Civil Service Leader, 1952 October 7

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Civil Serwiee

L

EADER

America’s Largest Weekly for Public Employees

—

Vol. XIV — No. 4

Tuesday, October 7, 1952

Price Ten Cents

Speed Urged in
Hospital

<a

See Page 4

pg C. Shoro (left) retiring fro

State servic:

Herman £. Hilleboe, State Commissi

State of te One
Department @
slation. A ferows

wr of Hi
Business foraging in the State Health

f the a Service Employees Asso-

Cut-Rate Plan Opens
For Public Employees, with

Pledge of Lowest Prices

Informally talked about for
many years by public employees,
an idea to slash their high cost
of living saw reality this week
with the establishment of the Em-
al Cut-Rate Buying Plan,

One year in the making, details
of this Buying Plan are revealed
for the first time on pages 8 and
9 of this week's issue of the CIVIL
SERVICE LEADER.

At Lowest Prices

jals of the Buying Plan an-
nounced that they were pledged
to offer each week the most ser-
viceable merchandise in the mar-
ket at prices unavailable else-
where.

“This can be done,” they told
The LEADER, “because the Buy-

New Rating
System Delayed

ALBANY, Oct, 6 —Adoption of
& new type of employee rating
system by the State Civil Service
Commission has been delayed for
at lea r month,

The Commission approved for
the Non-Competitive Class the
title of chief of the telephone bu-
reau of the Department of Public
Service. The PSC had asked ex-
empt classification.

Removed from the calendar was
@ request from the Labor Depart-
ment for non-competitive classi-
fication of the title of attorney.

However, approval was granted
the Thruway Authority to place
& position of special counsel in
the Exempt Class.

In connection with a request
from the Temporary State Hous-
ing Rent Commission for exempt
classification of the job of dir
tor of publications and press re-

lations, the Commission ordered
Substitution of the position of
public relations officer in the ex-
empt for the longer title
which already 1s non-competitive.

Raises Denied

ALB/ Oct. 6 — Applications
for increases have been
» Director of Classi-

lary
d by t

fication and Compensation in the

following titles
Chief Hydraulic Engineer, G-39,
gross salary range, $9,840-

Motor
$4,206-35,03

Vehicle Inspector, G-15,
9:

Railroad Track and Structure
Inspector, G-15, $4,206-$5,039,

ing Plan represents the mass pur-

chasing power of up to 600,000
in New York
State — the employees of Federal,
City and local

public employees

State, County,
Jurisdictions.”
As examples of the bargains
that they expect to offer weekly,
Buying Plan officials singled out
the following items, all of them
advertised in this week's LEADER:
Famous Make Razor Blades, 144
for T4e.
Sessions Alarm Clock, $2.99.
Peatherweight Raincoat, 88c,
Pamous Brand Nylons, 58c.
17-Jewel Wrist Watch, $10.99.
U.S. Army Reject Blanket, $4.99,
Six-piece 5.5. Steak Set, $1.77.
nmuine Alligator Belt, $1.44.
U.S. Navy Reject Hose,
for $1.00.
Flannel Lounging Robe, $2.44

ing Plan is without question

ing Plan statement continued.

“With the many difficulties that a
ce employee faces these
iting along on his salary,
it is with considerable pride that
we announce the details of the
Employees Cut-Rate Buying Plan.”

civil ser
days in

Want Needs Made Known

To make the Buying Plan even

more valuable to gvil service em-

ployees, the announcement stated,
every effort will be made to tle in
closely to buying
urged
employees to make known their

merchandise

needs. Officials therefore

needs to the Buying Plan, who wi

5 pr.

The Employees Cut-Rate Buy-

a
|major answer to the problem of
the elvil service worker,” the Buy-

ALBANY, Oct. 6 — The rising
cost of living has. aroused the
civil servants in the State to un-
dertake a campaign for a salary
adjustment to equalize the grow-
ing disparity between their pay
checks and their rent, fuel, food
and other bills, Spokesmen for
State and local employees state
they have long felt they have been
the forgotten men in the Amer-
jean economy, never having re-
ceived a wage adjustment com-
mensurate either with their ser-
vices or with rising price levels.
Urges Presentation of Viewpoint
Jesse B, McFarland, president of
the Civil Service Employees Asso-
ciation, in « letter to all confer-
ence and chapter presidents,
urged that they organize their
junits to present the viewpoint of
| the civil servant to the public,
“We have no desire to be an-
other contributor to the infla-
tionary spiral, Mr. McParland
said, “but we are conscious that
unless we make our point of view
known we are very apt to be oyer-
looked in the ure of other
business, The civil servant is also
@ person and in his personat life
has to meet the high cost of liv-
ing, Food, medical care and edu-
cational costs have become so high
it is becoming an_ increasing
source of worry and discontent to
many valuable State servants. Few
civil servants live eXtrayagantly,

and money worries cannot fall to
interfere with the efficient pro-
duction which the public has a
right to expect from its employees.
In a great many homes there is
not only the fear of illness but
frank discussion as to whether a
college education for the sons and
daughters can fall within the fam-
ily budget.”
McFarland Letter

Mr. McFarland's letter follows:

“Deep and detailed study by the
salary committee of economic con-
ditions and the direct impact of
inflation upon the standard of
living and general welfare of pub-
lic employees indicates plainly
that emergency adjustments in
salaries provided thus far for pub-
le workers did not suffice to meet
the present living costs, the high-
est in the history of our nation,
nor to care for family and com-
munity responsibilities of the pres-
ent era.

“The need to deal justly with
public servants as to the salaries
paid for their services is vitally
important to citizens generally
since without proper compensation
it is not possible to recruit or to
retain efficient workers. We hold
that the public service calls for
the best brains and highest de~-
gree of industry to maintain effi-
clency and integrity.

“So long as ,we have inflation

CSEA Plans Wage-Rise
Drive, With Committees
Blanketing Entire State

for those within our society whe
are dependent upon wages or sale
aries in private or public endeavor
— and these make up well over 80
percent of our people — it is
plainly imperative that there must
be sound balance between salaries
and wages and the costs of goods
and services,

“The State and local subdivi-+
sions cannot intelligently continue
to require that their public ser«
vants contribute their service to
government at substandard salary
rates while the earning of em~
ployees in private employment are
kept in line with dollar purchase
ing power.

‘The Initial Plea '

“This letter is the initial ples

in our 1952-53 salary adjustment
campaign. I ask that in your con~
ference and chapter unit you im<
mediately appoint a special 1952+
53 salary campaign committee. I
am directing that every present
resource of Association headquars
ters be used to the maximum ia
| aiding local committees with facts
and suggestions and material to
bring to public attention the need
of maintaining the income of civil
servants on a sound basis and
thereby contribute to the mainte-
nance of high standards of effl-
ciency in the civil service.

“Please get your committee ap-
pointed and ready.”

ALBANY, Oct. 6—Business ses-
sions and panel discussions on top-
ics vital to public employees fea-
ture plans for the annual meeting
of the vil Service Employees
Association.

schedule faces the expected 400 or
more delegates.

Albany’: Mayor Erastus Corning
will greet delegates at the lunch-
eon meeting Tuesday.

State Health Commissioner Dr,
Herman E.
cipal speaker at this session.

The afternoon will be devoted
to a business session and the eve-
ning will bring on two panel dis-
cussions on salary problems.

At 7:30 p.m. in the ballroom of
the DeWitt Clinton hotel Associa-
tion Fifth Vice President Joseph
Feily will preside at a discussion
on state salary developments. Pan-
el members will include Stephen
Davis, of the State Labor Media-
tton board; Lawrence MacArthur,
assistant director of Classification

in turn endeavor to locate r and Compensation for State Civil
quested merchandise at lowest | Service; Davis L. Shultes, CSEA
available prices. salary committee chairman, and

As a hint to keep buying costs

down even further, officials fur
ther suggested that employees

Join together in sending in orders

so that postage costs for all par-
ties concerned can be reduced.

In addition to the weekly offers,

which will be advertised regularly
in the Civil Service LEADER, the

|CSEA 3d Vice President J. Allyn
Stearns.

At the same time, in the audi-
torium of the Association at 8 Elk
St. the panel on salaries in local
units will be chaired by Philip L.
a CSEA director from St.

rence county chapter.

His panel will consist of Irving

Hilleboe will be prin-|

els on Civil Service Law and on
Pension - Supplemental Pensions
and Workmen's Compensation.
First Vice President John F.
Powers will preside at the Law
panel at 1:30 p.m, in the DeWitt

With registration set for the| ballroom. .
evening of Oct, 13 and meetings| On the panel will be James R.
for the 14th and 15th, a full) Watson, executive director of the

Civil Service Reform Association;
Frank L. Tolman, CSEA past
president and a member of the
Preller Commission on Revision of
the Civil Service Law; Theodore
Becker, chairman of the CSEA
law revision committee, and assist-
bi CSEA Counsel John J. Kelly,
r,

At 3:30 p.m. in the same room
Raymond L, Munroe, 2nd vice
President, will preside over the

CSEA'52 Annual Meeting
Oct. 13-15, to Cover Wide
Gamut of Employee Affairs

pension panel consisting of L. M.
Cloonan, assistant claims director
for the State Insurance Fund;
Dorothea Donaldson, of the Work-
men’s Compensation Board; Isaac
S. Hungerford, assistant director
of the State Retirement System,
and Charles C, Dubuar, chairman
of the Association pensions com-
mittee. Panel consultant will be
CSEA counsel John T. DeGraff.
Canadian Is Speaker

David Watters, assistant secre-
tary to the Treasury Board of
Canada, will be principal speaker
at the annual dinner Wednesday
| night, Following dinner and the
|speeches Leonard Requa, chair-
man of the Association's Board of
Canvassers, will announce the ree
sults of the annual election,

10 High State
Posts Added

ALBANY, Oct. 6 — Ten new
high-category positions have been
added to the State roster of jobs.
They will te filled beginning this
month and until April 1, 1953.

The new titles, with the gross
salary allotted to them are:

Assistant Director, Mental
Health Commission, $8,350-$10,138.

Chief, Bureau of Game, $6,801-
$8,231,

Chief, Bureau of Private Trade

$9.3!

Buying Plan is offering a cata-|T. Bergman, Nassau County labor| Chief Rent Examiner (Account-
logue that will be available within | consultant: Morris Cohen, Schen-| ing), $6,801-$8,231,
the next several weeks, in time for dy City manager; Henry J.| Director of Rescue Training
Christmas shopping. This enta- arland, director of the State $6,801-$8,231,
logue, officials said, will include|Division of Municipal Services;| Rescue Training School Assist-
close to 1,000 items John P, Quinn, a CSEA director 1-$4,051,

“Prom girdles to television sets,|{rom Erie County, and P, Henry Field Representative,
we will have gifts to answer the | Galpin, CE esearch analyst $5,039.
Christmas gift shopping problem Wednesday morning de Training Technician

for every member of a Civil Serv-
ice worker's family,” they state.
Details of this catalogue will be
found within the Buying Plan ad
on pages 8 and 9,

will attend another business
on followed by luncheon at
h membership awards will be
made,

The afternoon will feature pan-

|

$4,964-$6,088,
Supervising Rent Examiner (Ac-

counting), $5,189-$5,313.
Supervising ‘Toll

$3,001-$3,891,

Collector,

and oemontant Sohools, $7,754-/
94.

Appeals Filed
For State Pay
Grade Change

ALBANY, Oct. 6 — Applications
for salary grade changes were filed
with the Director of Classification
and Compensation during Septem
ber as listed below, While these
originated in the department
shown, other employees and ap=
pointing officers may participate
in the applications, if desired,
Head Industrial’ Shop Worker,

B. ental Hygiene;
| Industrial Shop Worker, Mental
Hygiene;
| Office Machine Operator (Book-
keeping),
Fund}
Office Machine Operator (Key
Punch), Agriculture and Marketa,
Taxation and Finance;
Shoemaker, Mental Hygiene;
ap eipervinos Tailor, Mental Hyw
giene;
Tailor, Mental Hygiene;
v, terer, Mental Hygiene,

Labor, State Insurance
Poge Two

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Tuceday, October 7, 1954

State Has Jobs for Teachers, Chemists, Others.

STATE
Open-Competitive
6212. SENIOR BIOCHEMIST,
$4,964 to $6,088, One vacancy each
in NYC and Albany. Require-
ments: (1) bachelor’s degree with
specialization in chemistry; (2) 1
year’s experience in biochemistry;

and (3) either (a) two more
+ years’ experence, or (b) master's
degree in inorganic chemistry.

physical chemistry, or blochemis:
try plus one more year’s exper-
fence, or (ce) doctor’s degree in
such fields, or (d) equivalent com-
bination of (3) (a), (b) and (c)
Fee $4, (Friday, November 7),
6213. BIOCHEMIST, $4,053 to
$4,889, Three vacancies at Al-
bany. Requirements: (1) bache-
lor's degree with specialization in
chemistry; and (2) either (a) one
year's experience in biochemistry,
or (b) master’s degree in organic
chemistry, physical chemistry, or
biochemistry, or  (c) equivalent
combination of (2) (a) and (b).
Pee $3. (Friday, November 7).
6214. SENTOR X-RAY TECHNI-
CFAN, $3,411 to $4,212. One va-
cancy each at Buffalo, Central
Islip, Manhattan, Middletown
State Hospitals and Letchworth
Village in the Department of
Mental Hytiene. Requirements:
high school graduation; (2)
two years’ experience in the op-

eration of X-ray apparatus and
auxiliary equipment; and (3)
either (a) two more years’ exper-
jence, or (b) one more year’s ex-
perience plus course In X-ray
technology, or (c) equivalent com-
| bination of (a) and (b). Fee $2.
(Priday, November 7).

6215. X-RAY TECHNICIAN,
$2,931 to $3,731, One vacancy.
West Haverstraw In the Depart-
ment of Health. Requirements;
(1) high sehool graduation; and
(2) either (a) two years’ exper-
fence in the operation of X-ray
apparatus and auxiliary equip~
ment, or (b) one year of the
above experience plus course in
X-ray technology, or (c) equiva-
lent combination of (a) and (b).
Fee $2. (Friday, November 7).

6216, SENIOR MEDICAL
TRCHNICIAN, $3,251 to $4,052;
and SENIOR MEDICAL TECH-
NICIAN (T. B. SERVICE), $3,411
to $4,212. Vacancies (senior medi-
cal technician), one at Newburg
Hospital, Department of Health;
five at Department of Mental Hy-
giene hospitals and schools. Va-
cancies (senior medical techni-
cian T.B.), one at Hermann M.
Biggs Memorial Hospital, Depart-
ment of Health. Requirements:
(1) high school graduation; and
(2) either (a) completion of
course in medical technology, or

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(b) four years’ experience as a
jtechnician in @ medical labora-
tory including two years under
qualified supervision, or (¢) equi-
valent combination of (a) and

(b). Pee $2. (Friday, November 7).
6217. MEDICAL TECHNICIAN,

$3,091 to $3,891, Vacancies (medi-
cal technician), one each at West-
field State Farm, Utica Buffalo,
West Haverstraw, and nine in
Mental Hygiene institutions. Va-
cancies (medical technictan T. B.),
one each at J. N. Adam Memorial

Hospital and Broadacres Sana-
torlum, Department of Health. Re-
quirements: (1) high school grad-

uation; and (2) either (a) course
in medical technology, or (L) two
years’ experience as a technician
in a medical laboratory including
one year under qualified super-
vision, or (c) equivalent combina-
tion of (a) and (b). Fee $2. (Pri-
day, November 7).

6228. ASSOCIATE IN VOCA.
TIONAL ARTS AND CRAFT:
EDUCATION, $6,088 to $7,421.
One vacancy in the Education De-
partment in Albany. Require-
ments: (1) bachelor's degree with
specialization in art education or
fine or applied or industrial arts
and with 30 credits in graduate
and undergraduate courses in de-
sign and crafts; (2) three years’
experience in teaching vocational
arts and crafts to adults; and (3)
either (a) two more years’ exper-
fence, or (b) three years’ exper-
ince as a producing craftsman of
arts and crafts articles, or (¢)
30 graduate hours in fine or ap-
plied or industrial arts plus one
year of the experience in 3 fa)
or (b), or (d) equivalent combina-
| tion of such training and exper-
ota Fee $5. (Friday, November

,

6234. OCCUPATIONAL  IN-
STRUCTOR, $2,611 to $3,411, Va-
cancies, more than 60 in the in-
stitutions of the Department of
Mental Hygiene. Requirement
() high school graduation; and
(2) either (a) three years of paid
experience in carpentry, printing
or needle trades, or (b) two years’
experience in teaching arts and
crafts In adult education or formal
class-room teaching, or (c) two
| years of supervised experience as
|an occupational therapy aide in
an organized occupational thera-
} py department, or (d) 225 clock
hours of post-high school training
in one or more arts and crafts plus
two years’ experience in the prac-
tice of fine or manual arts or one
j year of teaching, or (e) four years’

5

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WHITE PLAINS, N. Y.
WHite Plains 8-6633

tA more arts and crafts, or (f
college graduation or a teacher's
certificate including or supple~
mented by courses in industrial or
fine arts, or (g) equivalent com-
‘bination of additional training and
experience, Pee $2. (Friday, No-
vember 7).

6233. TREE PRUNER FORE-
MAN, kage $3,731. Two va-

two years’ experience in tree re~
moval; and medical examination.
Fe. $2. (Priday, November 7).

6229. SEWING MACHINE AD-
SUSTER, $3,571 to $4372. One
vacancy at Sing Sing Prison in
the Department of Correction,
Five years’ recent experience in
repair, maintenance and adjust-
ment of flat lock and multiple
needle sewing machine. Pee $3. No
written test, Appointment of males
only. (Ftiday, November 7).

6232, ASSISTANT INDUSTRIAL
AND
» $3,091 to $3,891.
One vacancy at Sing Sing Prison.
Requirements: three years’ ex-
perience in the manufacture of
brooms and brushes, with demon-
strated ability to oversee the work
of others. Men only. No written
a Fee $2. (Friday, November
6230, CORRECTION INSTITU-
TION VOCATIONAL INSTRUC-
TOR (CARPENTRY), $3,411 to
4,212. One vacancy at Wood-

urne Correctional Institution.
Requirements: (1) State certifi-
cate valid for teaching carpentry;
(2) completion of the 9th grade

pen, Pee $2. Men only.
ae 5

. CORRECTION
mon. “VOCATIONAL INS’

‘TOR (TRADES), $3,411 to $4,212,
One vacancy at Woodbourne Cor-
rectional Institution.

trades; Kd ‘completion of the 9th

es school; and (3) five

jeuunepm experience im

the building or mechanical trades,

oe Fee $2. (Friday, Novem-
»

6235, CONSULTANT PUBLIO
HEALTH NURSE; $4.964 to $6,-
088, One vacancy at Albany in the
Department of Health. Require-
ments: (1) nursing school grad~
uation and completion of the
“Public Health Nurse for Super-
vision” qualifications of the State
Department of Health Public
Health Council plus bachelor’s de~
gree including or supplemented
by 30 credit hours in public health
nursing plus State license to prac~
tice as a registered professional
nurse; and (2) either (a) five
years’ experience in public health
nursing including two years’ ex-
perience if’ a supervisory or eon-
sultant capacity, or ‘b) equivalent
combination of training and ex-
perience. Open to all qualified
citizens of the U.S. Fee $4. (Pri-
day, November 7).

