raise for them- be considered.” he de-
selves.
Feily iy also asked the members tn
Principle speaker at the second dance to start thinking about

+ was CSEA President Joseph year's legislative
10 commented briefly on| now. “We have learned the be
nt Legislature session and | fit of early negotiation and so we
Tam deeply grateful to must again be prepared early.” |

the vast partic'pation of our mem- Workshop Leaders
bership in putting across our lee-| Workshop dele heard two
islative program. When the cali| major speakers during the two-
went out for support you gave it | day event, Isaac Hungerford, of
unstintir The successes of this ie State Re
year were the successes of the | a detailed analysis of the recent

entire Association,” appro ibu
Felly then asked the delegates | points picked up by the State and
to give serious consideration to| answered other retiren ques-
the future of CSEA. “We are a bie s in a question and answer
anization and we haye some big od that was presided over by
Ted Wenzl, chairman of the CSEA
Pension Comta
In the afternoon
W. Albri JY
1964 Legislature session. Cha
nf the discussion period wa
T. Nulty, chairman of the

fies ative Committee

ate Insurance Department

‘Gen. O'Hara Set
inating Sansa card choice e;
ee vas ee on
Armory Meeting

department personnel dit
provided a leave of absenci
iod of up to twoy

per-| BUFFALO, April 27

at the

The guest
Western New York

s If necessary

apeaker

|

Henry Shemin reported on the| Armories chapter, Civil Service
conclusion of a successful texi- | Employees Assn. dinner May 6
lative session and Larry Newman] will be Gen A. C. O'Hara, Ch’

Selected to appear on the bal-| Ported on the Metro-Southern | of Staff to the Governor and b
Grigih gokoke ear: abort | Conferences joint workshop of the Division ef Military
Corum, of the Division of Em-| ‘The chapter also went on rec-| V#v#l Affaire |
ployment, first vice-president: |ord as opposing a proposed a. O'Hare will also prose
Albert D'Antoni of Workmans| ammendment to the State Civil ity Award Pins to Armory
Compensation Board, second vice- ice Department Rules and| “Mployees. The event will be held
President; Morris Kantrowitz and| Regulations which would allow) ®* ‘he Buffalo-Connecticut St
Lawrence Newman, both of the | departmental freedom in the ex-| A!mory Officer's Club.

Tax Department for third vice-| amination process for positions} ‘Invited guests include all of-
President; Edward Azarigian of| in Grade 27 and over. The reso-| ficers in Charge & Control at|
the Department of Motor Vehi-| lution protesting this proposat| the various armories in the chapt-
cles, treasurer; James Chiaravalle| was sent to Association headquar-|¢t area; Paul Kyer, Editor, The|
of the Office of General Services, | ters in Albany to be referred to| Leader; and Henry Gdula, Western
financial secretary; Yolanda Pa-| the Board of Directors for action.| New York CSBA representative
Jumbo of the State Racing Com-

mission, recording secretary and
Minna Weekstein of the Depart-
Ment of Taxation, corresponding
secretary

The of will
take place at a special meeting
of the chapter in May, Shapiro
announced, Nomination by peti- |
tion of 10 percent of chapter
Membership must be submitted
by May 13

In other action, the chapter
heard a report by Sol Bendet

grievance o

imuiittee chairman, on

the protect of

member of the

gency which had nottf her
that she was being dropped from
the payroll because of extended
absence the department
head had 1 the elroumstanee
surroundin case from CSEA
Tepres mely that

girl had beer talized f
an acciten ve overruled

| from mor

Krone, Ingraham Tell CSEA

N

Ray Brook

Employees

To Get Consideration;
Jobs Will Be Found

(Special to The Leader)
ALBANY, April 27—The Civil Service Employees Assn,

has been assured by two top

state officials that considera-

tion will be given to the Interests of Ray Brook State Hos-
pital employees faced with loss of jobs due to reduction in
the number of patient beds, announced recently by the State

Department of Health,

The assurances came from
Mary Goode Krone, President of
the Civil Service Commission, and

Dr. Hollis S. Ingraham Commis-
sioner of Health, after
ployees association took mov
protect the futures of approxt-
mately 100 employees who face
possible loss of jobs by April 1
1965 due to the cut back
Confirms Reduction
Miss Krone confirmed that
Health Department is conside:
reducing {1

than
sald the hospital now
employs approximately 280 pe!
sons, “Assuming that the reduc-
tion goes through,” she said, “the
Health Department estimates that
the number of emplo;
reduced by consider
80 percent, mainly
of food service, housekeeping
maintenance and practical nurs-
ing; relatively few reductions will
be made in the professional medi-
cal and nursing staffs, The total
number of jobs eliminated will
probably not exceed 109.”

