Civil Service Leader, 1953 January 6

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EADER.

America’s Largest Weekly for Public Employees
Tuesday, January 6th, 1953

Vol. XIV — No. 17 Price Ten Cents

‘At a dinner-meeting of the Orange County chapter, Civil Service Employees A
b The names that came along with the photo are: Percy V: chapter president; A
. Ist vice president; Ann Power, 2nd vice president; Marie Cain, secretary; James Pigott, CSEA field
Glavey O'Brien, representative, Ter Bush Powell. Sorry they didn't send along the
other names; it's @ nice-looking group.

Civil Service Commission
Would Be Changed Under

New Legislative Proposal

| aw

P DRAWER

125
ATLON
ln Y

U
CaPLToL
ALBANY
COMP

LeytsLuLive
Session Opens
This Week

ALBANY, Jan, 5—The State
Legislature convenes on Wednes-
day, January 7.

‘The roster of civil service bills
to come up this year is expected to
be less in quantity than in past
years,

Salary Increases

Major matters will concern:

salary improvements for State em-

law and possibly an increase in the
$1200 maximum which retired em-
ployees may receive; reorganiza-
tion of the State Civil Service
Commission. There will also be
bills providing for overtime pay-
ment and improvement in working

onditions. One measure which
will cause much interesting com-
ment is the firemen’s heart bill,
designed to place the burden of
proof on the agency when a fire-|
man claims disability as the result |
of a heart ailment

Buffalo City
Aides Ask

Pay Increase

committee of
Civil Service
tion of Weste'

the
Employees Associa-
n New York, Ine.

Buffalo to support a
ary increase and
of the present $200 cost
bonus unent -

10-percent
the inc
f-1

- intanton: ons Genk ntly different to avoid such an| Salary Committee Meeting
Mtate ¢ 1 Activit w a all z ng from! ‘The action was taken w
ussed behind it r3 ofthe] salary committee met at
Alt and ¥ to alter the ture| L which 18] Fidelis Hall, Buffalo, on Monday
b 1 y of th t Comn rJ.2 eve December 29

Many Proposals

State Announces Variety
Of Self-Improvement Per oe
|, CatirsesinAlbanyandNYC °

ALBANY

w pro-

T

A in- A in Punda- | hi ave
f ing Divisign, D of Civil x on and one in| pre
vide, Nas ed f mation n Sup fon will) act
pring semester trainin ASSES ot m me
conditeted in New. York City take in the day {der with
id Albany Y Pros em rying length. ‘Fhe distribution of |
The New York City evening 5 rking in salary e Commission's ors over
am begins-February 2. The 15-|6 to 15 and must be nominated | State and over local personnel mat-
I programm ts Offered in cooper-|by their supervisors. Employees| ters 1s another problem to which
tion) with the New «York City| must have satisfactorily comp the forthcoming legislation will
joardsof Education es will| ed the Pundamentals course in or-| give some answer.
hel@ once a week, usually from|der to be eligible for the Case| Core of all the bills is the pro-
p.mig to 8:40 p.m., at city high| Studies class. | posal for a strong central adminis-
100@4n Manhattan assigned by| Detailed announcements and| trator,
p Hgard of Education. nomination request forms will be

Registration distributed throughout all State
fled announcement bulletins | Offices in New York City during
Mlistributed by the Training | t first week of this month.
sign to all State offices in New | Day supervisory programs are also
rk City during the first week of | being planned for Albany, Roch-
8 month, Registrations will be| ester, Buffalo, Syracuse and Utica, |
pled immediately after the Pitman Steno
letins have been posted State employees in New York
A tgntative list of courses to be| City will also be able to take an
ereds includes Fundamentals in| in-service Pitman  stenographic

sion.A and B, Case Studies | refresher course. The four-week
rvision A and B, Elemen-| wil! meet from 3 p.m. to § p.m.
atistics, Intermediate Sta-|four days a week beginning Jan-|

High School,
include’ a
Business

combination course
Arithmetic, Busini

and Filing, Pundamentals of Su-|
pervision, Case Studies in Super-
vision, Elementary Psychology,

Practices.

Registration for all

the Governor

141 Western Ave.,
iB

English, and Comprehensive Reade
ing, and classes in Office Records |

and Elements of Public Personnel |

Abeaa|
classes will be held in the lobby of
Alfred &. Smith

ployees; changes in the retirement]

Civil Service

Cases

See Page 3

ree Chest
X-Rays for
Aides in NYC

ALBANY, Jan. 5 — Free chest
X-rays for State employees in th
New York City metropolitan ar
will begin January 12

Governor Thomas Z. Dewey has
urged all employees to take ad-
vantage of the program conducted
by the Department of Health and
the Personnel Council in the De«
partment of Civil Service.

Three Health Dept. X-ra
expect to service more than

teams
12,000

employees at five area locations,
Facilities will be set up in Mai
hattan at Madison Ave.,

Broadway, and 80 Centre St.;

in
Brooklyn at 320 Schermerhorn St.,
and at the District Office of the

Department of Public Works,
Montauk Highway and Little East
Neck Road, Babylon, L. I

BUFFALO, Jan. 5—The salary| makes available to employees.
Competitive|

has urged Mayor Joseph Mruk of | 52

ving

Metropolitan

\Group toHear
‘Of Training

The Metropolitan New York
Conference of the Civil Service
Employees Association will hear
Dr. Charles Klein, director of
training in the State Civil Service
Department, give the story of self=
improvement through the schoole
ing facilities which the State

369th Armory Host
| ‘The meeting will be t
aturday, January 24, at
p.m., in the 369th Armory
Fifth Avenue. Officers, delega
and members of chapter ex
r are invited to attend. 4
ss Will include, reports of
la

now ore

roblem. b
additional mate

and

on.
lation.

| ‘Thomas H. ¢
the Conferenc

g, chairmas
that a
and
chapter
e ine
bor=
Nassaa

16 County Groups Plan
= Workshop Dealing With

:|Problems of

SYRACUSE, Jan. 5 — The six-
en county chapters in the Cen~

terms of| tral New York area will hold their

second workshop on
January 24, at the Onondaga Ho-
tel in Syracuse. Onondaga chap-
| ter will act as it.

Panel discussions will take place
in the afternoon, Topics include
public relations, county law, and
membership and organization,
Dinner will be at 6:30 P.M.

The chapters participating are

Civil Service

Che

mung,  Tompking,
ango, Montgomery,
Onondaga, Madle
0 Iton,
ie da, Oswego, Jefferson and St
Lawrence.
Workshop Officers
Vernon A. Tapper is chairmam
and Mrs, Lulu Williams is co-
chairman, Mrs. Norma Scott is im
charge of reservations, Edward
Stevens, arrangements, and Irma
Misita and Eleanor Rosbach, dim-
ner.

Milton Alpert Succeeds

|Eliot Kaplan as Chief of

ALBANY, Jan. &

Milton Al-

‘State Retirement System

A native of Lakewood, New

tary Accounting A,|uary 5, The class will meet in| State Office Building on January |pert of Albany has been appointed| Jersey, Alpert entered State sere

tv Ad-| Room 309, Central Commercial|6§ and 7, from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.|deputy comptroller of ‘the ein 1943 as counsel to the State

c unt onary) High School, 214 East 43nd St.,| Late registrations will be accept-| Department of Audit and C War Council. He joined audit and

agingering, and a General Edu-| Manhattan. Jed at the beginning of t to succeed H. Eliot Kapla Control in 1945, rising to the pe»
n, ver Evening training courses im the| class on January 13 at resigned last summer. sition of associate counsel.