6236. CONSULTANT PUBLIC
HEALTH NURSE (MENTAL
HEALTH), $4,964 to $6,088. One
vacancy at Syracuse in the De-
partment of Mental Hygiene. Re~
quirements: (1) same as No. 623
(); and (2) five years’ exper-
fence in public health nursing in-
cluding two years’ experience in
community mental health pro-
grams of psychiatric nursing,

in school; and (3) five years’
journeyman experience

in’ car-

Completion of an approved grad
(Continued on page 10)

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Subscription Price $3.00 Per
Year, Individual copies, 106,

Tuesday, October 7, 1952

U.S. Aids State;

Layofis H

alted

In Labor Dept.

WASHINGTON, Oct. 6 — The
Bureau of Unemployment Security,
U, 8, Department of Labor, has
approved over-spending by the
New York State Department of
Labor, to the extent that such ac-
tion, during the next two thonths,
will prevent additional layoffs.
The authority granted, however,
does not permit any over-spend-

ing to provide for the recall of |

employees who were laid off, in
what is now known as the Divi-
sion of Employment. ft was form-
erly called the Division of Place-
ment and Unemploynient Insur-

ance,
Corsi Asked Aid
‘The letter from the U. 8, Bu-
reau was the result of representa-

tions by State Industrial Commis-
stoner Edward Corsi, On behalf
of Mr. Corsi, @ letter was ad-
dressed to that Bureau by Milton
O. Loysen, executive director of
the State division who received
the reply.

The U. S. approval was based
on the expectation that claims
|for unemployment insurance will
increase in the late fall. The New
York Department of Labor gave
assurances that, if past experience
repeats itself, there would be such
a rise. The New York officials
added that the caseload has been
| dropping steadily, hit a low of
154,009 when the layoffs were
ordered, and last week reached
138,000. But the upswing is ex-
pected to start soon.

State Troopers Entitled
To Unemployment Benefit

ALBANY, Oct. 6 — New York
State Police troopers are in the
classified State civil service and
therefore entitled to unemploy-
ment insurance benefits, according
to a recent referee's decision in a
case involving a trooper who had
Tost his job,

Question of Civil Service Law

The trooper had been denied
benefits by a local unemployment
insurance office on the assumption
that he had been employed in the
unclassified service, which is_not
covered for jobless benefits. This
assumption was based on the fact
that the State Civil Service Com-
mission, which sets qualifications
and conducts examinations for
classified civil service jobs, has no
jurisdiction over the State Police,
these functions being expressly

vested by Section 215(2) of the
Executive Law in the Superin-
tendent of State Police.

The referee points out, however,
that section 9 of the Civil Ser-
vice Law, defining the unclass
fied serv: does not include mem-
bers of the State Police, and, fur-
thermore, expressly provides that
the classified service shall com-
prise all persons not included in
the unclassified service. He there-
fore concludes that “the members
of the State Police are in the
classified service” and the claim-
ant is eligible for benefits.

Supporting his decision, the re-
feree cites the case of Andresen
V. Rice, 277 N.Y, 271, wherein the
Court, on page 275, definitely rules
that the State Police is in the
classified service.

Jr. Tax Exami
Have to Trave

ALBANY, Oct, 6 — Junior tax
examiners who must travel great
distances to reach their work will
be doing so during working hours,
the State Department of Taxation
and Finance told The LEADER
this week.

The announcement of the solu-~
tion to the Tax Department travel
problem is an example of the
settlement of an employee griev-
ance through the use of grievance
machinery within the department,

Heretofore junior tax exami-
ners, whose regular place of em-
ployment is Albany but who often
were sent to Buffalo, Rochester
and other upstate areas to assist
local offices during filing periods,
had to travel on Sunday.

This was required by the fact
they had to report to work early
Monday morning.

ners Won't
on Own Time

Although about 60 such em-
ployees are scheduled out of the
Albany office of Tax and Finance,
not all of them were concerned in
the grievance, since some of them
traveled relatively short distances
and could make the trip Monday
morning.

Starting Hour Moyed Back

The department has now de-
termined that, in cases where em-
ployes must spend many hours in
travel, their starting hour on Mon-
day will be moved back to allow
them time to reach their destina-
tion without using Sunday for
traveling

In other words, employees sign-
ed out for Buffalo or Rochester,
for example, will not be expected
at their desks in those cities until
noon or later on the day they are

to report.

LEADER Offers University

Library—The Literary Gems

Of All Time—a

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published since the beginning of
printing. How would you like to
go through them and pick out the
best ones? Don't fret, for the job
has already been done for you,

A group of educators headed by
the world-renowned Dr. John
Huston Pinley gave themselves the
task of selecting the greatest lit-
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a volume.

The CIVIL SERVICE LEADER,
continuing its extraordinary buys
for its read has made arrange=
ments to 4 these books for you
at only 98 cent volume, plus 12
cents for mailing.

278 Literary Masterpieces

A total of 278 literary master-

pieces ‘e included in this set —

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Every type of
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plays, biographies, poems and
essaya.And among the authors are
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Umes, names like hakespeare,

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yard Kipling,
Rousseau, Rot

O, Henry, Rud-
Benjamin Franklin,
ert Louis Stevenson,

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Tolstoi, Chekhov, Homer, Anatole
France, Edgar Allan Poe and a

host of others.

Thus for less than a dollar a
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source of pleasure to yourself and
your family.

‘CIVIE SERVICE LEADER

director; Phil
rector; Dolly

L, White, executive

Speakers were Dr.
Associatioi

a1 membership drive dinner of the Alba

iy Araeld W. Wise. Seen areand the food er

vice-president, Civil Service Employees As sociati

|, chairman of the Capital District Conferenc:
Went

Lefe Gooshaw, fourth vice-president, Back row: Mrs. Katherin:

representative: Glenn W, Mi

Ll
inelby, director; Cora Barbour, director, John Loucks, thied vice-present, was absent when the

photo was token,

Faustine Spencer,

Page Three

Gates, second
Marian ©. Murray
rd J. Mitchell, Jr., di

Officers of the St. Lawrence chapter, CSEA. Front row, Virginia Aldous, secretary; Florence C. Wood, trease
urer; Stanley Howlett, first vice-president; Welthia 8. Kip, president; Y.

pter, CSEA, this informal photograph was
left te right, Ens Ademi, chapter secretary: Card
Sue Long, chopter president; Di
principal membership ci

Mr. Feily, Mrs. Spencer, also Patrick De Murio, principal insuran
Betty Rivett, in charge of Blue Cross and Biue Shield for the Association.

clerk of the

ALBANY, Oct. 6 — Changes in
the constitution and by-laws of
the Civil Service Employees Asso-
ciation, one of them involving an
increase in the terms of officers
from one to two years, will be
placed before the organization's
delegates at the annual meeting
on October 13-15

The Board of Directors voted
affirmatively upon the proposed
amendments. The sections to be
considered and the changes fol-
low below, in full:

Note: Matter in parentheses is
to be deleted, Matter in bold face
type is new.

Constitution
ARTICLE IV
Organization of the Association.
Section 1. Divisions. The Asso-
ciation shall be organized in two
divisions to be known as the state
division and the county division,
Members who are active or retired
employees of the state shall be in
the state division and members
who are active or retired em-
ployees of the political subdivisions
of the state shall be in the county
division, Members who are active
or retired employees of any pub-
lic authority, public benefit corpo-
ration or similar autonomous pub-
lie agency may, with the approval
of the board of directors, elect as
a unit to affiliate with a state de-
partment or a county chapter and
shall thereupon become members
of the division with which they

have affiliated.

Section 4. Officers, The officers
of the Association shall be a presi-
dent, three or more vice-presi-
dents, a secretary and a treasurer,

(a) Election, Officers of the
Association shall be elected by
ballot at the annual meeting held
in odd-numbered years in the
cribed in the by-law
id office for a term
of two years or until
their successors shall have quali-
fied. Vacancies in any office may
| be filled for the remainder of the
term by the board of directors.

(b) Nominations
committee shall be apointed by
the Board of Directors at least
(ninety) one hundred twenty days
before the annual meeting of the
Association held in an odd-num-
bered year and such committe

It's simple to take advantage of| after giving full consideration to
this offer. On pag of this issue/all facts or petitions presented to
you will find a Library Coupon.|jt by individual members or
Clip this and mail with 98 cents| groups of members, s
plus 12 cents for postage and/the secretary, at least (sixty)
mailing, to Box 400, The LEADER, | seventy-five days before (the?
97 Duane Street, New York 7, N.Y.) such annual meeting a slate of
A similar coupon will appear in| nominations for officers of the|
future issues of The LEADER, so] Association, containing at least
that each week you can add > nominations for each office
other volume to your set. Pictures| Any member who accepts appoint-
of the volu appeared in last} ment as a member of the nomi-
week's edition of The LEADER nating committee shall not be

Or if you wish, the books may| eligible for nomination in the en-
be picked up directly at The] suing election to any of the offices
LEADER office, 97 Duane Strect,|enumerated in Section 4 of this
NYC, which is two blocks north| article
of City Hall and just west of|  (e) Independent Nominations,
Broadway. Nominations for officers may also

A nominating |

be made, by petition signed by
not less than five per cent of the
members of the Association, and
the names of such candidates
shall be printed on the official
ballot if such nominations are
filed with the secretary at least
(thirty? forty-five days before
(the) such annual meeting,

ARTICLE V

State Division

Section 1, State Executive Com-
mittee, The power and authority
to transact business relating to
state employees shall, except as
otherwise provided herein, be
vested in a state executive com-
mittee which shall consist of the
officers of the Association, one
representative from each state
department, and representatives of
regional conferences selected in
accordan¢e with section 5 of this
article,

The judici) and the legisla-
lature shall each be deemed a
state department, The state exe-
cutive committee may create one
or more subcommittees to perform
such duties as the state executive
committee shall delegate. Each
department representative shall
be elected by ballot by the mem-
bers in his department in the
manner prescribed in the by-laws.

(The public authorities, public
benefit corporations and similar
automomous public agencies,
which do not elect to affiliate with
a state department, shall collec-
tively be deemed a state depart-
ment.) Vacancies in the office of
state department representative
may be filled for the remainder of
the term by the board of directors,

Section 2, Nominations. A nom-
inating committee shall be ap-
pointed by the state executive
committee at least (ninety) one
hundred twenty days before the
annual meeting of the Association
held in an odd-numbered year,
and such committee, after giving
full consideration to all facts or

| petitions presented to it by indivi-

dual members or groups of mem-
bers, shall file with the Secretary,
at least (sixty) seventy-five days
before (the) such annual meeting,
nominations for members of the
state executive committee.
Section 3. Independent Nomina-
tions. Nominations for members of
the state executiv
also be made by petition signed
by not less than ten per cent cf
the members in the department
making such nominations. The
name of such candidates shall be
printed on the official ballot if}
such nominations are filed with
secreta: (thirty)
ty-five a (the? such
annual mee’

By-Laws

ARTICLE
Meetings
Section 1. Annual Meeting, (A)
Election of Officers, The annual
meeting of the Association shall
be held on call of the president

at
s before
ing.

committee may

Proposed Amendments
To CSEA Constitution

between the first and fifteenth day
of October in each year. The presi+
dent shall give notice of the date
of such meeting to the president
of each chapter, conference and
members of the board of directors
before May first in each year,
Officers of the Association and one
representative from each state
department shall be elected by
ballot at the annual meeting held
in odd-numbered years,

(B) Ballots, Ballots, with the
names of all duly nominated can-
didates printed thereon, shall, at
least (ten) twenty days prior to
the date of (the) such annual
meeting, be distributed in the
official (magazine) publication or
otherwise made available to mom-
bers at all offices or locations, de«
signated by the board of directors,
The ballot, or the envelope in
which the ballot is enclosed, shall
be marked “Ballot” and such en-
velope or ballot shall also bear the
signature of the member and the
name of the department or unit
of government in which he is em-
ployed. The ballot shall contain
instructions as to how a secret
ballot may be cast. To be counted,
properly prepared ballots must be
received at the headquarters of
the Association, either by mail or
in person, before six o'clock P. M,
on the seventh day (of) prior to
the annual meeting at which offi«
cers and state department repre<
sentatives are to be elected.

(C) Board of Canvassers. The
board of directors shall appoint a
board of canvassers, of at least
three members of the Association,
to determine the validity of nomi-
nating petitions and to count the
ballots. The member receiving the
greater number of votes for the
office shall be declared elected. Any
member whose name Is printed on
the ballot may be present during
the counting of the ballots. In case
of a tie vote, a new ballot shall be
taken under rules established by
the board of directors. The listing
of candidates for office shall be in
alphabetical order. Only the cans
didates’ names and their particu-
jar department shall be shown on
th. ballot

ection 2, Board of Directors,
Meetings of the board of directors
jshall be held upon call of the
president. Upon the written re-
|quest of five or more members of
the board of directors, the presi-
|dent shall call a special meeting
of the board, The president shall

call a meeting of the board of di-
rectors during the last ten days in
October and during the
teria diay

last (tend
in ,

Novembs

Oct Three titles
eliminated from the
structure since they are
They are:
Associate Physical Chgmist,
Greenskeep\ Industrial, | and
Technical diction Yeohfdtank,

have
State

job
no longer in use.

Page Four

CIVID SERVICE LEADER

State Civil Service Head
To Present Art Prizes

ALBANY, Oct, 6—The Art Show
Committee of the Civil Service Em-
ployees Association, at a meeting
in Albany, announced that J. Ed-
ward Conway, president of the
State Civil Service Commission,
would afficiate at the ceremonies
formally opening the Second An-
nual art show to the public on
October 15, at the Albany Insti-
tute for History and Art, 125
Washington Avenue, Albany. Judge
Conway will award the prizes to
those artists whose paintings have
been selected by a special prize
jury as meriting special award.

The prize jury, composed of Mrs.
E. Riva Fisher of Poughkeepsie,
Stanley Bates of Craryville, and
James V. Gilliland of Schenectady,
will convene next week at the Al-
bany Institute to make their se-
Prizes to be awarded

: first prize, $75; second
Prize, $50; third prize, $20; fourth
Prize, $1)

WATERCOLORS: first’ prize,
50; second prize, $25.
PTURE-CERAMICS: first

Prize, $25.

In addition, there will be one
honorable mention in each class.
All Invited
All artists and their friends who
submitted works of art for exhibi-

by the public employee, Also,”
continued Mr, Rothman, “we re~
gret that in a juried show every
otering cannot be selected. The
judges, who were such prominent
artists and critics as Fletcher
Martin of Woodstock, Joseph Tro-
vato of Utica and Lawrence R.
McCoy of Manchester, Vt., were
given a hard task in picking the
works of art to be shown, It is
hoped that the decision of the
judges will not discourage anyone
who is interested in increasing his
artistic skill.”

Krumman
Urges Vote

ALBANY, Oct, 6 — Pred J,
Krumman, president of the Met
tal Hygiene Employees Assoc:
tion, urged all employees of the
Mental Hygiene Department who
are members of the Civil Service
Employees Association to cast
thelr votes in the current CSEA
election.

“That election is important to
us all,” Mr. Krumman said, “As
employees of the State, we all
have a stake in the outcome. As
American citizens, we must make

Association, John F.

Miller
iD, Graves

At @ meeting of the St. Lawrence chapter, Civil Servic
ers, Ist vice-president of the CSEA, vepliies
some of the Association's functions. Listening are, (left) Mr
Mr. Miller, former president of the
4 Supervisor Joel M, H

Glenn W.
on the right, State
ard of Waddington.

Speed Urged on Pay Appeal
Of State Hospital Attendants

H. F. Brumm,
Of Public Works, “
Dies Suddenly |

ALBANY, Oct. 6. — Herman P,
Brumm, District Engineer of the

__Taceday, October 7 1952

t

Hornell District of the New York |

State Departmen’ of Public Works,
died suddenly early last Wednes< |
day at Pittsfield, Mass.

Mr, Brumm, widely known
among State employees, was born
at Tonawanda, New York, in 1890,
and has served with the State De«
partment of Public Works since
1912. In common with many of
his associates in the Department,
he progressed from a humble pos
sition in the organization to the |
rank of District Engineer, a posi«
tion he assumed in 1936.

Lauded by Tallamy

In speaking of the sudden loss,
Public Works Superintendent Tal-
lamy referred to a letter which he
sent to Mr. Brumm only a week
ago on the occasion of the com-
pletion of 40 years of service in
the Department. In his letter Mr,
Tallamy said,

This year marks the 40th Anni«
versary of your first employment
with the Department of Public
Works.