She said her department will
work closely with the Health De-
partment, “to mitigate the effe
on employees.” She con
“efforts will be made to plan well

beds. She

in

New President
ALBANY, April 27—Dr

Martin, professor at the §
College at Oswego, is the 1¢#

president of the Eastern States
Assn. for Teacher Education

the em-
3 to

the

ities at the hospital
100 beds to 100

6 will be
‘ably less than
the areas

in advance of any proposed lay=
off so that excess employees can
be offered positions elsewhere.”
Four Hospitals Closed

reply to the CSEA inquiry,
Ingraham said, “As you know,
have completely closed four
hospitals during re=
and have been success-
ful offering employees
who wished to continue in State
employm this opportunity.
Each time nave be able to
deal effectively with special
problems with which were
confronted.’ He said, giv.
t attention to the prepar=
ion of careful plans which safe=

I
Dr
we
tubercul
cent yea

those

nent
we

the
we

“we are

guard the welfare of the patients
and the interests of the em-
ployees.

Dr. Ingraham also suggested

that the Association keep in con=
tact with his department concerns
ing “questions as to the timetable
for intradepartmental transfers
and other Items in which you may
be interested."

Metro Div. Plans

‘Training Course

For Claims Test

A training course in con-
nection with the forthcoming
promotion and open competi-
tive examinations to Unem-
ployment Insurance Claims
Clerk, is currently being con-
templated by the Metropoli-
tan Division of Employment,
Civil Service Employees Assn.,
providing enough people are
interested,

All items mentioned in exami-
nation announcement No. 1335
will be covered and the course will
start toward the end of April and
will probably be held on Tuesday
nights at LO 532, 145 Remsen St.,
Brooklyn which is near Boro Hall
and within easy reach of all sube
way lines. It will be free to Chape
ter 255A members and $5.00 to
non-members, including th who
are going to take the open coms

petitive, There will be five sessions,
Frank Greene, UI, Manager at
LO 532, TR 5-8763, who ts the
educational commit chairman
of the © nvites all interest=
to get in touch with

Careerists Dance Set

Kings Park Gives The NYS Careerists Society,

’ : ; Inc. will hold its sixth annual

Tenos Pate Review dance and beauty contest on Prie

INC f K, April P day, May 8 from 10 p to 3

of a.m, in the grand ballroom of the

ae 5 commissioner, Division of Public Information; and | @¥eT*ide Plaza Hotel, New York

ing show las! TO WELCOME FAIR VISITORS — $ plage | City. The program will include

night Attendants for the New York State Pavilion at 298¢0h J, Moran, director, Bureau of Travel, Seated | Voy a totainment, highlighted

Called “"Telclaughs,” the revue! the World's Fale were briefed recently about details *%! to Horan Is Dr, Donald H. Davenport, deputy | |i siction of Miss New York

Was a spoof on television pro-| of the State and exhibits at the Pavilion, Semions mmissioner, Division of Research and Statistics, | 2.1 O. eovist for 1964. Subs

grams and co cials were held at the NYS Dept, of Commerce office in. Wh0 also addressed the group, The attendants are) soictions ave $2.50 In advance,

Patien " the only particle New York City, Shown standing are two Commerce employed by the NYS Commission on the World’s| 5390 at the doc Por reservae
Pants in the show | Dept, speakers, Neal L, Moylan (left), deputy Pair. tons, call LO 5-826,
Tuesday, April 28, 1964 CIVIL SERVICE LEADER Page Fifteen

Five Adninistation Changes Announced By Mental Hygiene |srsz.== «m=

Engineers For
(From Leader Correspondent) | central office” of the depart- | Pilerim State Hospital. Dr. lan Bate, now with he | Mell