A dy pervisory program will| Albany area have been scheduled| School and by the T Alper 42, will assume r The new deputy comptroller is @

e helf in*New York vi'ty in co-|by the Training Division in co. vin the telephone, of the New York State Employees | graduate of Dartmouth College

peratlon with the New York State| operation with the Albany Board| 11, Extension 1141 Retirement System, Since 1951 he |and Columbia University Law

chool of Industrial and Labor|of Education. These courses will] Gregg stenographic refresher |has been executive secretary and| School. He has worked on the

tions, Cornell University be open to the public as well as|course and a typing. refresher |counsel to the State Defense Coun-|revision of the New. York City

Once A Week to State employ: c! will| course will begin at Albany High | cil, and counsel to the State Civil| Police and fire pension laws and

Classes for this 10-week pro-| meet from 7 p. m. to 9 p.m. each| School on January 26. Classes will| Defense Commission, on modification of the State Re-

am will meet once a week, three| Tuesday and Thursday for 10|meet for four weeks, Monday| The appointment to the $15,310 tirement System law.
ours a day, » 270 Broadway, | weel through Thursday, from 2:46 p.m. | job was announced by Comptrolier| He is married and has two chile
‘tan. During the week Courses to be offered at Albany! to 4:45 pum 4, Raymond McGovern, | dren,
Page Two

CIVIL SERVICE CEADER-

STATE EXAMS OPEN

The following State exams are
now open. Pay at start, and after
five annual increments, is given,
‘The last day to apply appears a’
the end of each notice, Specify
eam by number and title. Appli-
cation may be made by mail to
State Civil Service Department,

tate Office Building, Albany, N.

. Enclose 374" x 9” or larger six-
cent stamped, self-addressed en-
yelope. (See Where to Apply, Page
13).

STATE
Open-Competitive |

6129. JUNIOR LAND
CLAIMS ADJUSTER, $4,512 to $5,
339, Seven vacancies at Albany,
four at Buffalo, two each at Hor-
nell, Rochester and Syracuse, Re-
quirements: (1) A year's experience
in appraisal, negotiation, settle-
ment or trial of real property
claims arising out of acquisition
of real property for a government
agency or large public utility; and
(2) either -(a) bachelor’s degree,
or (b) four years’ experience in
the practice of law or engineering
or as a real estate appraiser or
licensed real estate salesman or
broker,.or (c) two more years of
the experience in (1), or (d)
equivalent combination of (a), (b)
and (c). Fee $3. (Priday, January
23).

6128, ASSISTANT LAND AND
CLAIMS ADJUSTER, $5.414 to|
6,537. Five vacancies at Albany, |
four at Rochester, two each at|
Hornell and Staatsburg, one each |
at Binghamton, Buffalo and Wa-|
tertown. Requirements: me at)
No. 6129 above, except three years |
@f the experience in (1), Fee $4.|
(Friday, January 23). |

6221. SENIOR SUPERINTEND-
ENT OF CONSTRUCTION, $4,-
964 to $6,088. Seven vacancies, ten
more anticipated in field positions
Department of Public Works.
quirements; (1) two years’ field
experience in building construction
&@s a foreman, contractor, inspec-
tor, engincer or architect; and (2)
ther (a) bachelor’s degree in civil
engineering or architecture plus
ene year of the above experience,
er (b) master’s degree in civil en-
gineering or architecture, or (c)
three more years’ experience in
(2), of (d) equivalent combina-
tion of (a), (b) and (¢), Fee $4.
(@riday, January 23).

6222. ASSISTANT SUPERIN-
TE DENT OF CONSTRUCTION,

4.053 to $4,889. Vacancies, 32;

partment of Public Works. Re-
quirements: elther (a) bachelor's
@egree in civil engineering or
architecture plus one year's fleld
experience or (b) master's degree
@ (c) three years of the experi-

ence in (a), or (d) equivalent
combination, Fee $3. (Friday.
January 23),

6227. TELEPHONE OPERA-

TOR, $2,180 to $2,984; 48 vacan-
ies throughout the State. Re-
quirements: six months’ exper-
fence in telephone _ switchboard
eperation. Fee $1. (Priday, Jan-
wary 23).

6266. PRINCIPAL REAL ES-
TATE APPRAISER, $8,648 to $10.-
486, One vacancy at NYC. Re-
quirements: (1) seven years of
Teal estate or business experience,
five years of which must haye in-
volved field inspection and ap-
Praisal of real estate, and (2)
either (a) four more years of the

above experience, or (b) bache-
Jor's degree, or combination of
fa) and (b), Fee $5. (Priday, Jan-

mary 23)

6267. SENIOR REAL ESTATE
APPRAL $6,088 to $7,421.
One vacancy at NYC. Require-

Museum Job Open
To High School Grads

ALBANY, Jan. 5 — Museum
echnical apprentice applications
must be in by Friday, January 23.
The job pays $2,316 to start and

joes up to $3,118 after five years.

ie only requirement ts high
school graduation.

The job involves collecting bird,
mammal, fish and reptile speci-
mens, preparing specimen study
skins and arranging skeletons for
museum exhibits. A museum tech-
nical apprentice also does casting
and tmhodeling of animals, plants
and rocks in wax, plaster and
other materials, and collects leaves,
‘asses, Moss and soil.

The written exam will include
mature, science, art and history
Questions, and judge familiarity
with tools and methods used in
wood, metal and plastic work

‘The job is in Albany.

Apply to the State Department
ef Civil Service, 270 Broadway,

ments: (1) four years of real

estate or business experience, three

of which must have involved fleld
inspection and appraisal of real
estate; and (2) either (a) four
more years’ experience, one year
of which must have involved the
field inspection and appraisal of
real estate experience, or (b)
bachelor’s degree, or (c) equiva-
lent combination of (a) and (b),
Fee $5, (Friday, January 23).

6268, DIRECTOR, BUREAU OF
PLANNING, $8,350 to $10,138. One
vacancy at Albany fn the Depart-
ment of Commerce. Requirements:
(1) bachelor’s degree; and (2)
five years’ experience in research
or administrative work relating to
planning and zoning problems;
and (3) three more years’ exper-
tence or 30 graduate credit hours
plus two more years’ experience, or
satisfactory equivalent. Open to all
qualified U. 8. citizens, Pee $5.
(Priday, January 23),

6269. ASSOCIATE
TECHNICIAN, $6,088 to $7,421,
One vacancy in NYC, Require-
ments: (1) bachelor’s degree, with
specialization in some phase of
public administration, and (2) two
years’ experience in research or
administrative work related to
piannin. problems; and (3) three
more years’ experience or 30 grad-
uate credit hours plus one more
year's experience, or satisfactory
equivalent, Open to all qualified
U. S&S. citizens. Fee $5. (Priday,
January

6270. SENIOR PLANNING
TECHNICIAN, $4814 to $5,938.
One vacancy at Albany in the De-
partment of Commerce. Require-

PLANNING

tion, or (c) equivalent eombina-
‘tion of (a) and (b), Fee $4, GPri-
day, January 23),

6283. MUSEUM TECHNICAL
APPRENTICE, $2,316 to $3,118,
One vacancy in State Museum,
Albany. Requirements: gradua-
tion from high school or secondary
level vocational school, Fee $1.
(Friday, January 23).

6281, ASSOCIATE SOCIOLO-
GIST, $6,088 to $7,421, One va-
cancy at Albany, Education De-
partment. Requirements: (1)
master’s degree in sociology, so-
cial psychology or cultural an-
thropology; and (2) two years’ ex-
perience in sociological research;
and (3) either (a) three more
years of experience in sociology,
or (b) doctoral degree in socio-
logy, social psychology or cultural
anthropology, or (¢) equivalent
combination of (a) and (b), Fee
$5. (Priday, January 23),

6282, SENIOR SOCIOLOGIST,
4,964 to $6,088. One vacancy at

iyracuse, Department of Mental
Hygiene, Requirements: (1) mas-
ter’s degree in sociology with €
semester hours im psychology;
and (2) two years’ experience as
& sociologist. Fee $4. (Priday,
January 23),

6279. SENIOR RESEARCH
SCIENTIST (SOCIAL PSYCHO-
LOGY), $6,088 to $7,421. One va-
cancy at Syracuse, Department of
Mental Hygiene. Requirements:
(1) master’s degree in psychology
or social psychology with 6 semes-
ter hours in sociology; and (2)
two years’ experience in public
opinion polling or analysis or so-

ments: (1) bachelor’s degree in] (3) efter tay these mare coareat
gome phase of public administra-| psychologist experience or (0)

fence in research or administra-
tive work related to planning and
zoning problems; and (3) one
more year's experience or 30
graduate credit hours in public
ministration, municipal govern-
ment, or zoning and planning, or
satisfactory equivalent. Fee
(Friday, January 23).