{

son, whetty % their paint- ; ALBANY, Oct. 6 Jesse B.)the State, the hazards, the long} “A span of 40 years is @ con«
fae oo pon BA al Inviked to| OUF Voice felt in our own organi-|ycPariand, president of the Civii| hours of work, the better pay rec-| siderable period in the life of @
attend the preview. A radio broad-| 2*t#0n Service Employees Association, ognition accorded for this work in| man; a period in which you have
cast of the event is being planned. |7 olor CHAPTER has called for an early favorable| other jurisdictions, and the jus-| undoubtedly accumulated many
Of High Calibre bVICE Mize | decision on the appeal for salary] tification for higher allocation} fond memories. For you these
cael CONTRIBUTES ART P' .,}inereases by more than 11,000] within the present State salary|memories must be highly satis« @
Joseph Rothman, chairman of} ALBANY, Oct. 6 — The Civil) state civil service employees in the| structure. factory because through your abil-
the Art Show Committee, in a|Service Department chapter, Civil) attendant groups in State Mental Much Disturbed ity, hard work, study and close {
statement today said, “This year’s) Service Employees Association, | tygiene institutions, Mr. McFarland’s letter: attention to the Department's
art show has been credited by some | was among those chapters which| “yn jetter addressed to J. Earl] “The Association is much dis-|needs and programs you have
who have already seen the selec-| have contributed toward the prizes] xolly director of Classification|turbed by lack of action in this|made substantial progress, r
tions as being of a very high cali-| being awarded in the Second An- | ang Compensation, Mr. McFarland| matter of the appeal of the at-| Mr, Bramm is survived by his
ber. It is one which does great) nual Art Show of the Civil Service | stated that the facts presented at] tendant group of the Mental Hy-|wife and one daughter, Mrs,
credit to the painting béing done! Employees Association. a hearing held in March substan-|giene Department for upward|Louise Zannieri, of Eggerteville,
- tiated the need for the higher) salary allocation, New York, where she resides with
salary allocation requested and| “This appeal was presented to| her husband and two small chile
Al WORLD'S FINEST that the employees affected were| you on March 12, 1952, A most] dren,
vitally interested in an early fa-| excellent and complete presenta-
yorable decision. tion of facts substantiating the
TELEVISION SET The Changes Asked need for the higher salary slloca- Park Rangers
ol ion was made by e employees.
Fn OO ae ioe ange ge| They filed extensive briefs. They| Appeal Pay Case
Superpowered 31 TUBES attendants from grade 2 to @rade) oresented a petition signed by
Lic, “630" Chasis té Grade 6. and supervising. at-|™ny thousands in the,attendant| | ALBANY, Oct. 6 — The Park
ter Connie Concer: tendants from grade 6 to grade 8.) "I. sunications from the em-|jocation’ from grade 8 to grade
12" CONCERT SPEAKER ‘The appeal was based upon many], “Communications from the em- 5 5
aot iptessional and skilled ser-|Ployees indicate a vital interest in| was turned down by the Division
IN BEAUTIFUL HAND-RUBBED vices performed in caring for the] ‘his matter. ae of Classification and Compensa-
CONSOLE CABINET tics T90.000 mentally-ill wards of| _ “Will you please advise the pres-| tion, have decided to appeal their
Price, inclpdes Pederat tax |] over 100, cdi ent statis of this appeal affecting|case to the appeals board, The
TRANS MANHATTAN 86 Mouths we Foy by the Act of | over 11,000 employees? ease has been so forwarded.
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MEN — WOMEN by
to prepare now for U. 8. Civil Service jobs in and around
New York. During the next twelve months there will be over
39,000 appointments to U. S. Government jobs in this area, we
‘These will be jobs paying as high as $316.00 a month
to start. They are better paid than the same kind of jobs
in private industry. They offer far more security than private *
employment. Most of these jobs require little or no experience
or specialized education,
BUT in order to get one of these jobs, you must pass a *
Civil Service test. The competition in these tests is intense. wae
In some cases as few as one out of five applicants pass!
Anything you can do to increase your chances of passing
is well worth your while,
Franklin Institute is a privately-owned firm which helps
thousands pass these tests each year. The Institute fs the
largest and oldest organization of this kind and it is not Mts ;
connected with the Government. Banta Srrscteniek”
To get full information free of charge on these Govern-
ment jobs fill out and mail the coupon at once today. The holders, m
Institute will also show you how you can qualify yourself Conger fori
to pass these tests. Don't delay—act now! mortgages, or other urities are
*Eejlmate based on official U. 8, Government Beuree nde, in. cases ‘
_ Main Office
FRANKLIN INSTITUTE, Dept. R-56 . BT CHAMPERS STRERD
130 W. 42 St., New York 36, N. Y. cg RE ‘Grand Ci tral Office
ed tet Fd avai positions: (2) 5 East 42nd Street |
“Hi $. * Just off Fifth Avenue
for a U. S. Government Jo —_—- |
For period dan, tet be
tee LATEST soa
3 DIVIDEND © _wrenest’ From
before mie thie pay OF_ DEPOSIT
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Gommlgsloner ‘ol Deeds, City et M, ¥,
m York County Chick's, Ne. 0 eases
Gommilasiaa. eopiese May 19, 1004, Member Federal Deposit Insurance

/ Tuesday, October 7, 195%

| Important Information |
it about

SANITATION MAN EXAMINATION

Applications Will Open Nov. 7th
| Results of This Examination Depend Entirely on the PHYSICAL RATINGS.

THE WRITTEN EXAM, I8 ONLY A QUALIFYING
‘TEST, this means that all who pass a comparatively
easy written exam., regardless of whether they get
70% or 100%, will eompete on even terms in the

DIFFICULT PHYSICAL TEST!

FINAL STANDING ON THE LIST WILL
BE ON PHYSICAL RATINGS ALONE!

To stress the importance of starting physical train-
ing early, we offer preparation for written test free.

100% in Physical Test Requires:
© 80 LB. DUMBBELL LIFT

©°70 LB. ABDOMINAL LIFT
© 8 Ft. 2 In. BROAD JUMP

Wednesday, Friday & Saturday Few Men, Regardless of Size Can Attain 90% in
| Convenient Hours — Day and Eve. This Type of Exam. Without Specialist Training!

Train in the Largest and Best Equipped Civil Service Gym in the U. S.

Lecture Classes for Written Test
TUESDAY at 1:15 or 7:30 P.M.

PHYS! CLASSES:

« MEDICAL «

| ee” DELEHANTY INSTITUTE
| ENROLLING 115 EAST 15th ST., N. Y. 3 — Phone GR. 3-6900

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

MORE FOR YOUR MONEY

AT THE FAMOUS

*“'DIME**

Deposits made on or before
OCTOBER 15th
will earn dividends from
OCTOBER Ist

‘The deposits you make after October 15th will earo
dividends

FROM DAY OF DEPOSIT |

GATEST DIVIDEND

Open your “Dime” Savings Account today—in person)
or by mail. Send as little as $5—as much as $10,000)
Use the coupon below, and start getting more for yo:
money today! 7

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DOWNTOWN ,....Pulton Street and DeKalb Ave,
BENSONHUR: 86th Street and 19th Avenue
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CONEY ISLAND .,.Mermaid Ave. and W. 17th Su
Member Federal Deposis Inswrance Corporasion

The Dime Savings Bank of Brooklyn
Fulton Street and DeKalb Avenue, Brooklyn 1, N. ¥, |

‘]
|
| T enclose my first deposie of $.
i

Please open a Savings
mail kit wo che address below.
Name.

© Address 1!
I City, Zone No., State. |

! GENERAL SESSIONS & COUNTY COURTS within New York City
| Residents of N. Y. City and Nassaw and Suffolk Counties eligible

| $2,110 A Year to Start-—Annual Salary Increases

Page Five

OPEN ALL DAY MONDAY, OCT. 13th — COLUMBUS DAY

Modern Methods of Instruction

VISUAL AIDS ARE TO EDUCATION WHAT
TELEVISION IS TO ENTERTAINMENT

Remarkable New VISUAL AIDS Are Now Used

in Presentation of All Delehanty Co:
je method of instruction
the Armed Services
colleges and universities,

you te observe the many outstanding advantages
of this new vivid teaching eld.” a sh

MAN. Open Dec. 4th for

PATROLMAN — n. v. city potice pert.

The written and physical tests
The written

th

outstanding athletic obility.

Our Course Offers Specialized Preparation for
BOTH WRITTEN and PHYSICAL EXAMS.

90% of the present members ef the N. Y. C. Police Dept.

Were Our Students!

Attend Class As Our Guest in Manhattan or J

MANHATTAN: Thurs. at 1:15, 5:30 or 7:30 P.M.

wires for

—JAMAICA: Wed. at 7:30 P. M.
Gym Classes in Manhattan TUES, & THURS. at Convenient Hours

FIREMAN

| Lecture Closes at Convenient Hours Day and Evening In

Manhattan and Jamaica Include Complete Review for Written Test
Physical Classes Daily In Our Manhattan Gym

Transit Patrolman — Correction Officer

PRESENT LIST EXPIRES APRIL 11, 1953
Applications Soon
Lecture and Gym Classes Now Meeting Day and Evening

Applications to Open Soon for

COURT ATTENDANT

SUPREME COURT — Ist, 2nd and 10th Judicial Districts

Entrance Salary up to $4,670 a Year

Opportunity for Promotion to Positions Paying up to $9,000 « Year |

Preparation under supervision of M. J. DELEHANTY, for many
years clerk in the Supreme Court, who has prepared more than

80% of the men appointed in the various courts, \
Attend as Our Guest a Class Session Mon, at 5:45 or 7:45 P.M.

Permanent Positions for Men & Women in N. Y. C, Civil Service
Examination Has Beon Ordered for

CLERKS — crave 2

——

$2,355 AFTER Ist YEAR — $2,600 AFTER 2nd YEAR
PULL CIVIL SERVICE BENEFITS — PROMOTIONAL OPPORTUNITIES
Ages 17 Years & Upward - No Educational, Experience Requirements
‘Our Course of Training res Fully tor Official Examination
Be Our Guest at a Class TUESDAY at 1:15 or 7:30 P.M,

|| SOCIAL INVESTIGATOR —rues. ona thurs. ot 6 pm.
ASST. SUPERVISOR — won. ona rHurs, ot 6 P.M.

Persons who Filed applications for either of these exams,
are invited to attend a class session as our quests.

CLERK — Grade 5

This Promotional Examination Is Expected to Be Held
Shortly After Ist, 1953
}| Closses TUES. at 5:45 and PRI. at 6: P. M. — Complete Review

INSURANCE COURSE for BROKER'S LICENSE

Course Fully Accredited by
N. Y. State Insurance Dept, and Dept. of Education

New Classes in Preparation for

N. Y. CITY LICENSE EXAMS:
MASTER ELECTRICIAN

MON. & WED. at 7:30 P.M.

STATIONARY ENGINEER

TUES. & THURS. at 7:30 P.M.

MASTER PLUMBER

TUES. & THURS. at 7:45 P.M.

VOCATIONAL COURSES
AUTOMOTIVE MECHANICS ‘st. Astomatic

TELEVISION — tn  vaiavision eeniician

PREPARATION ALSO FOR F, C. C. LICENSE EXAMS
DRAFTING acchitecturat & Mechanical-Structural Detoiling

Account as noted () Individual [) Joint ( Trust. Send bank book and free |

The DELEHANTY %nscrewts

“Nearly 40 Years of Service in Advancing the
Careers of More Than 450,000 Students”

Executive Offices:
HI5E. 15 ST.,.N.Y.3
GRamercy 3-6900

Jamaica Divisions

90-14 Sutphin Blvd

JAmaica 6-8200
OFFICER HOURS: Mon. to Fri.t @ am. to 9:30 pm. Sat. to 2 p. m

crvin ERVICE LEADER

__/ Tecaday, October 7 1982

EADER.
America’s Largest Weekly tor Public Husphogecs

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Published every Tuesday by
LEADER ENTERPRISES,
97 Duane Street, New York 7. N. Y.
Jerry Finkelstein, Publisher
Maxwell Lehman, Editor and Co-Publisher
Bernard, Executive Editor Morton Yarmon, General Manager
<= 19 N. H. Mager, Business Manager
10c Per Copy. Subscription Price $3.00 Per Annum,

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1952

3-6016)

The State Employees
Vs. the Salary Lag
ith tactics learned over years of experience, and

‘ V V with a sensitivity to the importance of grass-root
Jocal opinion, State employees are mobilizing their forces
at the local level to help obtain an increase in their
walaries. The program, in which every chapter of the Civil
Bervice Employees Association will join, will have as its
aim the clear presentation of the facts — they’re plain,
simple, understandable facts — of the salary lag which
public employees suffer. The LEADER will, in-succeeding
fasues, present these facts, too, showing how the civil
pervice family is affected. Every employee must consider
himself part of the campaign, do what he can to enlighten
his neighbors and his community. Only in this way will
fhe full impact of public opinion be brought to bear upon
fhe legislature and the administration’s negotiators.

Grievances of State Aides
Quietly Settled Locally

| ALBANY, Oct, 6 — An example
@f the settlement cf employee
ances within the department.

@ recent decision announced by
. Arnold Kilpatrick, director of
ison River State Hospital.

In this instance some 200 em-

es working a day shift com-
ined that their hours of work
sed hardship in traveling to
@nd from work at the institution.
‘These workers had been sched-
to work from 8 am. to 12
. and from 1 to 5 p.m. The
‘vening hour was lunchtime.

‘They complained of difficulty in

nging car pools and of the
sibility of getting a bus into
n.

‘The solution was arrived at by
wing the employees to shorten
ir lunch period to one-half
r and jeave the hospital at

Settlement in Departments
While the State Personnel Re-
ions Board has handled but
ee cases at the top level, it re-
Ports many cases pass through
oni. phase of the machinery es~
ished in accordance with Gov,

Dewey's executive order which set
up the whole procedure.
A Case in Public Works

The “cumbersome” grievance
machinery, as it has been called
by critics, apparently worked in
favor both of the Department of
Public Works and some of its em-
ployees in the only case to be
handled formally as a grievance
in that agency.

A group of employees felt they
were entitled to overtime which
had not been paid. After exhaust-
ing routine administrative avenues
in seeking redress, the group and
the department decided to use the
grievance machinery.

When the matter reached the
appointed employee-employer pan-
el that body became interested and
went out on its own to make a
complete study of the entire situ-
ation.

“So thorough was their report
and set of recommendations,” a
PW spokesman told The LEADER,
“that the employee case was
shown to be correct but also means
of avoiding the abuse in the fu-
ture were established.”

Last Call to

Laborer Jobs
Upstate

Aspirants for laborer jobs in
@reene and Schoharie counties
may apply Wednesday, October 8,
gt Gilbao Road, Prattsville.

Only applicants who live in the
@ounty where the job is located
will be appointed, The employer

il be the City of New York. The

partment of Water Supply, Gas
‘and Electricity has watershed jobs
fm those and other counties,

‘The schedule for other counties:

Thursday, October 9, Dutchess

nty, Department of Water Sup-
Gas and Biectricity Hudson
© Pumping Plant, Chelsea,

Friday, October 10, Putnam
psec Department of Water

Supply, Gas and Electricity office,
Route 6, Belden Road, Carmel.
ppeiio ation hours are 2 to 4

The pay is $1,990 a year,
902 days’ work,

for

Social Worker
Jobs (Open
At $65

Social worker jobs, starting at
$3,411 and reaching $4,212 in five
Years, will be filled by the State
through an exam that opened on
Monday, October 6, The closing
date will be Friday, November 7.
The written test will be held Sat-
urday, December 13,

Vacancies exist in NYC and
elsewhere,

Requirements

The requirements are a bache-
lor's degree or equivalent educa-
tion; in addition, either a year's
experience in paid social work
within the last five years, or, in-
stead of such experience, a year's
graduate study of social work. An
equivalent combination of the ex-
perience and training will be ac-
cepted, The State Civil Service
Commission decides what is accep-
table.

The application fee is
eam is No, 6238,

$3. The

CIVIL SE

The Civil Service Assembly of
fhe U.S. and Canada will hold its
e@nnual international conference
NYC,
Aday, October 20 to 'T ursday,
23. Pre-conference activ-
on Sunday, October 19 will

at the Hotel New Yorker,
u
Oe

VICE ASSEMBLY TO MEET OCT, 20 TO 23

of regional and chapter officers,
On the morning of the 2ist
personnel problem panels will be
conducted, wih discussion of
job classification, pay plans and
fringe benefits, recruitment and
selection, employee training, per

sonnel records, and problems of
Commissioners,

High Post in
Conservation

Goes to Hyde

ALBANY, Oct. 7 — Conservation
Commissioner Perry B. Duryea has

announced the appointment of

Solon J, Hyde, of North Chatham,
to the position of Superintendent.
of the Bureau of Porest Fire Con-

trol. Mr, Hyde takes over the po-
sition left vacant by Kinne em
Williams,

of Lands and Forests,
Many Years of Experience
For 13 years, Mr. Hyde has held
the title of Supervising District

Forest Ranger, with: headquarters
in the Conservation Department's
Albany office. In this capacity, he

has been acting as immediate su-
Pervisor of the Department's For-

est Fire Control forces. A graduate
of the New York State College of
Forestry in 1919, Mr. Hyde was

first employed on the Forestry Staff
of the St. Maurice Paper Com-
pany, Three Rivers, Quebec, and for
five years thereafter was District
Ranger for the Conservation De-
partment, operating out of Mid-

dletown,
‘Ideal Choice’

Commenting on. this appoint-
ment, Commissioner Duryea said:
“This is not merely a routine ap-
pointment, nor a routine promo-
tion, Mr. Hyde's practical experi-
ence in Canada as well as in our
own State makes him an ideal
choice for this important position
—particularly at the present time.
He takes over at a period when
the fire hazard, mainly because of
the 1950 hurricane, is greater than
it has ever been in the history of
our State. But in view of the fact
that for the past year Mr. Hyde
has been in immediate charge of
the development of plans, and of
the training of our Rangers to
deal with major fires, we consider
ourselves very lucky indeed to
have him available for this ap-
Pointment,”

recently appointed as
Assistant Director of the Division

- Sa

CIVIL SERVICE

Ne

THE STATE DEPARTMENT of Mental Hygiene’s special attend
ants’ uniform committee has come up with a proposed new uniform
which will be shown soon to workers. Following visits to institutions
from which complaints regarding the present uniforms had been
received, the three-member special committee met with several clothe
ing manufacturers in an effort to come up with a satisfactory design,
Among the principal complaints listed against the attendant uniform
now in use were the matter of the collar and the shape of the skirt,
As far as the tentative new uniform is concerned, both of these fea

Cecelia Abrahamer, assistant director of nursing, and Daniel Shea,
secretary to the Mental Hygiene Commission, who comprised the
special study committee, have decided upon a detachable collar “of
new, attractive design.”

The proposed new skirt will be gored while the present is straight
cut, It is hoped the gored skirt will remove complaints from others

than-slender females who objected to the fit of the one now used,
As far as cost is concerned — and the attendants buy their own
j uniforms — tht proposed new outfits will be in about the same price
| range as those now used, Mrs, Farrar said. “We are definitely trying
to come up with a new uniform at no increase in price if we can,”
she stated.

Plans now call for two samples of the proposed outfit to be
photographed — one being worn by a slender model and the other
by a heavier mode). Copies of each photograph will then be sent to
the directors of each institution from which complaints were heard,
A final decision won't be reached upon the adopting of a new ate
tendant uniform until employee reaction from all of these institutions
have been received. No change has been proposed in the color of the
uniform — the present deep blue apparently will remain. The m:
terial is to be of hish quality chambray and will have “good launders
ability.”

This latter characteristic, according to the department, is of
extreme importance due to the already heavy burden being carried
by-institution laundry plants,

LOOK FOR the establishment of a Committee on Retirement
Policy for Federal Personnel. Committee will study all retirement sys-
tems in the U. S, service, including the military. It will report (
types and kinds of retirement benefits now being provided; the neces-
sity for special benefit provisions in certain cases; relationship of
the various retirement plans to each other, to old-age and survivors
insurance; and suggest policies to be followed by the Government,
‘The chairman will be appointed by the President. Also serving on the
committee will be the Secretary of Defense, Director of the Budget
Bureau, and other Federal bigwigs.

Big Exams Broaden Effect
Of Veteran Preference

By H. J. BERNA!