National Institute of Mental le
ALBANY, April 27— Five | ment. Dr. Christopher P. Terrence be-| Health, Bethesda, Md., becomes | Calif. Nev
Dr. Paul H. Hoch, State Com-| comes first deputy commissioner, | sssociate commissioner for com- Ld
major administrative § 8P-| isioner of Mental Hygiene, an-| replacing Dr. Brill.
pointments have been an- Arecdh ‘d munity services, the position
oe the State Depart. nounced the following changes; Dr. Herman B. Snow assumes! formerly held by Dr. Lang. The US. Civil Service Commis-
nounced by the part= | effective April 30: the duties formerly held by Dr.| In announcing the changes, Dr, | sion is seeking engineers (GS-5 to
ment of Mental Hygiene Dr. Henry Brill resigns as first) Terrence as deputy commissioner | Hoch said Dr, Brill was fulfilling | GS-15) for career opportunities
& further implementation of | deputy commissioner to return to| for program administration. @ longtime desire to return to| in California and Nevada at start-
the reorganization of the’ his former duties as director of! Dr. Leonard C. Lang becomes} elinical activities as director of|ing salaries of $5,650 to $15,668
Pilgrim. The commissioner added: | per year. Positions are also avail-
“I am deeply grateful to Dr./able in Pacific Ocean areas, in-

| Brill for his invaluable and de-| cluding Hawall.

voted service during a very cru- General information and details
cial period in history of the treat-|on requirements can be found in
ment of the mentally ill In which | Civil Service Commission Pam-
eee he played a very vital role.” phiet No. 4, “Working for the

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Page Sixteen CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Rice Reports On Legislature

Central Conference Honors
Senator Anderson, Poses
Emmett Durr For President

(From Leader Correspondent)

BINGHAMTON, Apri] 27—State Senator Warren M. Anderson of Broome County was
honored for his cooperation with the State Civil Service Employees Assn. during a meeting
of the Central Conference in Binghamton at the Sheraton Motor Inn

IN ATTENDANCE — Attending American Society of Pubs

lic Administration meeting at Statler Hilton New York last week

The senator received a certi
cate of award from the Bingham-
ton Chapter at a dinner attended

Williams, Mrs. Boone and Ray-| Hazel C. Ab

mond G. Castle, first vice

ams, state secretary;

were (left to right) Harvey Sherman, director of organization and

Theodore Wenzl, past state treas-

procedures, Port Authority;