6183. ASSISTANT IN ELEMEN-

TARY CURRICULUM, $4,964 to
$6,088. One vacancy in Albany.
Requirements: (1) 30 graduate

hours in education, and (2) one
year's experience in elementary
education plus participation in
projects dealing with elementary
curriculum programs; and (3)
either (a) two more years’ exper-
fence in elementary education, or
(b) doctoral degree in education,
or (c) equivalent combination. Fee
$4, (Friday, January 23.)

6278. ASSOCIATE IN ELE-
MENTARY CURRICULUM, $6,038
to $7,421. One vacancy at Albany.
Requirements: Same as No. 6183
bove; plus (a) credit toward an
advanced degree for training in
(1) above; and (b) two years’ ex-
perience in elementary education
in an administrative or super-
visory capacity, Fee $5. CPriday,
January 23).

264, CORRECTION INSTITU-
TION TEACHER (ARTS and

pCRAFTS), $3,411 to $4,212. One

vacancy at Westfield State Farm,

Department of Correction, Re-

quirements: bachelor’s degree plus

State certificate to teach arts and

grafts, Fee $2. (Priday, January
)

of Correction, Requirements
bachelor’s degree plus State ce:
tificate to teach physical educa-
tion, Fee $2. (Friday, January 23)

964 to $6,088, One vacancy at Al-
bany, Education Department. Re-
quirements: (1) mj

ministration; (3) anyone of thes
either (a) one more year's expe!
fence or (b) 30 additional grad-
wate hours im institutional food
administration, nutrition educa-
tion or home economics educa-

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
America’s Leading Newsmag-
azine for Public Employees
LEADER ENTERPRISES, INC.
97 Duane St.. New York 7, N. ¥.
Felephone: BEckman 3-6010
Entered as second-class matter
October 2, 1939. at the post of-
fice at New York, N. ¥, ander
the Act ef March 8, 1879,
Members of Audit Bureau of

Cireulations,

NYC, or State Office Building, Al-
bany, N.Y, a

Subscription Price $3.00 Per
Year, Individual copies, 160,

6280, ASSISTANT IN SCHOOL
LUNCH ADMINISTRATION, $4,-

ter's degree
in institutional f administra-
tion, nutrition education, or home
economics; and (2) two years’ ex-
Perience tn imstitutional food ad~

three years’ experience of teach-
ing, or research in psychology or
sociology, or (c) doctoral degree in
psychology or social psychology,
or (d) equivalent combination of
(a), (b) and (ec). Fee $5. (Friday,
January 23).
6208. (reissued)

“. TECTOR, Department of Conser-

vation, $2,771 to $3,571. Positions
in all counties except Orleans and
Schenectady, Present vacancies:
one each in Cortland, Greene,
Nassau, Oswego, Rockland and
Tompkins. Candidates must have
been residents of the county in
which they seek appointment for
at least four months preceding the
exam date, Requirements: 21 to 36
years of age; license to hunt and
fish for one year within the Iast
ten years or satisfactory evidence
of interest in wildlife conserva-
tion, and either (®) two years of
college with courses in wildlife
management, forestry or the na-
tural sciences, or (b) high achool
graduation or equivalent and B-
cense for three more years of in-
terest as described above, or (e)
equivalent combination of training

and experience. Fee $2, (Friday,
February 6)
6271. ASSOCIATE PLUMBING

ENGINEER, $7,754 to $9,394. One
vacancy in Albany. Requirements:
() high school graduation or
equivalent; and (2) either (a)
bachelor’s degree im engineering
and one year's architectural or
engineering drafting experience
in plumbing design, or (b) mas-
ter’s degree in mechanical engi-
(Continued on page 5)

i "JANIE" DOLL |
COUPON

JANUARY 6, 1953

LIBRARY COUPON

JANUARY 6, 1953

16.

MESLERNSSSSS:

4. Chanpin.

weeee

Tecsday, January 6, 1988 5

Latest Eligible Lists

STATE
Open-Competitive

DISTRICT HEALTH orriceR
1. Oppenheim, D. A. Stapteton . 69000

%.,Brosd, Robert H. Ithaes .... 87000
ASSISTANT IN EDUCATION OF
HANDICAPPED

+ Palevaity, Joseph, Bit
lich, “Rmanuel, NYC

aaeeeee

PLATE SHOP FINISHING)
O'Connell, Thomas J, Werdepert 64000
™ - 2000

1. Kehoe, Daniel J, Seaford
ASSISTANT BUILDING STRUCTURAL

1

.

3 erter, Arthur, Buffalo

4. Brogan, Philip 2.. ‘Syracuse

5. Gardner, Robert C. Peckaki

©. Little, Russell H.. Syrscuse .. 1.815

7. Inckwon, Donald 8, Wantagh |. 78700

SENIOR ON-THEJON TRAINING

REPRESENTATIVE

1. Kisin, Gerad. Bhkiyn

2 Fr John M. Oneida...

2 Jonevh By Bylyn |.

4

‘

6

7.

®

.

19,

i

12
is

Morris, Joseph A
Morgan. Francis &
Topp, Wiliam F..
Golthere, Prank

Patricia, Alfred J..
Cowin, Bdith M
Warman, Joep.
Meyers, Henry it

Woodaide
Weve

Grou, Thomas B
Goldeteln, Hyman A.
Bleanor A. Broax .-75230
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF NURSING
(PsvemiAaTRicy
trade, NYC... 89000

Adams, Richard A.,

Sisgo00

Vrana, Stanley Ti. Blaavett
Georke Tigeono

STATE
Promotion
AEOCTATE BUILDING STRUCTORAS
ENOINERR,

Prem.) Public Werks,

1. Devane, Thomas A. Albany Sis
at’

%. Cox, John 3. Albany
8. Benway, Perey L., Albany |...
RESEARCH ANALYST (PUBLIC FL
NANCE
(Prom.), Division of
tive

1, Williams, Jeanne B, Albany ..89688
%. O'Brien, Austin RB, e088
APSISTANT COMPENSATION CLAnag |
EXAMINER,
(Brom.), New York Office, State Tneuranee,
Fund, Department of Labor.
Jacobs, Morrie, L 1 City
Goodman, Milton L., Bklym
Meyer, Philip M.. Rronx
Givner, Seymour B., Bien
Slater, Willinm J. Woodside
Stevit, Irvine, Bkiyn tee
Tannenbanm, Jennie. Foret Te
Lessen, Samuel, Bklyn “
Galperin, Lillian, Biiyn
Leibowitz, Bernard, Bronx
. Hoffman. “Tose A. Mdyn
Pisani, Clementine. 1. T CH
Areste. Ann M.
Friedman, Tevine,
Dee, William J
Schaumon, Sylvia,
Block, Rana, Bktyn
Pinto, Mario, Wkiyn
Beaner, Belle,
Weindere. Loni
Marden. Jeanctte, Weyn
Jotter, Carol F., NYC
Widden, Georee T
Berlin, Ralph RN
Totchinekey, Miriam.
Font, Adeie C.

aaereeee

Brien
xye
WIG 50
Tiklyn

S255

Florrant| Flitabet®
Shenkom, Georer ¥
Wirrchbere, L. Bklyg 0.
Zohner, Muri La LT Oty

PEEP ERE LPL ELE

38, Hurwite, Laura, Bein
38. Papleno, ether, Bronx
87. Samovilio, F. Foret Hie
38, Konstam, Leonia. Trone
30. -

40. Bhiyn

4 Bk

2

43

“4

5. M.. Bilyn
4a. mma, Biden

a7 L Louise. NYC

48 Honora F.. Riien
49.

50.