WITH THREE of NYC's largest
exams now in under way or about
to open, the rules concerning vet-
eran preference, equally applicable
to all NYC and State tests, be-
come a@ matter of concern to many
thousands of veierans. Some have
long cherished a desire to become
a member of the police force;
others have wanted to be fireman;
still others sanitationmen and try
for promotion to one of the jobs
in which they can ride around in
a chauffeur-driven car,

Under the law as it now stands,
the preference consists of points
added to earned scores, but added
only after the candidate has passed

the exam. In open-competitive
exams — such as those patrolman
(P.D,), firemen (F.D.) and sani-

tationman, class B — disabled ve'
erans get 10 extra points, non-
disabled veterans, 5 points.

Must Be “War” Veteran

Tt is not enough to have served
in the arnted forces of the U.S.
Although the term
erence” is almost invariably used,
what the law provides is that one
must be a war veteran. For pres~
ent practical purposes that would
include service during any part
of World War Il and the Korean
conflict,

Dates become snportant; ‘The
World War TI period is December
7, 1941 to September 2, 1945,
while the Korean conflict, which
for veteran preference purposes is
a “war,” begins June 25, 1950, and
ends whenever the conflict ends,
Service in the armed forces of the
U.S. anywhere, during the Korean
conflict period, constitutes one a
Korean veteran, no matter how
short the duration of that service.
It fs unnecessary to have been in
the combat zone or even to have
left the shores of the U.S.

Residence and Citizenship

The benefit does not apply in
labor class exams, or any other
exams in which percentage scores
do not figure, because premium
points can not be added in the
absence of merit points,

To gain any veteran preference
the applicant must have been a
resident of New York State when
inducted into the armed forces,

Hid miles be 9 bea resident, of te Stare
the list is f established: Also, he

“veteran pref-|

may not claim any point prefer-
ence after the list is established,
and he must have been discharged
before the list is established,

Proof of claims must be pre-
sented. In the case of non-disabled
veterans, the proof is simple, ex-
cept occasionally for officers,
whose records are in Washington.

In all cases one must prove war
service, so in dealing with Civil
Service Commissions, one should
always bring his discharge paper.
The discharge must have been
under circumstances other than
dishonorable,

VA Pension Required

For disability preference the ap-
plicant must also prove that he is
receiving a disability pension from
the Veterans Administration. In
some instances a disabled veteran
is receiving a pension, say, from
the Army, which is not the VA,
and the disability preference bene-
fit under civil service would not
apply; but it is possible to apply
to the VA to take over at least a

qualify the applicant on this score.
The disability must have at least
a@ 10 per cent rating, under any
circumstances, but there would be
no VA pension unless that were so.

There must be some recent
proof of the existence of disability.
In general, under court rulings,
a VA medical examination held
within a year of filing the appli-
cation to take the exam, is re-
quired, unless the veteran has a
permanent, stabilized '-ineurred
disability, For instance, if a can-
didate had lost a leg in the war,
there would be no reason to ex~-
amine him medically to determine
whether the disability still exists.

The number of claims of point
preference which any candidate
may make is unlimited, but the
preference may be used only once,
If the eligible’s name is on other
lists, too, the preference credits
are taken away from him, on
these other lists, but he should
make sure to notify the Commis-
sion if he had used his credit, If he
tries to defraud the Commission,
by remaining silent, and espect-
ally if he attempts to use the
point credit twice, he becomes'sub-
Ject to penalties, including dis-

missal.
Irrevocable Decision:
Any preference ¢ained rider
the previous law (which did not’

part of the pension payments to}

grant any extra points) does not
count against the veterans; he
may use the point credit no mat-
ter how often he may have bene=
fited by the primary advancement
on the list that the old law al~
lowed,

No eligible is compelled to use
his preference points, even though
they've been granted to him, He
may withdraw his preference
claim at any time prior to the
establishment of the list or even
after the list is out, but before he
is appointed or promoted to @
job. By that time he knows
where he stands on the list, and
whether he needs the points to
obtain early appointment. He may
prefer to save the points for a
promotion exam, even though their
value is halved, or for some other
open-competitive test, in which
they are not halved, But once the
eligible notifies the Commission
what his choice is, that decision
becomes irrevocabie,

When Credit Is Used

The credit is used when it re+
sults in an eligibles permanent
appointment or permanent promo=
tion from a list on which his rank
is higher because of the prefer-
ence points. “his is true even
though he could have been ap-
pointed or promoted without the
benefit of the extra points.

For instance, suppose only one
eligible passes the exam and he's
@ disabled veteran, He may be ap-
pointed or promoted, and still re-
tain the right to claim veteran
preference in a promotion exam,
or in some other open-competitive
exam. Or suppose there are five
eligibles on the list, one of them
a disabled veteran who has an
earned score of 90, a non-disabled
veteran with an earned score of
80, and three non-veterans with
scores of 85, The preference
points would give the disabled vet+
eran 100 percent in an open-com-
petitive test, the non-disabled
veteran 85 and the non-veterans
stay at 85, The disabled veteran's
rank on the list has not been in+
creased by his veteran prefers
ence points, since he is first with=
out any help, in the final aver-
age. The non-disabled veteran has
a final average of 85, the same as

the earned score of ‘the non-vete
fefans, ‘so the non-disabled vets
eran's rank is higher than what

(Continued on ‘page 11)
J Tucsitay, Octoker 7, 1952
_

CIVIL SERVICE LCEADER Page Seven

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Pare Fioht CIVIC SERVICE LEADER Tuesday, Tuesday, October 7, 1952 CIVIET SERVICE LEADER Page Nine *

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money sack (UATANCLE oF s TO ORDER § fe fF. elite fas oe | =I
PETTY TATU KAN K RANK ANAT ANANANAI wat S208 HOORAY os Mera ti TOTAL ENCLOSED;
OCT N AY l 1 Add 20% Fed. Ym: a | 1

EMPLOYEES CUT

Address Your Orders to: 280 BROADW At

RATE BUYING PLAN <i.

(NEW YORK 7, NEW YORK

4)

Page Ten

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

.

Tucsday, Octioe 7, 1988

State Offers Library and Court Stenography Jobs

GIST, (Pror..), Division of Labora- (Prom), $3,411 to $4,212. Vacan-

STATE ing, placement or guidance work
including one year in a super-

‘Open-Competitive one 5
inued from 'y capacity; and (3) sither
Monti page 2" (a) one more year of experience
uate course for Nurse Mental Hy-|in the construction, validation

giene Consultants by June 1953
may be substituted for the two

of specialized experience.
Bpen to qualified citizens of the
‘U. &. Fee $4. (Priday, November

and interpretation of aptitude
and/or proficiency tests, or (b)
one more year of experience in
employment recrulting, placement
or guidance work for a govern-

». mental agency or large private

6237, SOCIAL WORKER) concern plus a master's degree in
(YOUTH PAROLE), $3,731 to $4.- mbit) or (c) equivalent com-
632. Pour vacancies: two field) bination of graduate training and

experience. Fee $4.

| estat one each at Albany and
vember 7).

yracuse, and two resident posi-
tions at the State Training School
for Girls at Hudson in the De-
partment of Social Welfare. Re~
quirements: (1) bachelor’s degree
or equivalent education; and (2)
either (a) two years’ training in
& school or social work including
supervised field Work, or (b) two
Years’ experience in social case
work with a public or private
agency including one year with

imary emphasis on casework

tment of individuals, or (c)
equivalent combination of (a) and
(>), Fee $3. (Priday, November

6298. SOCIAL WORKER, §$3,-
411 to $4,212. Vacancies, one in
NYC in the suburban area office
of the Department of Social Wel-
fare. One is anticipated in the af-
ter-care service section of the
Workmen's Compensation Board.
Requirements: (1) bachelor's de-
gree or equivalent education; and
(2) either (a) one year's exper-
fence in social work with an
agency adhering to accepted
standards, or (b) one year of
graduate study in a school of so-
cial work, or (c) equivalent com-
Dination of (a) and (b). Fee $2.
(Friday, November 7).

6904. EMPLOYMENT CONSUL-
TANT (SELECTIVE PLACE-
MENT), $5,638 to $6,762. One va-
tancy in Albany, Division of Bm-
ployment. Requirements: (1) high}
school graduation; (2) five years’
experience in employment  re-
cruiting, placement or guidance
work for a governmental agency
or large private concern, of which
at least three years must have
been in service to the disabled, in-

(Priday, No-

6211, SENIOR LIBRARY 8U-
PERVISOR, $4,964 to $6,088. One
vacancy in the Library Extension
Division, Albany. Requirements:
() State public Mbrarians’ pr
fessional certificate; (2) bache-
lor’s degree plus one year of li-
brary school; and (3) one year of
supervisory or administrative ex-
perience in a public library or in
itbrary extension work plus two
years of general professional li-
brary experience. Pee $4. (Friday,
October 31.)

6210. ASSOCIATE LIBRARY
SUPERVISOR, $6,088 to $7,421.
One vacancy in the Library Ex-
tension Division, Albany. Require~
ments: same as No, 6211 plus one
more year of general experience
and one more year of supervisory
or administrative experience de~
scribed in (3) above. 30 additional
credits in library science may be
substituted for one year of general
professional brary experience.
Fee $5. (Friday, October 31).

6207. COURT STENOGRAPH-
ER, Supreme Court, 3rd Judicial
District, $9,072, The counties in
this district are Albany, Columbia,
Greene, Rensselaer, Schoharie,
Sullivan and Ulster county. One
vacancy in the Supreme Court.
Requirements: either (a) three
years’ experience in general ver-
batim reporting, or (b) two years’
experience as court reporter in
any court in N.Y. State, or (c)
equivalent combination of above
experience, or (d) certificate of
certified shorthand reporter issu-
ed by the Board of Regents of
the University of the State of

re ‘
¢luding counseling, placement and| Ko" pre ce $5: “Friday, Octo-
Job promotion; and (3) either (a)

two more years of the above ex- STATE

petience, or (b) bachelor’s degree Piao

with specialization in psychology,
education, vocational guidance or
rehabilitation, or (c) equivalent
combination of such training and
experience. Fee $4. (Friday, No-
vember 7)

6905. EMPLOYMENT CONSUL-
TANT (TESTING), $5,638 to $
762. One vacancy in Albany, Divi-

5041, ASSOCIATE BACTERI-
OLOGIST (MYCOLOGY), (Prom)
Division of Laboratories and Re-
search, Department of Health,
$6,088 to $7,421 (reissue), One va-
cancy in NYC, Requirements: one
year as senior bacteriologist. Pee
$5. (Priday, October 17).

sion of Employment. Require-| 502. ASSOCIATE BACTERI-
ents: (1) bachelor's degree with| QLOGIST, (Prom), Division of
specialization in psychology, edu-| Laboratories and Research, De-
€ation or vocational guidance; | partment of Health, $6,088 to

$7,421, (reissued). Three vacancies
in Albany, Requirements: one year
as senior bacteriologist, Pee $5.
(Friday, October 17)

5043, SENIOR BACTERIOLO-

Where to Apply for Job:

©. 8.—Second Regional Office, U. 8. Civil Service Commission,
€41 Washington Street. New York 14, N. Y. (Manhattan) Hours 8:30
to 5, Monday through Friday; closed Saturday. Tel. WAtkins 4-1000.
Applications also obtainable at post offices except in the New York
post office -

STATE—Room 2301 at 270 Bxuoadway, New York 7, N. ¥., Tel.
BArciay 71-1616; lobby of State Office Building, and 39 Columbia
Street, Albany N. ¥.; Room 302, State Office Building, Buffalo 4, N. ¥.
Hours 8:30 to 5, excepting Saturdays, 9 to 12. Also, Room 400 at 155
West Main Street, Rochester N. ¥., Thursdays and Fridays, 9 to 5
Same appiies to exams for county jobs.
NYC—NYC Civil Service Commission, 96 Duane Street, New York
4, N.Y. (Manhattan) Opposite Civil Service LEADER office. Hours
9 to 4. excepting Saturday 9 to 12. Tel. COrtlandt 7-8880,

NYC Education (Teaching Jobs Only)—Personnel Director, Boara
of Education, 110 Livingston Street. Brooklyn 2, N. ¥. Hours 9 te
3:30; closed Saturdays Tel. MAin 42800.

N¥C Pravel Directions

Rapid transit lines that may be used, for reaching the U. 8.
State end NYC Civil Service Commisston offices in NYC follow:

State Civil Service Commission. NYC Civii Service Commission—
IND trains 4. C, D AA ot CC to Chambers Street; IRT Lexington

Avenue line to Brooklyn Bridge; BMT Pourth Avenu
Brighton toca! to City Hall, Lnisimillicie li

0. 8. Civil Service Commission
Christopher Street station.

u Data on Applications by Mail

oth the U. S and the State issue application blanks

celve filled-out forms oy mati. In applying dy mail for us fous “Ge
not enclose return postage Uf applying for State jobs, enclose 6-cent
Stamped self-addressed 9” or larger envelope. The State accepts
Postmarks as of the closing date. The U. S does not. out requires
that the mati be in its office by § p.m. of the elosing date. Because
of curtailed collections. N¥C residents shquid actually do their
mailing no ister than 6:30 p.m. to obtain a postmark of that date.

NYC does not issue blanks vy mat! or receive them by maf)

excert for natiunwide tests, and then only when the exam notice
80 states.

(2) two years’ experience in the
construction, validation and inter-
pretation of aptitude and/or pro-
ficiency tests and two years’ ex-
perience in employment recruit-

IRT Seventh Avenue local tc

The 0. S. charges no applica
Civili Service Commissions charge
by-law.

tion fees. ¢ Ath arid) Qbpea
(ges, and’ at the same rate fixed

tories and Research, Department
of Health, $4,064 to $6,088. One va-
cancy in Albany. Requirements:
one year as bacteriologist, Pee $4.’
(Priday, October 17).

5181, TRUCK MILEAGE TAX
EXAMINER, (Prom), Truck Mile~'
age Tax Bureau, Department of
Taxation and Finance, $4,053 to
$4,889. 39 vacancies in NYC, 26 in
Albany, 10 in Utica, 11 in Syracuse, |
9 in Rochester and 14 in Buffalo.
Requirements: three months as
junior tax examiner. Fee $3. (Pri-
day, October 17).

5182. INSTITUTION PATROL-
MAN Prom), Institutions, De-
partment of Mental Hygiene,
$2,451 to $3,251. 15 vacancies in
various State institutions. Require
ments: one year in a competitive
class; State driver's license; physi-'
cal, medical and character require-
ments, Fee $2. (Priday, October
17). .

6183. ECONOMIST, (Prom), De~
partment of Commerce, $4,053 to’
$4,889, Three vacancies in Albany,
Requirements: one year as junior
economist. Fee $3, (Priday, October
17.

5184. AUTOMOTIVE MAINTE-
NANCE INSPECTOR, (Prom), L.
L State Park Commission, Depart-
ment of Conservation, $4,053 to
$4,889. One vacancy at Babylon in
the Bethpage Park Authority. Re-
quiremorits: one year in a position
allocated to G-6 or higher. Fee $3.
(Friday, October 17),

5 ASSOCIATE IN HOME
ECONOMICS EDUCATION,
(Prom), Zducation Department
(exclusive of the schools and the
State University), $6,088 to $7,421.
One vacancy in Albany, Require-
ments: one year as assistant in
home economics education, Fee $5.
(Friday, October 17),

5186. ASSISTANT DIRECTOR
OF HOUSING DEVEL-
OPMENT, (Prom), Division of
Housing, Executive Department,
$8,648 to $10,436, One vacancy. Re-
quirements: one year in an engi-
neering or architectural position
allocated to G-32 or higher, and
State license to practice either pro-
fessional “engineering or profes-
stonal architecture. Fee $5, (Fri-
day, October 17).

5187. ECONOMIST, (Prom), Di-
vision of Housing, Executive De-
partment, $4,053 to $4,889. One
vacancy In NYC. Requirements:
one year as junior economist. Fee
$3, (Friday, October 17).

5188. ASSISTANT AUTOMO-
TIVE MAINTENANCE INSFEC-
TOR, (Prom), Department of
Health (exclusive of the Diviston
of Laboratories and Research and
the Institutions), $3,001 to $3,891,
One vacancy in Albany. Require-
ments: one year in a position allo~
cated to G-2 or higher and State
driver's license, Fee $2. (Friday,
October 17),

5189. ECONOMIST, (Prom), New
York Office, Department of Labor
(exclusive of the DPUI, State In-
surance Fund, Board of Labor Re-
lations and Workmen's Compen-
sation Board), $4,053. to $4,889.
One vacancy. Requirements: one
year as junior economist, junior
statistician or junior graphic sta-
tisticlan, Pee $3. (Priday, October
17).

5190, SENIOR RESEARCH AN-
ALYST (PUBLIC SERVICE),
(Prom), Department of Public
Service, $6,088 to $7,421, One va~
eancy in Albany, Requirements:
either (a) one year in position al~
jocated to G-20 or higher or (b)
two years in a position allocated to
G-14 or higher, Fee $5, (Friday,
October 17),

5191, SENIOR GENERAL OF-
FICE ENGINEER, (Prom), De-
partment of Public Works, $6,088
to $7,421, One vacancy in Albany,
Requirements: two years in an en-
gineering ttle allocated to G-20
or higher and State license to pi

5193, CIVIL SER bis-
TRICT REPRESENTATIVE,
(Prom), Buffalo Office, Depart-
ment of Civil Service, $4,053 to
$4,889. One vacancy, Require-

ments: one year in a position al-
located to G-9 or higher, Fee $3.
(Priday, October 17)

MM. SENIOR CLERK (PER-
SONNEL) (Interdepartmental),
(Prom), $2,771 to $3,571, Vacan-
cies: Commerce, Albany, 1; State
University-Medioal Center, NYC,
1; State Insurance Fund, Albany,
1, NYC, 1, Requirements: perma-
nently employed in clerical posi-
tions allocated to G-2 or high
appointed before August 22,
Pop $9. /Briiay, Qctpbox 47),

195) PRINCIPAL CLERK» (PER-
ONNEL) (Interdepartmentab -

Department, ot Lancaster,

cles: Audit and Control, Albany,|/ Erie County, $2,800, One vacancy,
Commerce, * State @riday, October 17).

, 1; Taxation) 549. Vilews

and Pinance, Albany, 1; also in| pete emer ‘Ona

Albany offices of Agriculture and] vq Cgc

Markets, Health, and Social Wel-| 17

. Requirements: clerical post~

tion allocated to G-6 or higher. Fee
$2. (Friday, October 17). |

COUNTY AND VILLAGE
‘Open-Competitive

6543. HELPER, Vi-
lage of Mayville, Chautauqua
County, $1.25 to $1.60 an hour. One
a Fee $2. (Friday, October

6544, REGISTERED PROFES-
SIONAL NURSE, Chautauqua)
County, $2,695 to $3,245 without

6553. INTERMEDIATE STATIS«
TICAL CLERK, Westchester Coun<

maintenance; $2,365 to $2,915 with 6552. SUPERVI:
maintenance. Two vacancies. Fee
$2. Friday, October 17). Tompkins County Memorial Hos~

pital, Tompkins County. $1.82 an
hour. One vacancy. Fee $3. (Fri«
day, October 17).