York Wilbern, director, Institute of Pub-

r t aint ot tie pate Onbante urer: Mrs. Mariam David of the Me Administration; Joseph F. Felly, president, Civil Service Em~=
by about 250 Central Conference | -oatant Division of Rehabllitation’s Bing-| Ployees Assn., and F, Henry Galpin, assistant executive director, CSEA,
officers, members and rep! ta-| “Election of officers will be at| hamton office; and Morton,
sins Toney flbieitass: | the annual conference meeting at| deputy commissioner of Motor|
We have at last established the :
asbeages A Hotel Utica, June 12 and 13 Vehicles. | 18 Cha ters Attend
Rena net ee cee Grievance Skit Also, Thomas Ranger, Confer-
that we can't have good govern-| piing a morning meeting,|ence preside rrederick Hi
ment without talented and de- : f e
members from the Utica area pre-| Cave, state fifth vice president
voted employees. and that We) uted a skit dramatizing the| Francis Connors, Taxation é& W. Conf: Rossiter,
must pay them adequately proper grievance procedures to be | Finance director, Binghamton of- e lA A
tor Anderson said. He received (oi owed by employees. ‘The cast| flee: Senator Anderson Dexheim- ° e
the certificate from Albert P-| i ciuded the following er, Mr. Peily and Mr, Rice; S Hh Nominated
in id ee ee ee M. Mary Terrell, Doris and/ Samuel Berelly, County Work
residen | * : riage a
pvOlticials at the meeting, inelud- | NoFMan Seeman, all from Marey | shop Group president: Vernon A.| HORNELL, April 27—Eighteen chapters of the Western
State Hospital chapter, Violet| Tapper, state second vice presi-
ing Joseph F. Felly, state prest-| see) y arthur ‘Tennis and Ray-|dent; James Burrows, Broome | COMference,- Civil Service Employees Assn. attended the
aun spaie atgg Pon: mond Pritchard of Rome State| County Chapter president; Rev, | Quarterly meeting here April 18.
Counsel, praised the teamwork | eonool chapter. Helen Blust, Mary| John Kane, Binghamton State The morning session was devoted to an informative
achieved by the state organization) Bat piven, Lois Minozzi and Mrs.| Hospital Catholic chaplain, and| discussion of the accident and health insurance plan by
f : wie: ES aangiy eee ak Boone did the staging | Paul Kyer, editor of The Leader. | Tom Canty, area representative for Ter, Bush é& Powell,
when T needed cooperation the San ee on Resolution The first afternoon se we
Association worked together to| , SORPMINON UavOr st At an afternoon session of the| devoted to a continuation of various committee reports, The
give me support,” Felly said members and wee among the din, | courence & resolution Know your CSEA" as explained | highlights of these reports was
Rice, who outlined this Yeats | eee eee et ae vend. tat passed asking that the rece by Leo Bernstein, education chair- | the list of nominees introduced
CSEA logislative program, Other nuetts were Castie, toaste| ine of & painter positior man. Joseph Lochner, executive | by Vito Perro of Gowanda, in the
the success of the pay ra master: Robert A Sullivan, Bing. | DAmton State Hospital b director, then devoted the next | absence of Celeste Rosenkranta,
wns evidence that the organiza-| soto Chapter exectl sevret. | com the Department of) pour to explaining the workin chairman, The following candle
ssa va a “sleeping | 41y: Benjamin H, Budiong of the om pen " the office staff at 8 Elic St, A’ Shc ee Be peda:
“This really was the first time ea or sens ee saved ed in a Grade bany. He told us that "there will fats: wiltiam Rossiter, president,
an over-all effort was made by Caswell, chapiaty but that no Grade be a new IBM System all Melba Binn, first vice president,
the Association membership it- Binghamton State Hospital; Mrs Wy as ad r ed to fill | June 1 which should correct some | Pauline Pitchpatrick, second vice
gel,” Rive said F | anette Grade Seven painter was of the inefficiencies that they have | President, Kenyon ‘Ticen, third
’ . hired, they sald aietiOnay. . vice president, Andrew Hirtz, cor
Anderson On Unused Leave |Capital Conf. al goaasthys eae encountered,” Lochner sald loa’ wane Neomee
Senator Anderson said after the) Gad fon Concord | Pactice in the Pai The second afternoon session| Halbert, recording secretary,
meeting he would continue to ; other shop |was the business meeting with! Thomas Pritchard, treasurer.
and seek action on two (Continued from Page 1)
od bills if he is re-| special price of $62 per person for

elected

The £1
vice employee for
leave time up to 60 days at
time of his separation from ser-
vice through no fault or miscon-
duct on his part—or at the |

rst would pay a Civil
all unused sick
the

the three-day event, which will
be held June The
will include a deluxe room in the
main building of the resort hotel,
three full meals daily, swimming,
ice skating, golf, ete. all-star en-
tertainment, a welcoming cock-

price

CSEA Moves In Rochester

(Continued from Page 1)
Continuation of the 5 percent
reduction in employee retirement
contributions to the State Retire-

jSet aside $1 million for city em-
ployees' pay raises but omitted a
Specific pay schedule because

tion of State, County and Munt+
cipal Employees (AFL-CIO) ts
bargaining agent for most city

me Y i negotiations with elty employees’ | workers, The union's constitution

Hive tact ote ouoees pt operon aaa rerenee | ment System plus city payment) unions are still in progress and officers have been suspended
, ng of t nee! of an additional 3 percent :

death before retirement, the sick Election To Be Held Sennloves, saiceiant ae erictbs | Cee cee nk Smeceniee. tn | Ont 1 Ue been pinend ta Geiser

time payment would go to his es-|
tate

Rice said this bill has y
high priority" in the CSEA pro-
gram |

The current law “penalizes the

On the serious side, the Con-
ference will hold a workshop on
Conference problems and will elect
a slate of officers for the coming
year

Costa announced that the Con-

tions, a5 won for state employees
by the CSEA In this year's legis-
lative session

Pive days of personal leave a
year was also won for state em-
ployees by the CSEA

CSEA which has lost two State
Supreme Court actions to force
the city to agree to payroll dues
deductions of CSEA members.