Bt

a2.

58.

BM

BS,

54

87.

BA

59. Murphy.

40. Felz, Gladys,

1, Pieciano, Etvira A. Jocks
82. Rrandt, Shirley 8.) Bidyn
G3. Braithwaite, B. RB, Wilyn
64. Deutehman, Max, Bronx
5. Schwab, Shirley G.. NYC

STATE GUIDEBOOK FOR
PLEASURE BOATERS .
ALBANY, Jan. 5—A new guides
book designed to assist pleasure
boat operators in cruising the New
York State Barge Canal anc cone
necting navigable waterways
being made available by the State
Department of Public Works.

For meals or between meals

TREAT CRISPS.

GOLDEN BROWN POTATO CHIPS

Always Fresh @

At All Good Stores

e Alwayt Testy

RAYEX COUPON
JANUARY 6, 1953

As « service to applicants for

Meee eee nee ened

Under New Management

DELICIOUS VIENNESE'

- AMERICAN CUISINE

SANDWICHES
LUNCHEONS FROM 85c

———

r$O00OO0000O00000000$00'

MAT McCARFREY’S

232 STATE STREET }
ALBANY, N. Y.

Z Tuesday, January 6, 1953

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Page Three

Barge Canal
‘Aides Share
$1000 Award

ALBANY, Jan. § — Announce-
ment of the annual prize lock
wards for the 1952 season was
made last week by B. D. Tallamy,
Btate superintendent of public
works. Continuing a custom of 37
Years, the State Department of
Public Works will award nearly
$1,009 in cash prizes to’ 18 work-
ers engaged in the operation and
maintenance of three Barge Canal
Jocks whose scores for general
efficiency of operation were the
highest.
rive Locks

‘The prize locks are Lock 2 lo-
eated near Fulton on the Oswego
Canal (First Prize), Lock 4 near
Waterloo on the Cayuga-Seneca
Canal (Second Prize), and Lock
7 near Fort Edward on the Cham-
Plain Canal,

The Prize Locks were selected
omt basis of frequent inspec-
tions ‘by a committee headed by
Pred R. Lindsey, assistant super-
inten@ent of maintenance and
operation. In reporting their find-
ings © Superintendent Tallamy,
the commitiee said: “The lock
operating men are interested in
their work and do much to add to
x good relations with the pub-

All Are High

In congratulating the winners,
Mr, Tailamy called attention to

the fact that the efficiency of op-|

eration on the co
ed in the gen

was indicat-
ly high scores for
the entire 55 locks in the system.
Thirteen locks had scores above
98%. Forty-two were above 95%
while none were below 90%,

The Winners

Individuals sharing tm the
wards:

Lock 2, Oswego Canal, near Ful-
ten, $400.

Harry Ketchum, Pulton, Chief

Lock Operator, $120.

Louis F. Dziegicl, Pulton, Canal
Structure Operator, $87.

D. V. Conroy, artville, Canal
Btructure Operator, §

J, Mathews, Oswego, Canal
Btructure Operator, $24.

Warren Hendrick, | Martville
Chief Lock Operator (relic $5

Cc. C. Conroy, Martville, Canal
Btructure (relief), $38

William Fair Haven

Canal Structure Operator (relief),
$10.

©, Chapman, Liverpool,
ag Operator (relief)

Lebro,
Helper, $40.
Lock 4, Cayuga-Seneea Canal,
near Waterloo, $2
Russell L. O'
Falls, Chief Lock Ope’
Charles C. Ahrens, Seneci
CanalStyucture Operator, $69.
José¢ph E. Martin, Seneca Falls,
Canal» Structure . Operator, (re-
Nef), $36.
Hafry Hobkirk, Jr.. Lyons, Canal
@tructure Operator (relief), $3
Harvey L. Amidon, Seneca Falls,
Helper, $32
Lock.7, Champlain Canal,
Fort Edward, $192.
T. Brian Ds Port
Chief Lock Operator, $72
Mitchell Conners, Fort M
Canal Structure Operator, $43.
Bernard Durkeg,.Fort Edward,
Cangh Structure Operator, $48.
Thurman Humiston,

Canal
+ $4
Pulton, Canal

near

Edward,

ward,

Invaddition to the cash awards,
honafable mention was also m
ef th® next ten lock:

Oswego at F

« 9, Champlain at S:
Basin; Lock 19, Erie at Frankfort;
Lock 15, Erie at Fort Plain; Lock
6, Exie at Waterford.

Postal Maintenance

Men Dine and Dance

Local 204, National Association
@f Post Office and General Ser-

vices Maintenance Employees, held
Ma first annual buffet supper and
@ance recently at Naval Ship No,
126, Veterans of Foreign Wars, 154
Lawrence Street, Brooklyn.
Guests of honor were Edward A.
¥. Boutin, pre ent, John W.

Richardson, secretary - treasurer,
and Ross A. Messer, legislative
representative, of the national or-
ganization, and James Burke and
Andrew Macara of Local 58.
Local 204, organized in 1951, re-
morte { more » than 300 members,

Fort Ed-|as

| ments

The Wostchester County Competitive Civil Service Association hold:

om December 22 at Frits's Restaurant la White Ploins. it shows the dra’
of Fomil;

Hughes, employed by the

chester employee group. Lett te right le, the
jal Secretary Alexander J. Ligay,

ration;

ly and

| Welfare, Miss

Leonard Mecca, Finance, @ director of the organl-
Family oad Child Welfare; Director Rickard A. Files, Chil-
dren's Court; 2nd Vice President Delos J, McKinstry, County Penitentiary: Mise Hughes; J. Al
view president of the Civil Service Employees Association: Director J. Harold

jughes Is

Steares, 3rd

Keeler, Public Works; and

-at-Arms Solomons Leider, Grasslands,

Law Cases Affecting
Civil Service Employees

ALBANY, Jan. 5 — Below is a| was also appointed, effective on
summary of recent and pending | June 16, 1952, Shortly after peti-

law cases in which the State Civil)

Service Commission has been in-
volved. These cases deal with
principles that are important to
all public employees, local as well
as State and complete the listing
begun last week:

PIERET et al. r, HOUSTON et al
—Commenced July 10, 1952.
The petitioner has commenced
this proceeding individually and as
President of the Association of
New York State Insurance De-
partment Examiners, an unincor-
porated association comprising
Persons employed in the Depart-
ment of Insurance as examiners,
report auditors, appraisers, and in
related positions, to review a de-
termination by the Classification
and Compensation Appeals Board
which denied a request by peti-
tioner and others for the salary
reallocation of the various posi-
tions in the Insurance Department
to eliminate the present overlap-
ping in the salary grades in such
positions. The basis for petition-
er's claim is that the salary grades

of positions at various promo-
tional levels in the Insurance De~
partment are overlapping; that ts,

the minimum salary paid in one
position is less than the maximum
salary paid in the next lower posi-
tion in the promotional series, The
petitioner alleges that such over-
lapping is contrary to the require-
ments of the Civil Service Law
and that, therefore, the refusal of
the respondents to reallocate such

"| positions as requested, and there-

by to eliminate such overlapping,
was erroneous and illegal,

Present status: Pending argu-
ment at Special Term.

SHARF vy. CONWAY et al —
Commenced July 30, 1952.

In this proceeding, the petition-
er seeks a review of the final rat-
ing received by him in the writ-
ten examination for the position
of Title Attorney, held on October

r,| 6, 1951. It is the petitioner’s claim

that for several of short-answer
type questions in the examination
his answers are equally acceptable
he respondents’ key answers;
that for other questions, no ac-
ceptable or legally correct answers
were possible; that petitioner's
scores on two essay type questions
were improperly reduced by de-
ductions made for incorrect state-

in his answers to such
questions; and that the scores of
candidates were improperly re-
vised by the respondents for the
purpose of insuring the promul-
ation of an adequate eligible list.
petition concludes that the
action taken by respondents, with
to the foregoing matters,

was arbitrary, capricious and

MMegal.