COUNTY AND VILLAGE
Promotion

HEALTH NURS-
ING, Edward J. Meyer Memorial
Hospital, Erie County, $3,950. One
a Fee $3. (Friday, October
6546. CLERK-TYPIST, Town of
36. Two bel Fee re : oriiday,
I. vacant a
October 17).
6547. KEY PU‘ICH OPERATOR,
Erie County, $2,750 to $8,050. One
vacancy in the Department of
Health. Pee $2. (Friday, October

6548. POLICE CLERK, Police

12
5442, SUPERVISING NURSK,
(Prom), Tompkins Cotlnty Me=
morial Hospital, Tompkins County,
| $1.82 an hour, One vacancy.
$3, (Friday, October 17).
OF NURS«
Al THEORY,
Department of Publie
Welfare, Westchester County,
$4,030 to $4,990. One vacancy,
Fee $3. (Friday, October 17),

SANITATION-MAN — N. Y. C.

Only those who pass the written test may take the
Our course prepares you to 3 the written test,
expected to be held in near ire.

CLASS MEETS ON WEDNESDAY AT 6:00 P.M.

CLERK PROMOTION — GRADE 5
Monday or Thursday class at 6:00 P. M.

CLERK - GRADE 2 — (N. Y. C. Agencies)
Thursday class at 6:15 P. M.

COURT ATTENDANT — (State & County)
Friday class at 6:15 P.M.
THE SCHOOL WITH
An outstanding experienced Civil Service Teaching Stat
HUGH E. O'NEILL EUGENE B, SCHWARTZ
WARD J. MANNING
Aftend one of or class sessions os our 2 nw a

SCHWARTZ SCHOOL

889 BROADWAY (at 19th St.) Algonquin 4-1236

—

SCHOOL DIRECTORY

Academie and Comimerctai—Cotiegs Preparatory

GOR) HALL ACADEM\—Finibusb Ext Cor Pulvoo &. Ol
OK for Gi's. MA 28-2447 oe, iktyn Regente approved,

Written tert

Building & Piast Macagement Stationary & Custodian Engineers License Preparations,

Business Senoote

LAMB'S BUSINESS TRAINING SCHOOL—Greme Pitorno Typing,
ct Das-kve lndividua) watruction 870 Ob

Bookkeeping, Comp:
tometry, xe
Gaiyo iB South #4290 a ee

MONKOR SCTIOOL OF BUSI’ Bhort Courses, Switchboard, Typewritite, Com
Nometry Day end evening. Bulletin, & West 177th Wend Bootsn Mees (hue
Chester Theatre Bidg.) Broux KI %-6600

ELECTROL Y6ts

KREE (NSTITUTE OF ELECTROLYSIS — Profitable full oF part-time
Pree Book

 tiair removal for aime and women o,
|. . O. MU 38-4498,

ik ae

Lo Mt Mechions

FOR (BM TAR. Sorting, Wiring. Key Punching, Veritying,
tion Business Selool, 189 W. 146th St ON £5170.

LANGUAGE SCHOOLS

CURETOPHR SCHOOL OF LANGUSORS. (Optwe eb
Yorvational Wrench. Spaaieh, German,

Bie. Go to the Combing

Motion Picture Operating
SKOOKLYN YMCA TRADE SCHOOL —1119 Bedford Ave (Gates) Bhtya MA #1208
o-

Miwale
NEW YORK COLMMOR OF MORO (Chartered L876) af branches Private or clams
tnewructions, Lid Bast 86th Sivees Kiwent 7-676). H. ¥. 28, NH. ¥. Ostalcgua,
Refrigeration — Oi Burner
we Hire do eget a aamartat oakley eee Sa cea Ra
Request catstogue L. OHelses 6330

Kadio — Television

KADIOTELEVISION UNSTITUTE €80 Lex rr
‘rening Sma weekly payment Foldee 90. FL seen

seeretartas
—
NE et CA aRAL, CTMEMT. BNO Secretarial Accounting, Drafting, Joureniiam,

Tad oe ne ed eee adda

WASHINGTON BUSINESS iNBT, .
Se Re ee el

Tuesday, October 7, 1952

jingle New
Subscription
Brings You
A Fine Gift

Pa you taken advantage of
The LEADER’s great new free
gift plan? The LEADER is able
to offer a variety of quality items

to all its readers who will bring|s

in at least one new subscription.
‘You'll find all the details on page

7

A single $3 subscription can
bring you, for example, a three-
piece seamless pocket-wallet set,
&@ magnetic can opener guaranteed
for five years, a quality quilted
chrome-finished automatic pencil
with a novel inset for a photo, a
three-piece lifetime carving set,
or a six piece colored refrigerator
gar set with crystal covers. These
are typical — they are yours free
for only a single new subscription
to The LEADER.

There are similar plans, with
superior free gifts, for three sub-
scriptions, five subse... ‘ons, and
— for the person enterprising
enough to gather 50 subscriptions,
an exceptional man’s or woman's
Bulova watch whose retail price
is $125,

‘Are You Working On It?

We would like to know if you
&re working on the subscriptions.
‘We would therefore appreciate a
letter or postcard from every per-
son who is working for three or
more subs, telling us which gift
you want, and we'll reserve it for
you until you gather your quota
of subs. If you have any sugges-
tions for helping to build the
LEADER’s subscriptions through |»
this plan, please Jet us know, and
thanks,

This is a fine way to solve your
Christmas gift problem. The
LEADER makes an excellent gift
for the person interested in a civil
service job; and the premiums
which you get free will help take
care of the rest of your Yule gift
Problems,

Preference
To Veterans
Explained

(Continued from page 6)
it would be without the points.
And if five appointments are made,
the non-disabled veteran has used
his preference credit, even though
he could have been appointed
without such benefit, because the
extra points put him higher on
the list. That's why, when a list
comes out, and prior to appoint-
ment, a veteran should decide
whether or not to withdraw his
preference claim,

What Is Permanent Appointment

Appointments are made on a
Probationary basis, At the end of
the probationary period an ap-
Pointee may be dropped, because
services have not proved satisfac-
tory. He therefore did not receive
an appointment that turned out
to be permanent. He may still
claim veteran preference in an-
other exam.

When to Use the Points
question of whether or not
to e preference credit need not
be decided solely on the basis of
whether it is needed to receive
appointment within a reasonable
time. y be needed to obtain
when one is out of
vk, or by one who wants to get
Appointed as soon as possible for
job secyrity reasons, Even by get-
ting appointed no sooner, a vet-
eran gets appointed from a posi-
tion higher on the list, and thus
gains seniority for layofl purposes
over those lower on the list ap-
Pointed on the same day.

Retroactive Seniority
Retention is one of the military
benefits additional to point pref-
erence, Layoffs are made in the
inverse order of seniority, with dis-
abled veterans being the last to
g0, non-disabled veterans second
from last, and non-veterans first,
on the basis of seniority as it ex-
ists in each separate group. This
provision of the law was not
changed when the point system of

veteran preference superseded the
primary benefit sfstem.

DAY'S PAY ISN'T FORFEIT
FOR VOTING DELAY

ALBANY, Oct, 6 — Any em-
ployee who takes more than two
hours to vote on election day

doesn’t necessarily forfejt all pay
for that day, according to a ruling

“Sivan SERVICE LEADER

* REAL ESTATE ¢

HOUSES — HOMES — PROPERTIES

No Mortgage — Vacant

Semily, 28 vacant, needa repeire.
Dlocks sissies Sissi pattie’ pa
Call owner PL 17-6085

LIQUIDATION SACRIFICE
No Mortgage—2 Vacant Apts.
FINDLAY AVE.
West Bronx — 170th Ss.

2 family brick. fully

detached.
darner, new brass plumbing, sunken “t ‘abe
exire ‘stall. showers. f-car

large Foams, expansion sitie, Batre. large
living room and bedroome. Aluminum
poreete ‘With onirus, Price $18,000. Cash

large 4 family, 17 roome.
000.

Lovely % family
on, al improve:
ments, Only $12,000, Terms,
LEXINGTON AVE. — 6 family, 6 room
apts, 2 stores, mi

and terme.

3, fammy house with Hollywood xe patna,
oll. Youngviown kitchens, venetian blinds,

LY ie] Broside, modern, nr, ‘transportation $9,500,
Seat MOGs mem arieidaire, combination | family, lovely buy. newly decorated.
Blok ere ne ‘ver LEWIS & CARROLL
20%. ‘Reasonable cach. hen Phan th greeny
"OAL: OWNER PL 7-6086 ‘ST. 06-0553

LIQUIDATION SACRIFICE
No Mortgage — Vacancy
WILLIAMSBRIDGE-
NEEDHAM AVE.
FISH AVE. - FENTON AVE.

Comer brick 12 rooms, % bathrooms, 3
car garage, sunken tubs, bardwood floors,
Dew comb. sinks, big backyard, new brass
plumbing, price reduced 26%, reason

able cash.
CALL OWNER PL. 7-60

LIQUIDATION SACRIFICE
FULL PRICE ONLY $8,750
West Bronx — East 206th St.
Near Grand Concourse,
Mosholu Parkway

VACANT APT.
$ Sumnliy, 16 rooms, oll heat, beet salghber
1 biock subway, reasonable cash.

Call Owner PL 7.0085

LIQUIDATION SACRIFICE
HANDYMAN SPECIAL

WILLIAMSBRIDGE

$975 CASH

2 _temity caw comb, cinke,  fiieldelren
tile, kitchen, | countrtfied, opp.
Saichineon ‘River Puway. Act

CALL OWNER PL 7-0085
LIQUIDATION SACRIFICE
WEST BRONX
ONLY $1975 DOWN.
West 181st St., University Ave,

‘kyard.
Call Owner PL 7-6985

LIQUIDATION SACRIFICE
No Mortgage—All Vacant
WEST BRONX
2 Blocks Grand Concourse

Brick 16 roome, 8 bathrooms, big back
yard, brase plumbing, parquet floors,
comb. sinks, no rent control. all rooms
privale, treelined block. exclusive melgh-
borhood Price reduced 25%. Heasonable

CALL OWNER PL. 7.6085

MANHATTAN

APARTMENTS
2, 22, 3, 3¥2 Rooms
NOW RENTING

Everything modern completdy done
ever. Keasonable rents, steam. mr. ans

portation,
Rentin
or, 9-05

Corrolls’ Service

LIQUIDATION SACRIFICE
All Vacant — No M jag
CONVENT AVE., 148 St,

. oll, brass plumbing,
parquet fankes tube big | beck
yard. Price teduced %5%  Reasonal

CALL OWNER FL. 71-6080

HANDYMAN SPECIAL

ONLY $975 CASH

10 Apie., 2 stores, one apartment, brick
house, business location opposite new
housing project. sleam heat, coud invent.
ment, income $360 & month, expenses

$200.
OWNER PL 7.0085

“MT. VERNON ©
Liquidation Sacrifice

NO MORTGAGE
VACANT APARTMENT

3 lowe countriefied, brase plumbing, 9 car

back yard, new comb, sin
fully “detached, lawn,
25% —"Keasonable cash,

GALL OWNER PL. 17-6985
ao
Have you been reading the
LEADER’s interesting new column,
Civil Service Newsletter? Y¥.
find it on page 6 Make it MU!

ok Attorney. General Nathanieb
Goldstein:

reading every week.

REAL GOOD BUYS
LAFAYETTE AVE,
ARLINGTON PLAC
LEFFERTS PLACE
PARK PLACE—3
Poaseasion. i
arranged. Other For!
BUY YOUR HOME LIKE PAYING RENT

&U
RUFUS MURRAY

improved property.

1981 Pull MA, &2762
rh ee
Your family deserves the bert.
WE WAVE IT.

INVESTIGATE THE FOLLOWING
CROWN HGTS—Lineoln Place, 11 room!
2 family, new oil burner, parquet, good

buy.
ALBANY AVE., wr. Park Place, 2 story
‘and basement, 9 rooma, 2 baibe, 2 kit-

cheas, steam hent, cash $2,000.
BAINBRIDGE ST—Xr. Hophinn, 12 rooms,
Paruet, mew oil wnit: Must be seen.

CUMMINS

19 MacDougal St. (Cor. Raiph @ Fulton)
PR 4-0857

$1,500 CASH DOWN

LAFAYETTE AVE., nr, Nostrand Ave, 3

family, 11 large, private rooms, modern
kitchens and baths, oi! beat, very clean,
Call owner

NE 8-3952

PARK K PLACE

2 mory and basement. Every possible im-

clase condition, new oil
burner, all brass plumbing, & Foome of
furnitire, 6 refrigerators, ‘sprinkler srs,
tem. Could be used as bome and earn
Profitable income. Price and terms, CALL

HERBERT MARTIN
B74 Clason Ave. — ST 9-7183
Day or Nixht, @4 Hr. Serview

DELICATESSEN
fa good condition, with  relrirerath a,
completely stocked. Will teach buyer the
(rade. 2 rooms in tear and basement,
First clase investment. $6.00.
Miss CARKOLE
p-0053

LUNCHEONETTE

HERE 18 A GOOD BUY
Everything modern on ® bury up-to-date
corner im excellent condition and tally
stocked for reasonalte cash. Ferme ean
be arranged. A real money-maker

BIGGEST SACRIFICE
NO MORTGAGE
$3950—ALL CASH

Bree and clear, 4 family, @ kitchens off
burner, must be sold at ance.
CALL OWNER. FL. 7.6085

WANTED

Real Estate Salesman
AOTIVE, Interracial, real estate office has
ing for young man or
rk. Excellent opportunity
for the rieht person.
CHARLES H. VAUGHAN

189 Howard Ave., Wkirn 33—GM 2.7610

$1,000 DOWN

BERGEN ST, 11 roony

baths, steam heat, very Oe
All Vacant

Owner Must Sacrifice

NE 8-3952

=

kitchens, 2

A LOVELY HOME

‘This houre m:

t be ween, call and make
t.

nice neighborheod, 8

— Many other good ’ buys,

. ROSE & WA EN

Houses Wanted

Wo have buyeré wailing for nomes and
imvestment provertice in ali orcs, List
your property with us for a quick sale.

LEWIS & CARROLL

GATES AVE.
ST. 80669

ry | Small farm. 9000

BRONX BROOKLYN LONG ISLAND
HANDYMAN SPECIAL | HOMES — Houses
FULL PRICE ONLY $4,750 | sumnrsmman sectio€. tums, 6

fs the home you hove been woiting tee, Overtooking Lene Istond

the beoutitt Model 8 Clayton Home at 99th Street

Easy to reoch, only 25 minutes from Times Square *
ode} home, Modern throughout. The Model

ond 2

— on terms.

SPRINGFIELD GARDENS

Here ie the home you've been asking
of O% roome,

and then so
terms arranged — seo this first
Legal 9 family in perfect condition, mewty

decorated, Al condition. detaened with
garage, must be seen. Price $14,000.
% family, everything modern, decorated

= house

00,
10% room.
40100

throughout by interior decor:
of beauty and charm. Price %
VALLEY STREAM, 2 fami
2 story in excellent
modern throughout with oil. Thiw property
will certainly help the buyer to pay for
ited. Only $14,000 — with cash and

terms.
JAMAICA

TAYE IN STYLE AND cOMPORT
» large, roomy O%
Sccapletely otechal’ win every
improvement and convenience, eles
oil burner, garage, nr, transports
solid home with many extras at
Cash and term

fn perfect many,
‘extras, Can be all yours for $14,000 with
easy down payment. Built to last,

LEWIS & CARROLL

450 GATES AVE.
ST. 09-0563

TONG ISLAND SPECIAL

ADDISLEIGH PARK

LIQUIDATION SACRIFICE
ST. ALBANS
No Mortgage—All Vacont
176 St., Linden Bivd

Comer, 9 rooms, 2 oaths, 2-car garage,
parquet floors, cew washing machine,
ew Frigidaires, bres  gtumbing.

acaped, AAA-1 comlition. Price

land.
joced

en. Re
CAL

WHITESTONE
18th Ave. & 147th. St.
Bernlee Ranch Home

EGBERT OF WHITESTONE
FL. 3-7707

“LIQUIDATION SACRIFICE.

MAPLE AVE. FLUSHE

Cash stirs RAD 975—All Vacant

ST. ALBANS
i St. Albans le the place to
We have some real buss, 6 laree roome,
‘oof, fully detached. and. Iand
soaped. “This house in|
tion and on large plot 74
throughout with parauet &

KH REAL GOOD BUY
IN QUBENS

EARLE © D. MURRAY

251

HOLTSVILLE, L. |.

square
beautiful country estate, a
surroundings, High Healihy

ade trees, good soll.
tricity. near lake. food swimming and
fishing, n9 buildings Full price $360.00
$20.00 dollars
Strom, Phone %

NYACK VICINITY
Quick sale
8

LOOK HERE

FOR BUYS

SY

COUNTRY LIVING —
in the
CITY

BAISLEY PARK
60x100 PLOT

1 FAMILY $9,200
on 8000 ec. ft. ple
2 ecunummioal hentia
schools and shape

Por consfart, Par better living
Low Carrying Charge
BUNGALOW TYPE
What About This

DOWN PAYMENT

Only
For G. I.

On Our Exclusive

Lay-Away Plan

WALTER
ASSOCIATES, INC.
AX. 7-7900

open EVERY day
_ including Sat, and § Su

_ ST. ALBANS _

ched, 6% room, @
Hohe até bath, steam
one short »

Peleoanlgr
Other Good
Hollis, ©

STOP! se “ST

own your OWN HOME

: 2 THR
‘SO. OZONE PARK

$52 Month Carcies. na

Live

FULL PRI ce $8, 800
Low down p

Ss. GLAZER
toma Mie
SACRIFICE BARGAIN

LIQUIDATION SACRIFICE
No Mortgage — Reduced 25%
JAMAICA

2 bathrooma,

We ANE IA IOS

1 family, 8 rooms,
new oil burner, new
ing, garage. y

Frigidaire,

, 750.
CALL OWNER PL, 17-6985

eS ALBAN'S — $10,990 _
r nice. saighive ood,

CALL JA 6-0250

The Goodwill Realty Co,
we. RICH

Le Broke ")

New York. tive:

. sine

115-43 Sutphin Bt a

Ja
ST. ALBANS
Two far ‘ whe
Ritehoo amd
Vavatery wt
lovely is ableiag’ 356.000:
borhood. CAL

Page Twelve

CIVID SERVICE LEADER

»Shoro Given Farewell Fete

By Health Dept. Workers mae

ALBANY, Oct. 6—The Shaker
Ridge Country Club was the scene
‘on September 30 of a farewell re~
ception and dinner for Clifford C,
Shoro, retiring Director, Office of
Business Administration, State
Health Department.