The CSEA says 200 city em-
ployees pay dues directly to the

ship, Its contract with the city
expires June 30.

The CSEA contended that city
salaries in Rochester lag 19 per
cent behind those paid in private
employment, seven percent behind

faithful employee and rewards! ference welcomes CSEA members | Deductions Sought association and that 850 others| those paid by Monroe County for

those who make certain to/from ali over the State to the| Payroll deduction of CSEA, Have signed payroll deduction| Siar positions and six percent

Uquidate all sick leave time dur-| event dues and premiums for its group | °4 behind those paid by New Yorke

ing their period of service,” the! Reservations, accompanied by a| life insurance and accident-and- Union in Trouble State for shafer: positions,

sennior:: anid $10 deposit, should be sent to the| health insurance as authorized in| Local 1635, American Fed The existing differential be=
His second bill would base an y

employee's rett

ement benefits on
the average of his three hi;

Convention Office, Concord Hotel, |
Kiamesha Lake, N.Y. and

writing by employees

payroll deductions

who want

tween salaries pald by the City
of Rochester and the State of
New

. es . ~ York for comparable posi«
mention the Capital Distri Five CSEA representatives pre- H

salaried consecutive years of ser-| ¢ ee, Make checks payable to| sented the eauenians tons an Jewish State Aides ee ee
Under the present system a) the Concord Hotel ing a four-hour meeting Tuesday . Sveney Ci) Set 2) NU NAR
ee ee meer Ho nt ahr acs eee ¥e"* | Moad Piano: Can You |e i tee pay ates
Conference Nominations Oneonta Chapter Manager Porter W. Homer and " J f sisi Prous i 3

: Durr of Raybrook " City Corporation Counsel Arthur A if Th i C hi . *

hominated for Con.| Installs Officers Curran wad Gee ere SSIS eir Lalise: | Remove “Dead End” Carers

Durr 1s now first vice president.|main order of business a ol) And “at @ city budget Nearing. | sociation is looking for a used saa lee ie ee Rb
7 deal cand naling smrand Povmoagte a Representing the CSEA were Si are oh ae ees last July 1 only helped to
SUM, ROmIOa Bhs Mehr) | Ciwena, ante, Cles. Vin n Al 1, president of the TMG FORA ah Wha C counteract inereases occurring in
Vasile. of "Rimlra, or ives) Bevpiasees” Aaa, esting Mats.| Monson ‘ounty, OBEA “chagt nis gt Duane sc, | Private employment across the
Margaret Whitmore of Syracuse,| following ne ntticers, , ied eee ok en ki pyro pnichgprd papoose.
aeere’ aid Dia. Seana Gocian| Bakard GFE preddenls Gee lORak Gene cece oe el Ph eee colbis ma | teen ct eee ee
ad Bruch, Suaciwis: Chhaseoe orca tis | Galinc, Gosh Cae ae, era ee ne SIRE A | EEIEDRS, EOD REDRESS GAA | See Seine Oe: ee
soe Saar ter a Saves fi i vs bres es | Perkinson, Albany, C8EA public} contact the Association's spiritual) ment and encourage continuous
The Taninetine committee, | oariy Belang, second vice presi-| relations director, and James advisor, Rabbl Gordon st BE-3-| incentive and Improve morale, The
which mee vartie't, omumitice,| dent: Janice Radley, secretary:| Powers of Attica, CSEA area fleld) 6862 or Sylvia Greenbaum, presi-| increases would also partially
en cg ee ia atest rder, treasurer representative. dent of the ladies’ auxiliary at | compensate for a lack of promos
new, +| Retirement benefits were diss No Pay Schedule CO-7-9800, ext, 7241. The assoola-| tlonal opportunities, the CSEA

hamton chapter secretary, Agnes|

cussed following the installation

Tn his proposed budget, Homer| tion will pay moving costs.

| said,

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