Dismissed by order of the Bu-
Preme Court, Albany County, dat-
ed September 19, 19532.

WEXLER ¥. CONWAY et al —
Commenced August 8, 1952.

‘The petitioner in this proceed-
ing was a successful candidate in
an open-competitive examination
held om September 23, 1951, for
the position of Principal Case
(Publie Service), and

pointed, No, 3 declined appoint~
ment petitioner, being
among the next

eligibles, | Char Mew

tioner’s appointment, a@ clerical
error im the computation of the
final ratings of two other candi-
dates was discovered and correct-
ed, resulting in the raising of such
two candidates to ranks on the
eligible list above the rank held
by petitioner. Upon the discovery
of such error, the respondent State
Civil Service Commission directed
the rescission and revocation of
the petitioner's appointment on
the grounds that petitioner would
not have been reachable for ap-
pointment except for the error in
the computation of the other two
candidates’ final examination
scores, Thereafter, the petitioner
commenced this proceeding to
compel the respondents to approve
his appointment of June 16, 1952,
and his continued employment, as
&® permanent incumbent, in the
Position of Principal Case Analyst
(Public Service). The basis for
petitioner's case is s provision of
Regulation V(6) of the Regula-
tions of the State Civil Service
Commission, which permits ap-
peals from examination ratings
and which provides that, upon
such an appeal, Commission may
correct any manifest error mis-
take of marking or rating, “such
correction in any case to be with-
out prejudice to the status of any
person previously appointed as a
result of such examination.”

The Supreme Court, Albany
County, ruled that since no ap-
peal was involved here, the afore-
mentioned regulation which is op-
erative only “on formal written
appeal submitted by the competi-
tor” is not a bar to the rescission
of petitioner's appointment. The
Court also noted that the same
regulation provided that “This
provision shall not be held to pre-
vent the commission from correct-
ing an obvious clerical error at any
time during the life of an eligible
list.” It was held that the error
involved here was not an error in
judgment, but rather a ministerial
error defeating the judgment of
the Commission and frustrating
the mandate to enter names of
eligible persons “in the order of
their final earned ratings on ex-
amination,” and, therefore, the
Commission's action directing the
rescission of petitioner's appoint-
ment was valid and proper. The
proceedings were dismissed by an
order date September 19, 1952.

Present status: Appeal to Appel-
late Division, 3rd Dept., pending.
FOY et al v. CONWAY et al. —

Commenced August 15, 1952.

‘The petitioners were candidates
in the open competitive examina-
tion, heid in November, 1950, for
the position of Court Stenographer
in the Supreme Court, First, Sec-
ond and Tenth Judicial Districts,
and received various ratings, all
passing, im the training and’ ex.
perience portion of such examina-
tion. In this proceeding the peti-
tioners contest the ratings of their
training and experience, and seek
to compel the Commission to re-
vise such ratings upwards. The
basis for the petitioners’ claims is
their allegation that the training
and experience rating scale, em-
ployed by the Commission in this
examination, was arbitrary and
capricious im that it prescribed
less credit for experience as &
tm the courts of the
York and as & re

porting stenographer in various
city and other governmental
agencies than that which was
granted for experience in the
County Courts in the First, Second
and Tenth Judicial Districts and
as a CAF-9 reporter in the federal
governmental service. The peti-
tioners allege that experience in
the various city courts, in which
they are official court stenogra-
phers, is more closely related to
the duties of Court Stenographer
in the Supreme Court than any
other type of experience except
actual Supreme Court experience
and, consequently, it t# alleged,
petitioners should have received
more credit for their experience
jn such positions. Petitioners also
allege that the Commission acted
in an unlawful, discriminatory and
capricious manner in consulting
with representatives of the New
York State Shorthand Reporters
Association, all of whom were offi-
cial court reporters in the Su-
eme Court in the County of New

ork, as to the method of rating
training and experience and in
refusing to permit representatives
of any other shorthand reporters
association te attend such con-
ference.

Present status: Awaiting deter-
mination in Matter of Simone y.
Conway, now pending before ref-
eree, which also Involves the ex-
amination for Court Stenographer.

COLLEGE STUDENTS SOUGHT
AS SCIENCE AIDES

‘The U. 8, Civil Service Commis-
sion is seeking student aides in
chemistry, physics, mathematics,
peer meteorology and engi-
neering, at $2,050 and $3,175 a

year,

College students are te be se-
lected for summer employment and
cooperative education. Jobs are in
Washington, D. C. and adjacent
counties in Virginia and Maryland,

Apply to the U. 8. Civil Service
Commission, Tth and F Streets,
N.W., Washington, D.

Highway
Force to Stay
On 40 Hours

ALBANY, Jan. 5 — The Civil
Service Employees Association,
which appealed on behalf of the
maintenance men in State high-
way service for a continuance of
the maximum 40-hour, five-day
week on & year-round basis for
these workers, has received advice
from the Department of Public
Works that this arrangement will
continue,

State Superintendent of Publie
Works Bertram D. Tallamy has
approved the year-round schedule
of the five-day, 40-hour week for
the maintenance forces.

Joseph P. Ronan, executive as~
sistant, in advising the Association

M.\of Superintendent Tallamy's ao=

tion, pointed out that the main=
tenance force has tremendous re-
sponsibility in ensuring safe travel
conditions at all times on the
State highway system, and hag
shown its appreciation of this re-
sponsibility by cooperation im
meeting the emergency calls with
willingness after regular working
hours, as is often necessary in bad
weather conditions.

Subject Te Call

The Association, which has bees!
constantly active in seeking im-
provement of working conditions
among field forces throughout the
State, pointed out that the high-
way maintenance force Is subject
to call at all times when inclement
weather or other unusual condi«
tions are present and has an ex-
cellent record of unselfish duty im
ministering to safety on the State
highways. The Association praised
the action of Superintendent Tal-
lamy with reference to’ establish-
ment of the sound weekly schedule
and stated that it was in line with
the fine interest in employment
conditions and cooperation tm
dealing with worker problems dis.
played in the

State Has Job
Opening for
Plant Inspector

ALBANY, Jan. § — A horticuk
‘tural inspector job with the State
Department of Agriculture and
Markets at Geneva will be filled
through a State civil service exam=
ination scheduled for February 14

Last date for applying is Janu«
ary 9.

Horticultural inspectors inspect
and certify nurseries, nursery
stock and farm products to assure
freedom from plant pests and dis«
eases, They also enforce quaran-
tines and regulatory requirementa,
Their salary goes from $3,571 te
$4,272 mm Sve annual increases,

Requirements
Candidates need either » bache+
lor’s degree in horticulture, entom<
ology, and plant pathology, or twe
years of college training in this
field and two years of experience

Purther
amination may be obtained by
writing the State Civil Service De-
partment, State Office Bulli
Albany, or by calling in person

offices of the State Employmen@

Buoy Light Tenders Sought
To Man Barge Canal Posts

InUpstate Cities; Pay $2,316

ALBANY, Jan. 5 — The State
Department of Civil Service is
seeking people to maintain buoy
Ughts, beacons, and other channel
markers in the State Barge Canal

system.

Three openings are availeble in
Albany and one in in ‘Buffalo. The
State Civil Service Department
will accept applications for an ex-
amination for buoy light tenders
until January 9.

The buoy light tender jobs are
permanent civil service positions,
with salaries starting at $2,316 and
rising to $3,118 im five annual in-
creases.

Tn addition te and Buf-
falo, the buoy Mght tender jobs
are also found at Utica, Syracuse,
and Rochester. Although there are
now mo vacancies at the latter
three locations, the current ex-
amination may be used to = any

as a mechanic repairing
engines, or am equivalent com-
bination of this

ination to determine if they
the specified medical

nation may
ing the Department of Civil
vice, State Office Building,

or by visiting in person offlces
the State Employment Service,
__Page Four

crvin SERVICE LEADER :

=e Tuesday, January 6, 1983,

2000 Office Worker Jobs
To Be Filled; Posts Are
Permanent; No Experience

ALBANY, Jan. 5—About 2,000
permanent State civil service jobs
for office workers will be filled
through an examination on March
21.