Highlights of the affair included
greetings and the presentation of
a Health Department gift to Mr,
Shoro by Dr. Herman E. Hilleboe,
Commissioner, and the presenta-
tion of a Civil Service Employees
Association tribute by Jesse B.
McParland, CSEA president. Other
entertainment included a play in
five scenes titled “A Streetcar
Named Retire,” written and di-
rected by Dr. Arthur Bushel, of the
Dental Bureau, and Daniel Klepak,
Office of Business Administration.
‘The cast of well-chosen thespians
included Irving Goldberg, Sylves-
ter Bower, Mr. Klepak, Paul Rob-
Inson, Robert Winchester, Virginia
Clark, Mr. Bushel, Robert French
and Eugene Cahi

The following committees,
headed by the general chairmen,
Dr. William A, Brumfield, Junior
Assistant Commissioner, and Mar-
fon L. Henry, Assistant Director of
the Office of Business Administra~
tion, included: Entertainment, Dr.

* Arthur Bushel and Daniel Klepak;
finance, George Fisher; General
Arrangements, William Byron,
Madge Davis, Daniel Kiepak,
Katherine Tierney and David Za-
ron; Musical Program, Beatrice
Hetrick, Robert Winchester, Mil-
dred = Winters; Transportation,
Richard Bolton, Louis Generous,
Regina Warhurst; publicity, Clif-
ford M. Hodge, Roy L. Cramer;
Programs, @ary Carlson, Charles
Parny, Regina Hickey, Betty Slick;
Reservations, Madge Davis and
Katherine Tierney; Pavors, Frank
Crist and Viola Notz.

Hosts and Hostesses at the re-

Truly Yours
BEST HAT

FALL & WINTER STYLES
1952-53
Question: Why are your prices
lower?

Answer: We manufacture ALL
own hats,

MEN—
WHY PAY MORE?

Qur BANKERS Fine Fur Felt
HATS Ae All HANDMADE

Water Blocked—Richly Lined

onc 34s

One
Price
Including HOMBURGS
RAIN HATS Weatherized $1.40
“Special Attraction”

See Our Wool Felts at Dy Aa

Compare with $2.50 grades

139 Messau Ste peonas.)

NEW YORK CITY

All Subways — Get Om at City Hall
Mention The LEADER

ception were: Carl Berger, Peter
C. Bruso, John P. Coffey, Edward
J, Coyne, Thomas J, Malone,
Harold E, McKenney, Jr., Benj
min Schwartzer, Ralph Winton,
Doris E, Benway, Katherine H.
Campion, Jean _Cherniak, Char-
lotte Clapper, F. Virginia Clark,
Sally Degnan, Helen McGraw and
Mary Scholan,

SIGNAL CORPS GROUP
ENROLLS IN HIP :

LONG MILITARY LEAVES

There are still some employees
on military leave from their New
York State or NYC jobs who were
inducted into military service
early in World War I.

ALBANY, Oct. 6—The weather-

man was kind to the staff at Asso-
ciation headquarters for their
annual clambake held on Tues-
day, September 23rd, at Thacher
Park. The optimistic employees
and their guests left Albany in
what appeared to be an all-day
drizzle, but arrived at the park
with bright sunlight flooding the
entire area,
‘There were many stars in the
softball game played. Faustine
Spencer and June Henry showed
unusual skill as pitchers, but were
replaced by Larry Hollister and
Hank Galpin when their pitching
arms gave out, Bill McDonough
and Phil Kerker caught several
flies in the outfield, but nursed
lame muscles for the next two
days. “Dutch” er and
“Beaver” Fisher succeeded
keeping first and second bases
clear most of the time, although
Rugby rules were somewhat in
evidence.

Hollister Prepared Bake
Larry Hollister did a fine job in
preparing the bake, despite the
leaky steamer, and the fresh air of
the Helderbergs made everyone do
justice to the delicious meal. Later
in the evening, singing was en-

WERBEL AIDS STUDENTS
Bernard G. Werbel, former co-
ordinator of the insurance course
at Hofstra College, invites former
students to eall on him for any
study assistance needed. He is at
his office, 107 William Street, NYC,
from 11 to 11:30 AM. He will
conduct an educational forum at
6:45 P.M. on October 23 at Cen-
tral Commercial High School, 214
East 42d Street, and invites all
interested persons to attend,

POLICEWOMAN LIST
ISSUED LAST WEEK

The NYC Civil Service Com-
mission established last Saturday
the eligible list for police-
woman (P.D.), consisting of 144
names, The Police Department will
immediately request permission of
the Budget Director to fill the 23
vacancies.

———

LeOAx NOTICE

Ais Special Term, Part II, of the Clty
Court of the City of New York, held in
and for the County of New York, at the
caurthouse thereof located at 63 Cham-
of Manhattan, City
20tn day of Sep-

HON. VINCENT A. LUPIANO,

ber, 1
Prosent
Justice.
the Matter of the Applleation of
A.

name of EMIL A. U. ABBUL im place and
stead of hie present name, and the Court,
boing satisfied thereby that the averments
contained in the sald petition are true,
and that there i¢ no objection
to the change of name proposed: and
that petitioner was born on September 3,
1920, im the county of Washingtom,
Townshiy of Canton, State of Peunal-
vania,
NOW. ea motion of IRVING 8. COt-
iQ. alterney for petitioner, it is
. that EMIL A. URBANIK
bo, and he la hereby authorized to assume
the naine of EMIL A. U. ABBUL and no

VETERANS

KOREAN-VETS
NON-VETS

Without A Penny Down
3 Years To Pay
No Red Tape
We Deliver immed to You
"52's, or Any Late Model Car
‘As low as $25 Mo.
WE MEAN FRI
Remember: We +3 not on

AUT
Se sbroriyuvorn ves

ARGO MOTORS

3510 Webster Ave., Bx.
OL 4-7200

mo on ond utter the Sed day of
1952, upon complying with
and it ie

the, provisions ot this onder;

had eatored within ten, days from the date
horeof im the office of the Clerk of this
Court; that within ten daye from the
entry hereeof, a copy ef thie Order be
published once in the Civil Service
& newspaper published in the City and
County of New York; and that within
ty days afior the making of this Onder,
root of wich publication be filed im the
Mee of the Clerk of thie Court; and it is
further

ORDERED, that a copy of thie Order
be served upon the Local Draft Hoard
Group 165, located at Weet Maiden
Washington, Pennaywania, within twenty

daye aftr the entry horein of this Order,
and that proof of such serviews be tiled
Within on dave afier mich service; and

KDERED, that upon compliance with
onier and after the Sint day of
ber, IAS, the Petitioner may ase
the name of EMIL A, U, ABBUL and
olker mame

RNTER,
VINCENT A) LUPIANO.
400

joyed around the fire, with Jesse | bearing

Association Staff Has
Its Clambake, Too!

McParland, CSEA president, huf-
fing and puffing on the harmonita.

good time was had by all.

‘Those who attended were: Joe
and Annette Lochner and chil-
dren, Jesse B. McFarland, Bill
McDonough, Henry Galpin, Larry
and Annabelle Hollister, Philip
Kerker, Pat and Mary DeMurio,
Harry Fox, Roy Fisher, Jake Har-
ris, and Dorothy Sheehy, Char-
lotte ©, Barbara Foster,
Jessie Napierski, Helen Garrah,
Henrietta Karnik, Jean O'Hagan,
Paustine Spencer, June Henry,
Paula Grogan, and Dorothy Mac-
Tavish.

LEGAL NOTICI

HEYLAMD, IDA. — CrTaTt 4
1963. — The Peeple of the State of New
‘York, By the Grace ef od Pree and Inde
sentcot. Te EMMA HAYNES alse known
Emma Haines, JACOB HENN, and all
Sther heireabiaw. next of Kin and die
Sroutens of Ide Heviand ff wag, there &
Places of

end greeting:
‘Whoreas, Lalu Gnitke, who resides at
77% Springfield Avenue, Irvine Kew

Jersey, hae lately applied to the
of New

both real property, duly

proved as the last will and testament of
Yaa" Beyland, who was at the
time of ber death a resident of 322 Cen

tall Park Weet, the County of New ¥:
Therefore, you and each of yeu are cited
to show cause before the Surrogate’s Court
of our County of New York, at the Hall
it Records in the County of New York.

o
on the 24th day of October, ene thousand
ine hundred and fifty: at half-past
in o'clock im the forenoen of 1 4
why the said will and testament should
not be admitied te probate as a will of
real and personal propert

Ta tewtimony whereof, we bi

the seal ef the Surrogi
af the said County of Now ‘Yors

cous 12th day of Sep:
tember in the year of eur Lerd
one theusand nine hundred and

Lifty.two.
PHILIP A. DONAHUE,
Clerk of the Surrogate's

ours,

NEW YORK SUPREME COURT: COUNTY
Plaintift,

O¥ BRONX, JOHN PRITZK:

Bork Re’ DEAD. THEIR RESPECTIV

WIDOWS, HUSBANDS,  DEVISEE
HEIRS AT LAW. NEXT OF KIN, DiIs-
TRIBUTES, EXECUTORS, ADMINIS.
TRATORS, GRANTEES AND LEGAL
REPRESENTATIVES, AND GHNERALLY
ALL PERSONS CLAIMING ANY INTER.
est IN THR

IN THR
IN THE COMPLAINT BY OR THROUGH
SAID HENRY  PEICHTEG
SADIE
THEIR,

INTEREST, ALL
ARB UNKNOWN Te
ethers, Defendants. Plaintiff resides in
Brenx County. Trial desired in Bronx
County.

‘TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFEND-
ANTS: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMM@NED
to answer the complaint im this action, and
te serve & copy of your answer,

if the

complaint ie not served with this sum-
mona, (@ serve a notice ef appearance. om

the plaintift's attorney within twenty (20)
days after the service of this summons,
exclusive of the day of service. In case of

Dated: August Sth, 1962.
GEORGE KITTNER,
Attorney for Plaintiff, OMice & P. 0. Ad-
Som, 23 West Sind Street, Borough of
Manhatian, City of New York.
TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS
IN THIS ACTION:
‘The foregoing summons te served upow

the Supreme Court iat te State of Bow
York, dated 195% and fled

wits’ Ga valiel compiles tm tee oles
of the Clerk of the County of Bronx om
Reoteinber 10, 1068 ot the

day of February,
1040. Said Transfer of Tax Liens were
fold on June 24, 1941 bearing lnterest at

ad subsequent terete.
New York, Mew York, September

a
Dated

19, A000.
GRORGR KITTNER,

Attorucy for Plaintitt,

It was unanimously agreed that a|@

‘Tax | Be match your jackets,
Exemon 9 illoriae “hWearinay don a
Broadway. #.

NYC Em Employee Pension Question Answered

ARE members of the NYC Re-

paid pension re
system before aur es LW. | mains intact. 61, -
;| Answer. — this was form- ample, @ $1,000 loan ad Fe

erly required, but the Inw has
been changed so that members

ee ee wR 9 see 9 ae @ coe a a
When Seconds Conut — Put Your Confidence In

RIVERSIDE PRIVATE
AMBULANCE SERVICE

OXYGEN 24.HR. SUPPLIES
EQUIPMENT SERVICE _Rental & Sales
Reasonable Rates fal —_ —

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ee eee eee

6 VIL SERVICE EMPLOYEES
BUY GLASSES AT
JOHN SCHEIDIG & CO., Inc.

Opticians Since 1866

BECAUSE: (1) YOU ENJOY ALL THE BENEFITS OF CLINICS
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(@) EYM EXAMINATIONS ANDY DELIVERY OF
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PHONE: ie] P|
sMoNR 60 NASSAU ST. Si nin

=| + Mail Order Shopping Guide

These mail order advertisers offer you a simple and q a
method of pps ov bong your shopping f
hard to get equipment. When you place your order be pon
to siping your ur full name and —

PURNITURE FOR SALE

CIVIL SERVICE
EMPLOYEES!

Special Discount at
STEIN'S — URSTEIN'S

SEEING! — Bi
CLEARANCE
OF FLOOR SAMPLES!

B CHAIRS

Lu!
LOUNGE CHAIRs
BASY CHATRS

vA i

WM Mrranast
TO CIVIL SERVICE

EMPLOYEES

See MARTIN BURSTEIN

At 32 Cooper Square
ALGONQUIN 4-1996

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READER'S SERVICE GUIDE

Mr. Fixit
PANTS OR SKIRTS

Pulton a,
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WINGS TRAVEL ov sone ore
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0

‘Tuesday, October 7, 1952

___Gtvin SERVICE LEADER

—

Page Thirteen

Activities of Civil Service Employees in N.Y. State «

Onondaga

’ | HE ONONDAGA chapter, Civil

Service Employees Association, ex~
tends its congratulations to Mary
Cavanaugh, deputy auditor of the
City of Syracuse, who retired after
53 years of service with the city.
On Tuesday, September 30, Miss
Cavanaugh was honored by Mayor
Corcoran of Syracuse at cere-
monies at City Hall, where she
was presented with a television
set from her fellow employees.
She was also honored at the re~
cent clambake of the Onondaga
chapter, CSEA, when she was

2,353 Have
Filed Applications
for the

SOCIAL
INVESTIGATOR

EXAMINATION
Competition Will Be Keen
Are YOU Prepared?

We invite you to attend » lecture
scerion of our preparatory course

TUES. or THURS.
at 6:00 P. M.

ne our guest

DELEHANTY

INSTITUTE

115 E. 15th ST, N. ¥. 3

given @ double strand of pearls,
And on her Tist birthday on Sep-
tember 24 she was entertained in
the Persian Terrace of the Hotel
Syracuse by members of the State
Department of Audit and Control,
when gifts were presented by co:
workers,

Congratulation also to Mr. and
Mrs, Justin King (Mabel King of
the Sales Tax Department), who
celebrated their 25th anniversary
on September 30. Mr. King is a
deputy sheriff in the Criminal
Division at the Court House.

Manhattan State Hospital

SEVERAL employees at Man~-
hattan State Hospital who do not
receive 7% percent compensation
for extra hazardous or arduous
duties have requested that J. Earl
Kelly, director of Classification
and Compensation, give attention
to this situation. The MSH chap-
ter, CSEA, will sponsor a resolu-
tion to be sent to the Association
in Albany to get corrective legis-
Jation.

Among those who attended the
last meeting of the Metropolitan
Conference at Creedmoor State
Hospital were Pat Geraghty,
Elizabeth McSweeney and John
‘Wallace. They presented the fol-
lowing resolutions:

1, 40-hour work week, without
loss of pay.

2. 37%4-hour work week for all
office employees, without loss of

pay.

3. Freeze in of past salary m-
creases to basic salary.

4. 15 percent salary increase to
meet the high cost of living.

5. Free toll privileges for non-
resident car owners at MSH.

6. More liberal pension program,
a 25-year service, no age limita-
tion, optional retirement plan for
= Hygiene employees.

ive personnel re-

A progressi
latlons tribunal which will have

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to hear, resolve and recom-
sound settlement of em-
jevances and complaints,

NYC area are attending these
meetings, which began on Sep-
tember 29, The second workshop
group met on October 6.

Get well wishes are extended
to Elwood DeGraw, chapter presi-
dent of Kings Park State Hospital.
Mr. DeGraw recently suffered a
heart attack and must take things
easy for some time,

Every member of the Association
is urged to vote in the coming
elections, All members have been
mailed ballots, but if anyone has
mislaid his, another many be ob-
tained from John Wallace. Bal-
bg must be returned by October

The MSH chapter is endorsi
Jesse McFarland for presiden'
John FP. Powers, ist vice president;
Charles D. Methe, 2nd vice presi-
dent; J. Allyn Stearn, 3rd vice
President; Joseph FP. Feily, 4th vice
president; Robert L. Soper, 5th
vice president; Charlotte M. Clap-
per, secretary, and Harry Fox,
treasurer.

Council Unit

Holds Pension
Aid Hearing

Strong arguments by’ represen-
tatives of employee groups and
Ralph L. Van Name, former sec-
retary of the NYC Employees Re-
tirement System, the
Finance

estimate the cost of providing
minimum pensions for retired
NYC employees, The committee
held a public hearing on Council-
man Edward Vogel's bill to pro-
vide the benefit, Nobody appeared
in_ opposition.

The speakers recalled that the

|| Voters approved the policy of

granting pension increases to
those receiving pittance allow-
ances, the maximum addition un-
der the bill would be only $25 a
month, no pension would be
brought beyond $1,200 through
such ald, The State already
has mai out checks under its
aid plan. @ Vogel bill follows the
patterns of the State law, which
authorizes NYC to grant benefits.

Chairman Charles E. Keegan
presided. Besides Mr, Van Name,
who retired recently and wouldn't
be benefited by the bill, speakers
included John E. Carton, presi-

dent, Patrolmen’s Benevolent ARA’
Association; Philip F. Brueck, isa aa
CIO; Frederick Q. Wendt and Refrigerating Operator
Daniel P, Cronin, Civil Service| prot, Bnogineer, hitect, Burveying
ee Pages Murphy, High } ad lets, Fiuinber, aasearee
chool Teachers Association; at Dr —
James Gagen, NYC Veteran Po-| Mathematics, Drafting, Design
licemen’s Association, and Charles | Survey." ie. Geom. ‘Trig.
faery ona neurek Firemen’s and | Gale, Physies, Prep Engineering Colleges.
olicemen’s sociation. Howard
P. Barry, president, Uniformed | wyo ee ie

Firemen’s Association, submitted
a brief.

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(Bquivalency)
Tnened by M. ¥. Board of Regents
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YMCA
EVENING HIGH SCHOOL

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ENdlcott 98117

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Dept, LSI, 480 Lexington Ave,,

New York 17, WN. Y.

Please send ma, PREB, full information about the Arco Schock Mish Gcbost
Th fe undereiood what

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ore Ane

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Social Welfare

THE FIRST FALL Lemna Ag of
the Social Welfare chapter, CSEA,
was held on September 29, ‘The

Ast vice presidents Sid Honigsberg,
2nd vice president; Gladys Brown,

and Jessie Lockwood,

‘The chapter's unit representa-
tives are; Virginia Corrigan and
Mandel Schwartz, accounti:
Alice Kelly, Sally Champagne and
Ida Cole, administration; Adam L.
Russell and James E. Mahony,
office administration; Arnold
Heart and Jane Piynn, research
and statistics; Marie Maguire and
Margaret Sayers, welfare and
medical care; Mercedes Lovegrove,
Rosemary Fay, institutions, and
Patsy Russo and Andrew Smith,
area 4.

Mandel Schwartz is chairman
of the membership committee and
Carolyn Viall is publicity chair-
man.

At the meeting tentative plans
were made for a fall party.