Applications may be filed any
time up to February 9.

There are no education or ex-
perience requirements for the jobs
which are in offices, hospitals, in-
stitutions, parks and schools
throughout New York State. Start~
ing salary is $2,180 with five an-
nual increases leading to a maxi-
mum $2,984. Candidates must be
residents of New York State and

will have to pass a written clerical
aptitude test.
Excellent Opportunities
Titles to be filled from the tests
are clerk, account clerk, file clerk
and statistics clerk, According to
the Civil Service Commission,
there are “excellent promotional
opportunities” particularly for ac-
count clerks in State institutions.
Lists of successful candidates
will be established in early Sep-
tember with appointments made
soon after. As a result of similar
examinations held last year, all
candidates who made the eligible
lists were offered State jobg.

Where to Apply

Application forms may be ob-
tained in person from State Civil
Service Department offices in Al-
bany, Buffalo, and Rochester, and
from all local offices of the New
York State Employment Service
outside New York City. In New
York City they may be obtained at
270 Broadway, Manhattan, and
from offices of the State Employ-
ment Service at 1 East 19th St.,
Manhattan, and 25 Hyatt St., St.
George, Staten Island. Mail re-
quests should be addressed to the
State Department of Civil Service,
State Office Building, Albany, N. Y.

Chapter Activities

Central Unit

Barge Canal

MEMBERS of the Central Unit
of the Barge Canal chapter of |
CSEA met recently at Baldwins- |
ville and elected the following of-|
ficers to serve for the coming year:
President, Joseph Grieve, Minetto;
vice-president, S. Axtell, Mart-
ville; secretary-treasurer, Millard
Hawthorne, Fulton; delegate
Joseph Grieve, Minetto, and
Harry LaVere, Savannah; alter-
nates — Millard Hawthorne, Ful-
ton, and A. Fischette, Clyde.

Sing Sing |

PERSONNEL NEWS and notes
from Sing Sing chapter, CSEA:

The chapter is glad to hear that
Capt. Fred Vetter is convalescing
at home after undergoing an oper-
ation at the Ossining Hospital,
and hopes to see him back soon,

Congratulations to the Sing Sing
pistol team on its victory over the |
Department of Water Supply po-)
lice on the Sing Sing pistol range.
‘This is the second victory of the
year in as many competitions for
the new members of the West-
chester County Police Pistol
League. The team for this match
was represented by Sgt. W. Byrne,
Ployd Moore, M. DeSimone and J.
Panelli.

Pat McCawley is convalescing
nicely after undergoing an opera-|
tion at the Ossining Hospital on |
Tuesday, December 16.

V. J. MeQueeney is back after |
rectiperating from a leg condition. |
Glad to see you k, Met

Employees were glad to ereet|
Fd Parthemore. Ed suffered a sort
of breakdown recently. It's heart~
ening to see his jovial face around
spreading good cheer as usual,

Hearty congratulations to Mr.
and Mrs. J. Panelli, who were)
blessed with the arrival of a brand |
new baby daughter.

Belated condolences to
family of William Cribbins, ye
died recently. Cribbins was
former employee of Sing Sing tie
many years,

Members of the CSEA chapter's
entertainment committee, Gus
Westphal, Joe Pesik and others,
are happy to announce that tickets
for the annual New Year's Eve
party were all sold. ‘The commit-!

‘Strong Plans

|ble changes in the State

| monsters"
|tion and the public relations job

i
the|

tee predicted that the affair would)
be a magnificent success, Happy
New Year to all! |

Chapter President Martin Mul-
cahy reminds all members to fill|
out the information requested on
the cards each member received, |
concerning the chapter's Widows
Pension Fund. Please return them
promptly to the Widows Pension
Fund chairman, Pete Kellard. |

‘Set by P.A.
‘Albany Group

ALBANY, Jan, 5 — The Capital
District Chapter of the American
|Society for Public Administration,
Albany, has outlined its program
for the first half of 1953.

After a meeting on “Program
Planning and Control” this month,
\the chapter will play host in Feb-
lruary to ASPA President James M.
Mitchell, U, 8. Civil Service Com-|
mission member. Mr. Mitchell will
take part in a panel discussion on

the future of civil service reform, |
Retirement
In March a discussion of possi-

Retire-
ment System is planned. At the
April meeting a discussion of con-
ferences and conference techni-
|ques will be held. The month of
| May will feature the annual chap- |
ter dinner with awards to out:
| standing State employees

Recent chapter meetings have |
included discussions on the impact |
of organized citizen groups on pub- |
lic administration, “mechanical
and public administra-

in state government.

The Capital District Chapter is
the second largest ASPA chapter
n the United States with about
400 members. ASPA is an organi-
zation devoted to “the advance-
ment of the art and science of
public administration.”

Employees in other areas of the
State who are interested in or-
ganizing or joining a chapter
should contact Donald Axelrod,
|Bnapter, of the Capital District

hapter, at Division of the Budget,
State Capitol, Albany.

Fredonia State

Teachers College

AT A RECENT meeting of Fre-
donia State Teachers College
chapter, CSEA, the following of-
flcers were elected to serve for the
coming year: ident,
Patrie Kenneth
Howard; secretary, Alva M. Keen;
treasurer, William J. Chalker.

Psychiatric Institute

NEWS OF the Psychiatric Insti-
tute chapter, CSEA:
Mary Shea, nursing department,
is recovering from a recent opera-
tion.
Caesar Fragiacovio, kitchen,
out becaure of iliness.
Jack Matulat, elevator depart-
and Ruth
chology

is

department,

P:
have returned to work after being!

on sick leaves.

Mae Barnett and John Bujosa,
dietetic department, are on vaca-
tion.

Vera Stevenson, dietetic depart-
ment, has returned to work after
a visit to Canada.

Congratulations to Alice Trel,
O, T. department. She heads the
recently-issued occupational ther-
apist eligible list.

Citizens Union Offers
Legislative Program

The Citizens Union will press

for enactment of election reforms|

and party organization controls
by the State Legislature, said
President Milton M. Bergerman.

Th legislative program in-
clude:

1, Forfeiture of the public-paid
part of pension benefits of retired
Rublic employees who refuse to
testify before a Grand Jury con-
cerning their official conduct, or
are found guilty of crimes ¢on-
nected with their public work.

2, Obligation of party officers to
testify when called by a Grand
Jury on penalty of removal from
office.

3. Requirement that judges’ sec-
retaries must be lawyers and that
party officers shall not be em-
Ployed on court staffs.

1953 GOVERNMENT JOBS!

Start As High As $3,795.00 a Year

MEN — WOMEN

Be Ready when next New York, Bronx, Long Islan ,
New Jersey and Vicinity examinations are held

Prepare Immediately in Your Own Home

Rearmament Program has created
Thousands of Additional Openings.

Veterans Get 5,
Full

cial Pi

hocasssscisasiacazs

articulars and 32-Page
Book on Civil Service FREE

Now you have the best opportunity in many years
to get a big-pay U. 8. Civil Service Job with gen-
erous vacations, sick leaves, retirement pensions
and other benefits, Fill out and mail coupon to-
day! Or call at office—open daily 9:00 to 5:00
Learn how you can prepare at home to get
onco! the many excellent pobs open NOW!

ACT TODAY

‘eference fush

(2) Free

FRANKLIN INSTITUTE

(not Gov't Controlled)

Dept. W-56, 130 W. 42 St., N.Y. 18

0
full deserip

ney gerd free of charge (1) a

ion of U, S, Government Jobs;
Copy of a astrated 82-page books
Job"; (3)

me how to

(4) Te
Jovernment Job,

Ag

Apt. Ne.

s
Minlay 1—-W rite oe Print Plainly

-- ——

Lawrence |

Montgomery, |

|day, January 31.

| Yates, Allegany

|tauqua, Delaware,

Graduate Pro

gram Offers

Advanced Training Courses
In Public Administration

ALBANY, Jan. 5 — Six new
courses will be included in the
second semester schedule of this
year's Graduate Program in Public
Administration, in Albany, Regis-
tration starts January 26,

Courses being offered for the first
time are Personnel Counseling in
the Public Service, Government
and Labor Management Relations,
Seminar in New York State Gov-
ernment Administration, Financial
History of the United States Since
1865, Survey of Public Law, and
Correctional Administration.

Classes Begin February

Classes begin during the first
week in February and wind up the
last week in May. Bach class meets
one evening a week for two hours,

A Public Relations course is one
of four being repeated from prev-

fous years, Others are Compara«
tive Personnel Administration, Ree
search and Thesis Direction, and
@ continuation of the class in In«
troduction to Public Administra~
tion,

The Graduate Program in Publie
Administration is offered in Al~
bany by New York University and
Syracuse University in
tion with the State University 08
New York. College graduates may
complete requirements through 1€
for their Master of Public Ad-
ministration degree, and may
work toward a doctoral degree,
The Program also accepts other
well-qualified persorfs in its classes.

Detailed information about the
courses and registration forms
may be secured from the Graduate
Program office in the Law Li
of the State Education Building.

School District Exams

To Be Held

_Non-teaching jobs in large va-
y, in 54 different titles, will be
filled by school districts through-
out the State from open-cpmpeti-
tive exams to be held on Satur-
The last day to
apply was on Friday, December
19. Office, custodial, phone op-
erator, bus driver and lunchroom
jobs are included.
List of Exams

The exam number, title, loca-
tions of the position, and starting
pay are given, and the list, publi-
cation of which began last week,
is herewith completed:

6718. SUPERINTENDENT OF
BUILDIN Various school dis.
tricts, in Cortland, Rensselaer,
Schenectady and Suffolk counties
$4,000 to 100.

6749. SUPERINTENDENT OF

BUILDINGS, Union Free School
District Ni Township of Cheek-
towaga, Erie County, $4,000.

6750. ERINTENDENT OF
BUILDIN' [; ee School
District . 14, Township of}
Hempstead, Woodmere Public
Sch au County, $6,000.

1, SUPERINTENDENT OF
BUILDINGS, Central School Dis-
trict No, 1, Township of Lewiston,
Niagara Coun! $5,250 to $6,675.

67 TYP! , Various school
ssau, Suffolk and
counties, $1,200 to

TYPIST, Various school
districts in Herkimer, Jefferson,
Madison, Monroe, Montgomery,
Niagara, Onondaga, Ontario, Or-
ange, Oswego, Rensselaer, Rock-
land, oga, Schenectady,
Steuben, Sullivan, Warren, Wayne,
Broome, Cattar-

augus, Cayuga, Chautauqua, Clin-
ton,

Delaware,
Pranklin,

Dutchess,
Genesee

Erie,
and

6754. TYPIST, Various school
districts in Albany, Cayuga, Chau-
Erie, Herkimer,
Onelda, Onondaga, Tompkins,
Warren, Washington and Wayne
counties, $2,000 to $3,000.

6755. SENIOR STENOGRA-

Jan. 31

PHER, Central School
No. 1, Township of Chi
ton County, $3,180.

6756. SUPERINTENDENT OF
BUILDINGS, Union Pree School
District No. 5, Township of Hemp-
stead, Nassau County, $5,000.

6757. STEAM FIREMAN, Vari-

ous school districts in Erie, Mon-
roe and Suffolk counties, $3,000 te
$4,000.
6758. TELEPHONE OPERA-
TOR, Various school districts im
Nassau, Rockland and Westcheste
er counties, $1,200 to $2,000.

6759. TELEPHONE OPERATOR,
Union Free School District No, 6,
Township of North H.mpstead,
Manhasset Public Schools, Nassau
County, $2,500,

6760. TELEPHONE OPERATOR,
Union Free School District No.
3, Township of North Hempstead,
Roslyn Public Schools, Nassau
County. $2,340.

676 ENIOR LIBRARY
CLERK Various school districts
in Nassau and Niagara counties,
$2,000 to $3,000.

istrict
Clin-

Highway Trainee Jobs
|Pay to $3,410 a Year

Highway engineer trainee jobs,
at $3,175 and $3,410 a year, are
now open with the Bureau of Pub-
lic Roads of the U. 8, Department
of Commerce. Vacancies are in
Washington, D. C., throughout the
country, and a few overseas.

Three years of college training
are required for the $3,175 joby
and a bachelor's degree, or ite
educational and experience equive
alent, for the $3,410 post.

Apply to the Board of U. &
Civil Service Examiners, Bureau of
Public Roads, De parineees oes ae
merce, Washington 25,
later than Tuesday, PouniMry ey

ve you been rei
LEADER: interesting new,
Civil Service Newsletter® | Y¢
find it on page 6. Make ie must
reading every week.

WORLD'S FINEST

ve ed

2 2 @ tio
upon request.”

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LTucsilay, January 6, 1953

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER in Svs .

__ Page Five

STATE AND COUNTY EXAMS NOW OPEN

STATE
Open-Competitive
‘(Continued from page 2)
Reering, or (c) eight years of gen~
eral experience and one year of
ten experience, or (d) five

Be cape experience, or
Xe e equiva nt combination of (a),
), (co), and (d); and (3) State
Hcense to practice engineering and
six more years of specialized ex-
Perience with two years in super-
visory capacity, Fee $5, (Friday,
February 6).

6272. SENIOR PLUMBING EN-
GINEER, $6,088 to $7,421. One
vacancy in Albany and_ one in
NYC. Requirements: (1) Same as
No. 6271 above; (2) same as No.
6271 above; and (3) State license
to practice engineering and four
more years of architectural or en-
gineering drafting experience in

lumbing design. Fee $5. (Friday,

bruary 6),

6273. JUNIOR PLUMBING EN-
GINEER, $4,053 to $4,889. Two
vacancies in Albany, Department
of Public Works, Requirements:
«) Same as No, 6271 above; (2)
game as No, 6271 above. Fee $3
Priday, February 6).

15. ASSOCIATE DENTIST
SI {H), $7,039 to $8,469,
cancy in Albany, Depart-
‘Health, Open to all quali-
‘e §. citizens. Requirements:
State‘license to practice den-

istry of eligibility for one; (2)
two years’ experience in general
practice of dentistry, one of which
May have been as interne; and
(3) either (a) one year, within

10 years, of experience in
epidemiological studies and/or
dental research projects, or (b)
one year postgraduate course in
public health, or (c) equivalent
combination of such training and
experience, Fee $5. (Friday, Feb-
ruary 6).

6277. JUNIOR BUILDING
ELECTRICAL ENGINEER, $4.053
to $4,889, One vacancy in the De-

tment of Public Works, Albany.
Requirements: (1) high school

graduation or equivalent; and (2)
either (a) bachelor’s degree in
electrical engineering and one

ar's experience In the prepara-
ion, inspection, and checking of
electrical layouts on building
Plans, or (b) master’s degree in
electrical engineering, or (c) eight

Years of engineering experience
and one year of the above exper-
Jence, or (d) five years of the abo’
experience, or (¢) equivalent com-
bination of such training and ex-
perience. Fee $3, (Friday, Feb-
ruary 6).