Harry O. Page, who has re-
signed as Deputy Commissioner in
the Staté Department of Social
Welfare, was given a farewell
party by his associates on Sep-
tember 25, There were about 180
people present, A mahogany =
tail table was presented to
Page by the staff.

Mr. Page was appointed Deputy
Commissioner of the Division of
Welfare and Medical Care on
August 1, 1945, and continued in
that_posiiion until his resignation
on September 16. On October 1,
Mr, Page took up his new duties
as Associate Director of Commun-
ity Research Associates, Inc., 58
Park Avenue, NYC.

Metropolitan Armories

THE FIRST Metropolitan Arm-
ories chapter meeting of the 1952-
53 season was held at the 102nd
Engineers Armory on Tuesday,

MACHINE

STENOTYPE fitvnruaxo
$3,000 to $6,000 | ad ree.

Bara while you fears: tndividual_ tostrue
tion Theory to court reporting in 80 wocks
$60, 8. 0. Goldner O8.R. Oficial NYS

Reporter, All classce 6-8 P. M. Mon. and
Wed—Fri. 126.295 wpm, Tues, and
‘Thure—80-125 w.p.m.

Dictation 760 per setsion
Stenotype S|
G Beek:

Bog:
Bide. Supt,
Custodian Engr.
itech Inapector

Subway Exame

ir Mech. East,
Elect. Engr.

Jee hrehitset

Burtace Lino Dispatch

se. 7-2080
Junialea AX 72429
Courses Given Days & Eves.

Over 40 yre. Preparing Thousands for
Civil Service Bngre. License Exame

wed for

163-18 Jamaica Ave.,

ATTRACTIVE
POSITIONS ARE
PLENTIFUL...

<7 tor Mon and Women with

STENOGRAPHY, TYPING or
SECRETARIAL TRAINING

‘A Moderote

tavestment of methods shorten |
Time and Tuition [your time ment

Will Poy You | # training.
swbitontial Rewards.) Bains” |
Approved for Veterans

DELEHANTY scuons

Rog. by N.Y. State Dept, of Education
MANHATTAN, 116, 4th fh, = OR,
TAMAICA, 14 Buiphin Blvd mm dhe

STENOGRAPHY

TYPEWRITING-BOOKKEEPING

Special 4 Months Course
Day oF Eve.

Golcuteting ¢ or Gomptemetry
waive Course
BORO HALL ACADEMY
427 FLATBUSH AVENUP EXT,
or, Fulton Sty B’kiyn MAln @aday Uh

September 30. Because many ems
Ployees were on vacation, attend+

in charge and control of
Armory.

President William J, Maher re=
ported that the National Guard
Officers Association will support
the chapter's resolutions, to be
introduced Into the State Legisla-
ture by Assemblyman Prank J,
Becker, chairman of the legislative
+ to recodify the military

We

Mr. Maher has had a strenuous
schedule lately, traveling to and
from Peekskill, attending the Na=
tional Guard Convention at Al-
bany, and going to Denver for the
National Convention of Officers,

Congratulations to Martin H,
Traub on his recent promotion to
superintendent of the 187th-Field
Artillery Armory.

Jack DeLisi, chairman of the
entertainment committee, would
like to have all returns in for the
annual dinner-dance by October
a No tickets will be sold at the

01

Sadie Brown says:

SECRETARIAL
INSTITUTE:

coLLEGiaT

6.187

EXAM 18 COMING SOON FOR

SANITATION MAN

FREE CLASSES
IF YOU FAIL
CIVIL SERVICE EXAM

If you fail our training course for the
written test of physiea! Lest, Hamond
School will retu ery cent
Of the low tuition charged.

‘Thousands of men have enrolled
this your in the many successful Ham-
mond Hehool classes. Our record of
success Is becoming farm Write or
telephone for full information,

HAMMOND SCHOOL

130 W. 42 St., Room 606, N, Y, 36
MARK MURPHY, Ph.D., Director
Wisconsin 7.2405

PREPARE NOW FOR EXAM
DEC. 20th FOR

ACCOUNTANT

Promotion — All Departments

Open Competitive
100 POSITIONS EXPECTED

In the City Comptroller's Office

Tn 10949, 540 applied for the onen
competitive and 176 passod. ‘There was
a job offered to every one Who passed

YOU WANT TO PASS HIGH!
EENS'EMOROUGH

(0 HOUR COURSE
GIVEN BY LINCOLN ORENS

ENROLL NOW
Write, or Phone WA, 4-0321

oF use this coupon
CLYEL SERVICE DIVISION L
Kehool of Industrial Teehnolagy,

200 Tth Ave. (wt 47th BL), Ne My de

Please write, free, abot your course
for the Accoumtant ex

Name (Print)
Addross

Boro s+.

“ CIVIE SERVICE LEA

“Tuesday, October 7, 1952

at the anowal cla

State Comptroller J. Raymond McGovern presenting award to Sal Genovesi, winner of the men's bag rece,
bake of the

Frank Jennings, Joseph Burgess, fai

of Audit and Control, held Th

ursday, September 15. Onfookers cre
M+ president of the Audit ond Control chapter, CSEA, and John

Activities of Employees

Sullivan County

THE REGULAR meeting of
Sullivan chapter, CSEA, was held
fat the Court House, Monticello, on
September 23. The following offi-
cers were elected for the coming
year: President, Kenneth G. Ross,
Monticello Water Department; 1st
vice president, William Parker,
County Highway; 2nd vice presi-
dent, Joseph Griebel, Liberty Wa-
ter Department; 3rd_vice presi-
dent, Frances Hodes, County Wel-
fare; recording secretary, Leslie
Divine, Monticello Water Deps
ment; corresponding — secretary,
Henry Rieping, Monticello Sanita-
tion Department; treasurer, Otto
Scheible, Motor Vehicle Bureau;
representative, Charles Sharkey,
County Highway.

President Kenneth Ross report-
ed on a salary resolution to be
presented to the Monticello Village
Board which would establish a

early increment plan for all vil~

ie employees. Chapter represen-
tative Charles Sharkey reported
‘on the progress of the classifica-
tion survey conducted by the Mu-
nicipa! Service Division on County
highway positions.

James Pigott, fleld representa-
tive, addressed the chapter and
stressed need of increasing mem-
bership by means of a strong, ac-
tive membership committee. A
question and answer period was
held at the close of the meeting
at which time retirement and em-
ployee problems were discussed,

Pubic Service, Albany

THE EXECUTIVE Council of
the Public Service, Albany, chap-
ter, CSEA, held its monthly meet-
ing September 30 at 55 Bik Street.
John F. Burns presided.

‘The Council voted to assist the
department in soliciting funds for
the various charitable campaigns
such as Community Chest, Red
Cross, Heart Fund and the like.
The current campaign fs for the
Community Chest. Mr. Burns will
act as chairman,

Consideration is being given to
the possibility of a harvest party
for members. Since this is only in
the embryo stage no further de-
tails can be given until a later
date.

The next meeting of the Coun-
cil will be the latter part of Octo-
ber, after the annual meeting and
will be a dinner meeting

The delegates who will attend
the annual CSEA meeting are
John F. Burns, Robert Husband
and Morris Goldfarb.

Mt. Morris Tuberculosis

NEWS
Morris
chapter, CE
Following a long period of State
service, Dr, Arthur M. Stokes re-
tired on September 30 director
of the Mt M
Hospital. He
vacation with
Stokes was appointed director
the Mt. Morris H ta 1

the Mt
Hospital

to succeed Dr. b « Lin-
coln. Prior to that he "i
Assistant supe i

eonta State Hospital
Dr, Stokes ta 4 prc mem-
Der of the Liv 1 County

Medical Society and other State
and national associations. He and
Stokes have been active in
the Mt. Morris Rotary Club, Com-
munity Chest,
other organizations,
Dr. Stokes was presented with a
Hamilton watch by the personnel
of the hospital.
Dr. Armstrong is
juccessor as director of the hospi-

L

Eleanor Lariton has been elect-
ed treasurer of the CSEA chap-
ter to replace Harry Bernt who
resigned due to ill health.

Jack Kurtzman, field represen-
tative of Western New York, ad-
dressed the hospital employees at
their regular meeting recently.
Joseph Schirmer is convalescing

Veterans Hospital in Buffalo
after a major operation,

Psychiatric Institute

THE BACTERIOLOGY labora-
tory now has 100 percent repre-
sentation in the Psychiatric In-
CSEA, and has
received a certificate to this effect.

Walter E. Wood and Salvatore
Butero of the engineering depart-
ment have received a cash award
and a certificate from the Merit
Award Board. They designed and
constructed a stirring device which
permits the simultaneous process-
ing of several samples at different

varying conditions,
research work in the
pharmacology department.

John Hegarty, who had left the
Institute to enter military service
and saw action in Korea, has re-
turned to the engineering depart-

stitute chapter,

the Institute and its
has appeared in The
LEADER for some time now. The
correspondents wish to extend the
e to as many depart-

telephone de-
Charles Morley, meat
Jack Matulat, eleva-
tor department; Harold Pierce,
bacteriology

ring department;

John Kehiringer, storeroom,
and Charles
meier are now vacationing. They
ike a trip to Canada.

A farewell party was held for
leaving the

neuropathology

wish her the best

ults of balloting
election of officers of the Psychia-
chapter were
nounced on September 30.
for the coming year are: Dixie D.
John Matulat,

president; Margar

ith, wife of Clar-|
department, |

housekeeping de-

Chemung County

GENERAL m

in the district attorney’
Elmira, James

dent, named the following to at-
tend the Association meeting in
Albany, October 14 and 15: Mada-
lon Sanstad, recording se
Welfare Department; Marie Louise
Decker, district attorney's office;
Anthony Giordiana, chapter rep-
resentative, State yards; and
President Hennessy.

Mr. Hennessy thanked Albert

De Renzo, City of Elmira mainte~
nance, for his work on the annual
outing at Big Pond, Pa. It was
one of the biggest events of the
year.

Mr. Giordiana and Kenneth
West, of the Probation Depart-
ment, attended the Workshop at
Utica on September 27,

Matthew Donavan, father of

Paul Donavan, district attorney's
office, died last week. The Asso-
ciation offers its deepest sympathy
to him, and to the family of
Joseph Witucki, who also died last
week, Joe was a worker for the
City of Elmira.

Orange County
Public Works

THE SPAGHETTI and meat
ball-supper prepared by Ed Pimm
for the annual meeting of the
Orange County Public Works
chapter, CSBA, was enjoyed by all
who attended. Elected to succeed
themselves were Roland Schoon-
maker, president; Ed Pimm, sec-
retary, and Josh Heater, treasurer
Richard Bray declined re-election
as vice president, and Walter Tra-
en to fill that office,

Francis A. MacDonald, Presi-
dent of the Southern Regional
Conference, was guest speaker. He
discussed the value of CSEA to
employees and the duties of em-
ployees to CSEA.

The members present voted to
support Mac for Ist vice president

| of the CSEA and J. Allyn Stearns

for 3rd vice president.
Plans were made to insure a
large membership vote this year.

Hudson River Hospital

THE HUDSON River State
Hospital held a dvep sea clambake
and field day on Tuesday, Sep-
tember 23, ai the recreation field,
Inwood. About 600 patients at-
tended the affair, given under the
auspices of the hospital's recrea-
tion department, The medical staff

judged the events. Prizes were|

presented by Dr. O, A. Kilpatrick,

The clambake menu included
raw and steamed clams, corn,
chicken, watermelon, and other
delicacies, prepared by Paul Bois-
vert, food service manager.

Music was supplied by the
HRSH Patient's Orchestra and a
professional band.

Dr, Donald K. Schwartz, super-
vising psychiatrist of the south
wing, has been appointed to suc-
ceed Dr. Niles as head of the social
service department and all out-
clinies. Dr. Schwartz was present-
ed with a Longine Wittnauer
wrist watch by the employees of
the south wing service.

The following persons were
lected officers of the CSE
ter, at a meeting held on Se
ber 15: Mrs. ite M. Davis

ting of| president; Ruth A. Van Anden
chapter, | Ist vice president: Arthur Marx

4nd vice president; Mrs, Margaret
Killackey, secretary, and Mae E.
McCarthy, weasurer,

LPGAL NOTION

LEGAL NOTICE

THe PROPLE OF THY STATE OF NF
TORK Hiy the Grace of God Pree no Tn.
State Tax

Meyer

have eee
v4 Court of the
hereunto

the year of

DONATE
Clore of the Su

INSURANE
DVANTMENT, x

that Qi
INSURANCE
ESOTA, MINNEAPO.

‘,
Disbursement for the yt

YORK—INSURANCE

tary,

Dolley

Distursenent

L
$15,048,040.09.

URANCE | 9f this onler, proof ot such publica
DEPARTMENT ¥

Superintendent of | Cov
e of New York,

‘COM. | Miter November th, 1153, the

Lycome
Disbursement

$12,449,011 .00.
YORK—INSURA’

INSURANCE
CALIFOR.

SAN FRANCISCO.
r

$14.000,460.19.

RANCK | and anuexed schedule it appears that

that the
INSURANCE COM
. COLUMBUS OHIO, ie duly Heenwed

and that ita statement flal for the
1951 shows the | to dischare

ted Ansets | directors of &

44, Total Liadilition $34.518,

$200,000.00

Vellesholers 4.008,
Pie

SURANCE

DEPARTMENT

that the
tine, | S8tb day of Getaboe
THAR lin the forenoon

PAWM BUREAU MUTUAL FIRE

STATE OP NEW YORK-INSURANCH
DEPARTMENT, ALBANY.

AE! ob Alfred J: Bohlinger, Superintendent of

Sew ¥ Don the pe. | Teurance of the State of New York, hore
4 pf EMMY MEYER who ferhiew at | 4
ma Canty OF | seeRCHANT PIKH INSURANCE COM:

Sur

cortify purenant to Taw, Chat the

DENVER. COLORADO, t# duly
aet the bieliew of ime

nt that
for the year. ented
shows the frllowine
Namal «
Ligtsitities

and Valine
plik ne tee
Income

Disb

a Symcial ‘Trem, Part It of the Cliy
Wf ine City of New York, Netd im

FRANK-| ewil for the County of New. York, at the
eth Chambers Steet,
the BOW day of $e

Te the
LYLIIAN

MOK, to aecttme the
ESPENDRZ,

RAMOS wae born on July 8,
Pucrin Rico, and the’ Court
isfind thereby (hat the avern
contalned In the said Petition are true,
aud that there Is no masonabte objection

KORERT GOLD.
for the petitioner, it is
that LYLLIAN PRISCILA
RAMOS be, and she is authorized
to assume the name of LILLIAN BS.
PENDEZ, on and alter November Oth,
195%, upon contition, however, that she
shall comply with the farther provisions
i ‘and it ix further
that thik order and the
be fled within,
ten CLO} day date hereof in
the Office of the Check of thin Court: and
at a copy of this order shall, within
days from the entry thereof, be
pce in the Civil Serviee Lender,
& Hewaraper publixhal in the City of New
York, County of New York, and that
within forty (40) days after the making

the
for

shall be filed with the Clerk of this
and it ie Surthicr

here | ORDERED, that upon compliance with

the | he forecoing provisions, — th

LYLLIAN @RISCILA DI
he known by

MARKEWICH.
7c. ©

ART T, OF THR
Stato of New
County of Bronx,
rt Howse, State
day of Septem=
CHARLES D,

Application of
the PACTURING CO,
ry Dissolution, — INDEX

id filing the petition of
Washburn, al I. Brown,
wy MeNicol ind Joseph FP. Quinn, a
majority of the directors of Pomeroy Dis
Nifacturing Ca,, @ corporation
under Article 2 of

lock Corporation Law of the State
Sur: Ik and having i1# pr
$15,850.-| located at 26 Bruckner Boul

x. City ond State of New York,
verified by the
th day of Annet

ule thereto annexed, from which petit

ease 19 one of those specified under Secs

tlons 101 and 10% of the General
tion I

© voluntar

© aupearing to the watie-
the Cour

thin an

warets of sald Cory

ficial to the

ral

ator

‘orporation entitled tw

to dissolution after a meet
1

to present to this
A verified petition for its voluntary
lution ae preseribed in Sections 101
and 10% of tho ation Law;
 renliane « the notion of

this Application dated August 20, 1082,
with proof of view thereof and of
and kehedule 10

of this prososed

Court bavi
NOW, ow motion of Kichmond L. Brown,
attarney for the petitioners, tt
RANGE | .,CRDERRD that all crvdiiors, ‘stockhold.
Corporation show
Term, Part 1, of thig

the Beonx County

ir ENTER oO. DB.
RR Justice of the Supreme Court

abitition Rate high on your next Civil

‘er | Service Test. Get a Study Book at
jor | The Leader Book Store, 91 Duane
Street, New York 7, N, ¥,

Tacedwy, October 7, 1952

“CUVIE SERVICE LEADER

Page Fifteen

How Many Ap

‘The NYC Civil Service Commis-
has announced that 9,159 per- 4 }
gons applied for the 25 open-| promotion exam had 2,323 appli-
competitive and 12 promotion ex-|cants; 1,991 applied for the fire-
‘ams which closed on Wednesday,|man (F.D.) exam, and 1,476 for
jobs as maintenance man.

‘The number of persons filing

attracted 2,353 ™P| P as~
sistant train dispatcher, NYCTS,

e@dding the June , the} applications for each exam were:
total is 6,854. + Assistant civ-
Second most popular exam was] il engineer (structural), 20; assist-
social investi , arade 1, which engineer,

ing
|1,991; first assistant marine en-

ant maintainer, 16; assistant resi-tect, 21; junior nschanical enei-
dent bys 20; maintenance man,
+ | 1,476; occupational therapist (2nd
| filing period), 5. (still open);
physicist (radiation), 0; public
health nurse (Sth filing period),
draftaman, 6; fireman (F.D.),|41 (still open); radio promotion
assistant, 28; senior physicist, 2;
senior physicist (isotopes), 5; so-

cial investigator, grade 1, 2,353;

custodian
gienist (10th fling period),

(still open); electrical engineer-

gineer (Diesel), 5; furniture main-
tainer's helper, 19; inspector of
elevators, grade 3, 33; junior archi-

Only 427 Pairs Are Left!

i maintainer, group C,
—— | yt 59; technician (X-ray)
(Sth Ming period), 45 and televi-
sion cameraman, 14.

plied for Jobs in September.

marine engineer (Diesel), Depart.
ment of Public Works end Sani-
tation, 1; conductor, NYCTS, 41;
first assistant marine engineer
(Diesel), Departments of Public
Works and Sanitation, 6; head die~
titian (teaching), Department of
Hospitals, 0; inspector of pipe Iay-
ing, grade 3, Department of Wat
Supply, Gas and Electricity, 5;
junior chemist, Department of
Hospitats, Public Works, Health
and Board of Transportation, 40,
and supervisor, Department of

STOP HEADLIGHT GLARE!

ACTUALLY SEE AFTER DARK!

today! Read this amazing story of

GONE FOREVER! Binding Headleit Glare—the womber one cause of trafic sccdenia N
how science conquered this “one wapeevsatahie” eockienst

DO YOU DRIVE YOUR CAR AFTER DARK? Do you Ssutomobile manufacturers, such as

trapped .
blinded . . and killed by the headlights of another man’s car?

Here ts ‘the first full story of
how you can completely avoid that
blinding headlight glare .. . avoid
those night driving accidents
how you can actually drive
night with almost full daylight
safety!

How many times this month
have you been completely blinded
by the headlights of another car?
How many times have you been
blinded when you were driving
30-40-50-miles an hour... when
you were in the middle of a dan-
gerous intersection . .. when you
were turning a sharp curve or
corner? Yes, how many times this
month have you been forced to
trust your life—and the lives of
your family — to a driver who
doesn't even have the sense to dim
his headlights?

These Accidents
Can Be Avoided

Do you know that now you can
avoid all these risks? Do you know

that during the last five years over
70,000 drivers have found a new
way to protect themselves against
this headlight blindness? That
these drivers have tested and
proved an optical instrument that
actually makes the brightest head-
lights as easy to take as” dims!
Here is that amazing story

Pive years ago, three of the
country’s top optical experts de-
cided to tackle this problem of
headlight glare. They immediately
discovered that all of the common
remedies were either useless or

discovered that there was only one
sure way to protect yourself
against this blinding night glare
—a piece of optically colored glass
worn by you, yourself—that filters
out the glare from these head-
lights in exactly the same way
that a pair of sunglasses filters
out the glare of the sun.

These experts
scientists had developed such a

glass—that many of the _leading

NOW! A Special Offer To Readers
Of The CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

By special

fe recently been advertised at

errengement with the
avellable to its readers @ set of

manufacturer. the Civil

16) v
r substantially higher price, Act
today! Send the guarentee coupon sow!

different issue of The LEADER ( ) ¥

I Gaderstand that, theses’ wiasees’ musts
biting headlicht glare.

r ACT TODAY! SEND THIS GUARANTEE Sourox wow
BOX 333, CIVEL SERVIC

P send me pas

10 conte per pair for postage. ( } f enciose two coupons,

ay copy of ‘The LEADER.
WOMEN'S CLIPON ( }

So Wy thee glasses ai your risk for one full wook

farther

pu
each trom ®
am a subscriber, aud enclose the name

) WOMEN'S REGULARS +

(for Whose who wear gtassce)
fimulated alligator | Daabboard

shearer after dark.

actually dangerous. These experts |

Buick, Cadillac, Oldsmobile, Lin-
soln and Chrysler—were equipping
their special deluxe models with
special glare-resistant windshi¢ids,
However, the cost of this glass on
these special cars was necessarily
$20-$50.

To avoid these costs these ex-
|perts took this special glare-resist -
ant glass and built it into a pair
of Night Drivin® Glasses that
could be worn by any driver. Since
they eliminated all rays of glare,
the experts called them RAYEX
Night Driving Glasses.
some of the amazing results they
discovered when they tested them.

This Is How Night
| Driving Should Be

1, WITH THESE RAYEX Night
Driving GLASSES, you can leok
directly into the brightest head-
lights. You will see the headlights
as pale amber discs—but you will
not see the glare. You could pass
an entire line of fifty cars, and not
even squint.

2. WITH THESE RAYEX Night
Driving GLASSES your eyes will
be protected against any intrusion

of glare. They will not have to
adjust themselves to constant
flashes of ight, You will actually
be able to see better . . . clearer

. and farther with them on than
you could see without them, You
| will see dark objects more quickly.
You will react more quickly to the
pedestrian who darts out of a side
street... to the dark bumps in
the road that ruin your tires

3, SINCE THESE RAYEX Night
Driving GLASSES PROTECT
YOUR EYES AGAINST STRAIN
you will not suffgr from dangerous
night driving headaches. You will
be able to drive as much as 400
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Page Sixteen

“CIvIE SERVICE LEADER

Tuesday, October 7, 1952

Activities of Civil Service Employees in N.Y. State

Marcy State Hospital

AT A GENERAL meeting of the
Marcy State Hospital Credit Un-
fon on September 23»-William A.
Wiskin resigned his presi-
dent. His retirement fronf™State
service, after many years of em-

loy at Marcy, became effective

ptember 30.

The officers of the Credit Union
congratulated Mr. Wiskin on a
job well-done, for he had served
in the capacity of president since
the Union was started at the hos-
pital In the spring of 1951,

As a token of appreciation and
remembrance, the Credit Union
Presented its retiring president
with a masonic-emblemed table
lighter-and a personal lighter,

The Credit Union at Marcy has
been in effect a little over a year,
has more than 100 members, and
is growing every day. Employees
at Marcy are urged to inquire of
the Credit Union’s officers and
members as to the many benefits
membership brings.

New officers for the coming
year, elected at the last_general
meeting, are: Kenneth Hawken,

president; Leonard Jackson, vice
resident; Janet Boxall, secretary;
salind Lieber, treasurer, Frank
Pizer, assistant treasurer, and
Stuart Coultrip, publicity.
Mas, Ester Kittridge was elected
to fill a vacancy as member of

the Board of Directors, created by |

the resignation of H. C. Mason,
who was unable to attend meet-
ings regularly because of his many
official duties.

League bowling is again in full
swing at Marcy, with five regular
leagues participating this year.

‘The Marcy Recreation Club, com-|

prised of hospital employees, is re-
sponsible for maintaining - the
alleys and reports that they are
in excellent condition. All hospital
employees and their friends are
invited to visit the alleys for open
bowling weekends.

Officers of the Recreation Club
are: Howard ne, president; Dr.
J. A. Howard, vice president;
Dorris Blust, secretary, and Ken-
meth Hawken, treasurer,

Rochester State Hospital

THE MEMBERSHIP and exe-
cutive committee of the Roches-
ter State Hospital chapter, CSEA,
met recently to launch the chap-
ter’s new membership drive. All
Workers on the committee were
urgd to do their part in making
this a record year for the chap-
ter. All chapter members can help
even though they aren't members
of the membership committee.

Claude Rowell and Wm, Rossi-
ter attended the dinner given at
the Hotel Rochester for the mem-
brship campaign.

Among those who attended the
Western Conference meeting at
the Thomas Indian School were:

Mr. and Mrs, Fred McNair, John
McDonald, Mr. and Mrs, William
Rossiter, and Mr, and Mrs, Claude
E, Rowell

Sympathy {s extended to Marie|

. Henry in the
band, Elmer
Ge
tired. Good luck, Georg
A dinner party sponsored by the
chapter was held at the Chateau

on September 30 in honor of Dr.
Donald J. McIntosh. Dr. Mc-
Intosh was recently appointed

assistant director of Willard State
Hospital, A wrist watch was pre-
sented by the employees to Dr.
McIntosh, Mrs, MelIntosh was
given a corsage, Those present
wished both the doctor and his
wife many years of continued suc-
€ess. Dr. McIntosh was a member

of the chapter's executive com-
mittee, Toastmaster for the eve-
ning was Claude E. Rowell.

A ee-day training course,
“Comptrollers Rules and Regula-
tions, ganized through the ef-

forts of the Civil Service Training
Division in cooperation with the
Department of Audit and Control,

has just been completed. The re-
fresher was given to Busi-
ness Office employees to help them
m thelr duties more efficient

d Sorensen, of the staff

e Department of Audit

was

and Control
Thi

the instructor,
sssion of the
able to other

y of the course

at Rochester
i, D, Joseph
rard nson, Be
Mary Byam,’ Mat
Betty Cashion, Helene

Connie Wojcikowski,
Mary Coulson, Orville Lagenor,
Laura McCarthy, Blanche Allen,

student

At a recent meeting of the Metr
Byrnes, William E. Gri

Micha

litan Conference, Civil Service peo ng Association. Front row: oop
k row: Henry Shemin, —e Seims, John Wallace, Patrick Geraghty and

Rowland and William Williams,
Claude Rowell and Roy Eligh
will represent Rochester State

| Hospital chapter at the CSEA an-

nual meeting in Albany, October
14 and 15.

The chapter's second annual
dinner will be held at Mike Con-
roy’s on November 1,

Veterans Vocational School

FOLLOWING ARE the newly
elected officers of the Veterans

Vocational School chapter of the
CSEA: President, Leo P, McDon-
nell; vice president, George Kron-

ea secretary, Marjorie Callan-
der; treasurer, Fred E. Pluff;
delegate, Caryl Decker; alternate,
Victor Miller,

District 4, Public Works

THE FOLLOWING officers of
the Rochester Department of Pub-
lic Works District No. 4 chapter,
CSEA, were elected at the annual
meeting of the chapter held re-
cently: President, Gilbert J. Hess;
vice president, Peter Varlan; sec-
retary, William H. Saunders;
treasurer, Rita VanDerwell; dele-
gate, John Wurme; alternate,
Leonard Bach.

Syracuse State School

from Syracuse

State School:

The Floral Association of Syra-
cuse State School Farms and
Colonies entertained recently at
Amos Colony in honor of Mr. and
Mrs. Bryan Pearson. Mrs, Pearson
is leaving State e joy afi 10
years of Walter Jenner,
Farm manager, presided at the
supper. He welcomed Dr. and
Mrs, Watts and daughter Betsey
to Syracuse State School. Dr.
Watts will assume his duties as
assistant director soon.

Among the 59 guests were Dr.
Bisgove, director; Dr. Fink, Dr,
Schemzyn, Dr, Held and members
of the Association,

Mr. and Mrs, Winn were hosts
at the supper.

Walter Jenner, president of the
CSEA chapter, appointed the fol-

; Central Conference, which met at|

| Beck’s Grove, Rome, on August
13.

Mrs, German ahd Mrs. Stedman
attended the CSEA membership
committee meeting at New York
Mills, September 15.

John Schallenberg reported on
the groundsman pay appeal, heard
in Albany August 19,
| A buffet lunch was served after
the meeting by Matie Morgan and
Helen Griffin.

Psychiatric Institute

ON THURSDAY, September 18,
a surprise party was held at
Psychiatric Institute in honor of
Mrs, Sophie Dezo, a member of
the housekeeping department,
who is retiring after 18 years in
State service. Mrs. Dezo, better
lmown to her many friends as
Sophie, was presented with $100
and a traveling case by Mrs, Mar-
garet Dowdall, head housekeeper.
Sophie contemplates taking life
easy under the blue Florida skies.
Her friends wish her well.

The affair was sponsored by a
committee «omposed of Jack
Matulat, vice president of the
Psychiatric Institute chapter,
|CSEA; Mrs, Mary Legge, assist-
ant housekeeper; Agnes Elder and
Mrs. Catherine Hagesmeier, house-
keeping department; Estelle
Grany, Mrs. Antoinette Schwob
|and Dixie Mason, nursing de-
partment, Every Institute depart-
ment was represented. Refresh-
ments were furnished by Miss R.
Rosenstock, head dietitian, and
her efficient co-workers.

During her years at e Insti-
tute, Sophie Dezo has made a last-
ing impression by her numerous
and varied contributions in all
departments, and it is with ming-
led feelings of regret at her de-
|parture and good wishes for her
future happiness that the Insti-
tute says good-bye, Sophie, and
good luck.

Napanoch
Institute

THE 1952-53 officers of the Na-

lowing membership committee:|panoch Institution — employees
Frederick Krumman, Felix Munn, | chapter of the CSEA as recently
George Snyder, Albert Bregard,|elected a President, George
Madge . Gladys Hoimaquist,| Halbig; vice president, Edward
Margaret Sullivan, Charles Ecker, ge treasurer, Frank Wal-
Walter Helen Cashore| pole; secretary, Arthur T. Drew;
and Ja delegate, Arthur T, Drew,

last chapter meeting,

nith and Albert Bregard

ed delegates to the Asso-
ciation.
P

rick Krumman had -his
evered while he worked in
the canning factory,

Fort Stanwix

FORT Stanwix chapter of
h

E 24 in
of M Building.
the first mee!
| Irma German, elevated to chapter

meeting
club room: Tt was
ting presided over by
ident

when Lewis Fearon,

former president, left State ser-

viee, Janet Levison was elected
vice president
Mrs, Ruth Stedman reported on

Doris Batt, Alton Baker, Robert'the resolutions committee of the

the |

Willard Slate Hospital

NEWS ITEMS from Willard
State Hospital chapter, CSBA:

All bowling leagues are off to a
good start for the 1952-53 season.

pital League and Indian League,
composed of eight teams each
There is a ladies’ league of four
| teams. The Hospital League is op-
erating on the four-point system
this year, and last year's last place
North Wing team is leading with
eight points Won and no losses.
North Wing's captain and league
president, Carlton Sweet, together
with William Latimer, is the
pillar of the team, with a 160
average. Last year's champions,
the Engineers, started the season

There are two men’s leagues, Hos- |

Dr. gE.
paychiatrist at Huds

been appointed
assistant director at the Pilgrim
State Hospital, Brentwood, L. I.

with a four point win but dropped
four points the next week, leaving
them with a .500 average. Harold
|Reed of the Engineers shot a
scratch 573 on opening night. Last
season's
iam Stockdale, started with a cool
542 for a 180 average and looks
to be the most dangerous man this
year. Bill has but few games of
200 and over, but what a bouquet
he has from 175 to 190, during the
28-week season.

The Indian League is starting
off more bunched. The Onondagas
and Mohicans are leading, each
with four won and two lost, This
league still uses the three point

m, Last year’s winners, the
Senecas, are leading by several
hundred pins on total pins, but
due to a very low handicap, the
higher handicap teams are nosing
them out on games won, Dagwood
Jordan reports that he has lost
his hook. If anyone finds it, kind-
ly return to “Daggy,” c-o the Car-
penter’s team,

In the ladies’ league, Elliott Hall
is leading with a 7 won and 2 lost
standing. This league also uses
the three point system. Dot Moses
leads the ladies with a 144 aver-
age, and Plorence Stockdale and
Mary Collins follow, with 141 and
139 respectively. Though Marie
Baley is fourth with 132, those
who will be bowling Willard State
Hospital this winter can expect
better competition.

Commencement exerci: for the
graduates of the Nurses Training
School were held September 18 at
| Hadley Hall, The commencement
address was delivered by Dr.
Harry A, Steckel, former director
of the Syracuse Psychopathic Hos-
pital. The diplomas were awarded
by Dr, Arthur Jackson, president
of the Board of Visitors. The fol-
|lowing graduates received their
| diplomas: Catherine May Brant,
Lucille Webster Huff, Peter Ed-
ar Hungerford, John Foyn Kla-
oe, Jr., Joseph John Licak, Alice
May Matzell, John F, DiNardi,
Lioyd D, Evans, Robert C, Over.

high average kegler, Will- |

acre, Ray H. VanNostrand, Vire
inia Lee Milliman, Theresa A,
usinskas, Patricia Harolding
Veit and Elaine Therese Vreeland,

‘The address of weloome was given

by Dr, Kenneth Keill, director of
Willard State Hospit:

John Lawler, Louis Rizziert,
Polly Mason, Mary Collins, Charles
Collins, William Rogers, Robert
Montford, Jane Brown, Edi
Cooper, William Latimer, Leva
Kelleher, Leona Bell, Elizabeth
Wilkens and Elizabeth Trainor
attended the Nurses Work Shop
at Gowanda State Hospital.

Get well wishes to the follows
ing: John Reardon, John Garlick,
Marilyn Woodington and William
Pierson.

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph McDonald
attended the races at Batavia.

Alvis VanLone was on a fishing

trip to Canada.

The following are vacationing:
Alice Dunham, Marion P. Ste<
wart and Leon Charles,

Virginia Gates has returned

from her vacation.

Vivian Porsman is on a leave of
absence caring for her son who

is ill. The chapter wishes the child
@ complete and speedy recovery,

A farewell party was given for
Ann Hassey, stenographer in the
social service department, by her
friends and associates on Sepe
tember 23, at which time she was
given a radio. Mrs. Hassey trans
ferred to Brooklyn State Hospital

October 1,

State Insurance Fund

THE STATE Insurance Pund
Glee Club has heid several very
successful rehearsals. The Glee
Clubbers are having so much fun
they want to remind Pundites that
applications are still available,
and the bigger the turnout the
more enjoyment there is. No talent
is needed. Come and join with your
co-workers in song. See any of the
Glee Club officers, or its musical
director Bill Dillon.

Chapter efforts to organize the
State Pund Blood Bank have at
long last been realized. The em-
ployees have been circularized and
asked to signify their intention of
donating. If enough Fundites so
signify, the Red Cross will arrange
for a  bloodmobile. .Everyon
knows the patriotic purpose of the
Blood Bank and an enthusiastic
response should be forthcoming
for this reason alone. The blood
will also be available to Pundites
and their families in time of need.
Everyone is urged to submit his
name to his departmental repre=
sentative promptly.

The Bowling League has been
going full blast for several weeks,
Mallia and Flamholtz have had
individual high scores of 227 and
236 respectively. At the end of the
meet on September 23, the top
three teams were Policyholders,
Payroll and Claims Seniors,

Actuarial Thespian, Ralph
Meyerberg, is again appearing in
a dramatic production, The play,
“Outward Bound,” will be pre
sented at the Amato Opera House,
159 Bleeker Street, NYC, on Octo-
ber 14, 15 and 16. Admission is
free. All who attend are sure of
&@ grand time.

Pundites join in extending all
good wishes to Jane Stall upon
her retirement on September 30,
Miss Stall is 70 years young. Her
friends will honor her at a dinner
in October,

Utica State Hospital

ROSCOE C. GRIFFITH, who
retired in March after 42 years
of service in the business office at
Utica State Hospital, was honors
ed at a dinner held at Twin,Ponds
on Tuesday, September 30. One
hundred employees attended the
dinner. Mr, Griffith's wife and two
children, Connie and Timmey,
were also present. A gifs of $150
was presented to Mr, Griffith.

Margaret Fenk was chairman
of the dinner, assisted by Stanley
Ochab, Gertrude Haage, Vera
Walsh, Rosanna Daley, Helen
Smith, Rose McKenna, Anna Lee,
Catherine Jones, Keith Wheeler,
Warren Crumb, Charles Greene
and Watkin Perry. Lawrence Max-
well was toastmaster,

Among those who attended the

dinner were: Dr, Bascom B,
Young, director of the hospital,
and Mrs, Young; Lawrence J,

Maxwell, business officer, and Mrs,
Maxwell; and eleven employees
who worked with Mr. Griffith and
have since retired, Mary Borst,
Anna Hopkins, Mary Hackett,
Lena Kranz, Sara Burns, Lena
Plant, Ida Hayes, Lou Hayes, Nora
Holdridge, Carl Hunginger and
Harry Landers,

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