6276, ASSISTANT BUILDING
ELECTRICAL » $4,964

to $6,088. Thre with
two more expected,
artment of Public
any. Requirements:
277 above and, in addition, two
more years of experience in_ the
‘eparation, inspection, and check
Ing of electrical layouts on build-
ing plans. Fee $4. (Friday, Feb-
ruary 6).
6284, 5 JUNIOR VALUATION

ENGINEER, $4,053 to $4,889. One
vacancy fn Albany and one in
NYC imithe Department of Public
Service Requirements: (1) two
years of a college course in engt-
Reeringy and (2) either (a) two
more years of college with a bache~
lor's in engineering and
‘one year's experience in engineer-
ing, or (b) four years of engineer
tng experience im valuation, de-
@ign, construction, maintenance,
@r operation of electric, gas or
water utilities or similar proper-

» (c) -equivalent combina~
tion such training and exper-
eg Fee $3. (Priday, February

rae ASSISTANT HYDRAU-
Lic NEER, $4,964 to $6,088,
‘One ghee expected in NYC,
Department of Public Service, Re-
quirements: (1) three years’ ex-
perience in hydraulic engineering
@r public water supply operation;
and (2) either (a) bachelor's de-
gree in engineering, or (b) four
more years of the above experience

er (¢) eight years of engineering
experience, or (d) equivalent com-
Dination of such training and ex-
Fee $4,

dence.

(Friday, Feb-

BIOLOGIST
to $4,889, One
in the De-
tment of Conservation, Open to

qualified U, 8, citizens, Re-
ements: (1) two years of col-
with courses in the biologi-
sciences; and (2) either (a)
‘lor’s degree plus two years’
@xperience in fish conservation or
years of graduate study, or

Six years’ experience in fiah
@onservation, or (c) equivalent
Bembination of such training and
Fee GPridas, Heb-

mary 8,

6286. SALES REPRESENTA-
E FOR THE BLIND, $3,411 to
112, Two vacancies in NYC, De-
partment of Social Welfare. Re-
quirements: three years’ experi-
ence, of which two years must
have been in sales work Including
some bookkeeping and responsi-
bility for cash receipts and one
year must have been in saies pro-
motion and organization work, Fee
$2. (Friday, February 6).

6287, HEAD OFFICE MACHINE
OPERATOR (TABULATING),
$4,359 to $5,189. One vacancy in
Albany, Education Department,
and one in State Insurance Fund,
NYC. Requirements: five years’
experience in operation of IBM
tabulators and auxiliary equip-
ment, two years of which must
have been in a supervisory or ad-
ministrative capacity. Fee $3, (Fri-
day, February 6).

6288. BRIDGE REPAIR FORE-
MAN, $4,359 to $5,189. One va-
eancy at Babylon in the Depart-
ment of Public Works, Require-
ments: eight years’ experience in
construction, reconstruction, or
maintenance of bridges with two
years in supervisory capacity. Pee
$3. (Friday, February 6).

6289, CORRECTION INSTITU.
TION VOCATIONAL INSTRUC
TOR (SEWING), $3,411 to $4,21
No written test, One vacancy at
Westfield State Farm. Require-
meni State certificate to teach
sewing trade; ninth grade or equi-
valent education; and five years’
journeyman experience in sewing
trade. Fee $2. (Friday, February
6).

6290. CORRECTION INSTITU-
TION VOCATIONAL INSTRUC-
TOR (BEAUTY CULTURE), §3,-
411 to $4,212. No written test. One
vacancy at Westfield State Farm.
Requirements: State certificate to
teach beauty culture; ninth grade
or equivalent education; and five
years’ journeYman experience in
beauty culture, Fee $2. (Friday,
February 6.)

6209. ASSISTANT ADMINIS-
TRATIVE FINANCE OFFICER,
$6,088 to $7,421. One vacancy at
the Albany office in the Depart-
ment of Education. Requirements:
() four years of specialized ac-
counting or auditing experience;
and (2) two years’ experience in
the supervision of an accounting
or auditing
(a) bachelor’s degree with 24
credit hours in accounting, or (b)
bachelor’s degree plus one more

year's experic in (1) or (2), or
tc) three more years’ experience,
or (d) equivalent combination of|
(3) (a), (b) or (ec). Pee $5. (Pri-
day, January 9)

6239. BLINDN PREVEN-
TION NT, $4,664 to
$5,601. One vacancy in NYC in
the Department of Si al Welfare,
Requirement ther (a) State
license to prac as @ registered
nurse, plus four years’ experience

in public health or school nurs-
ing, or (b) two years of graduate
study ‘n school
plus two years’ experience in
medical social case work, or (¢)
equivalent combination of (a) and
(b), Fee $3. (Friday, January 9).

6240, HEALTH PUBLICATIONS
EDITOR, $6,088 to $7,421. One
vacancy at Albany in the Depart-
ment of Health. Requirements:
(1) bachelor's degree; and (2)
three years’ experience in pro-
fessional writing including edi-
torial experience with one year in
the field of public health or medi-
eal science; and (3) either (a)
master’s degree in journalism,
English, or public health, plus one
more year's experience, or (b) two
more years’ experience, or (e)
equivalent combination of (a) and
(b), Open to all qualified U, &
citizens. Fee $5, (Friday, Jan-
uary 9),

6241. PUBLIC RELATIONS
AIDE, $3,571 to $4,372. One vi
cancy at Babylon in the Conse:
vation Departinent, Requirements:
school graduation or
diploma; and (2) one
year of public relations experience
involving extensive contact with
the public; and (3) either (a)
four more years’ experience, or
(b) bachelor’s degree, or (c)
equivalent combination of (a) and
(b), Fee $3, (Friday, January 9).

6243, IDENTIFICATION OF-
FICER, $2,771 to $3,571. Vacan-
cles: one each at Matteawan, Sing
Sing, and Woodbourne in the De-
partment of Correction. Require-
ments; (1) one year’s experience
in photography and fingerprint-
ing; and (2) either (a) high school
graduation, or (b) three years of
experience, or

ination

of
(Priday,

. | experience, or (b) two years’ ex-

aff; anc (3) either|

}in sanitary

of social work,|

TENANCE), $2,771 to A ted Sev-
eral vacancies in Albany, Utica,
Rochester and Watertown in the
district office of the Department
of Public Works. Requirements:
(1) one year's experience in keep-
ing time records, stock records and
clerical reports in a construction
company o: engineering office;
and (2) either (a) high school
graduation, or (b) two more
years’ experience, or (c) equiva-
lent combination of (a) and (b).
Fee $2. (Friday, January 9.)

6245. OFFICE MACHINE OP-
ERATOR  (TABULATING-IBM),
$2,180 to $2,984. Several vacancies
at Albany and NYC in State de-
partments. Requirements: either
(a) three months’ experience in
the operation of IBM sorters, ac-
counting machines, and other
types of tabulating equipment, or
(b) completion of course in the
operation of the above machines,
Fee $1. (Friday, January 9).

6246, TITLE EXAMINER, $6,-
088 to $7,421. Ten vacancies
Albany in the Department of Law.
Requirements: (1) two years’ ex-
perience in a law or real estate
office or in a title company in
work involving search, examina-
tion, proof or closing of titles to
real property in the State; and
(2) either (a) five more years’

perience as an attorney engaged
in proceedings involving title to
real property, exclusive of landlord
and tenant or negligence cases, or
(ce) equivalent. Candidates must be
admitted to the State Bar, Fee
$5. (Friday, January 9).

6250. SENIOR PHYSICAL
cH 'T, $4,964 to $6,088, One
vacancy at the Saratoga Springs
Authority in the Department of
Conservation. Requirements: (1)
bachelor’s degree with specializa-
tion in chemistry; and (2) three
years’ experience in physical
chemistry laboratory work in-
cluding experience in spectogra-
phie and chemical work involving
independent research in spectro-
chemical analysis and radiation:
and (3) either (a) two more years’
experience, or (b) master’s degree
in physical chemistry of biochem-
istry, or (ce) equivalent. Pee $4.
(Priday, January 9).

SANITARY CHEMIST,
to $4,889. One vacancy at
Albany in the Division of Labora-
tories and Research, Department
of Health. Requirements: (1)/
bachelor’s degree in chemistry or
sanitary selence; and (2) either
(a) one year of laboratory work
science including
chemical and biological examina-
tion of water, sewage and indus-
trial waste, or (b) master’s degree
in ‘sanitary chemistry, or (c) |

equivalent, Fee $3. (Friday, Jan-
uary 9).
6252. HISTOLOGY TECHNI-

CIAN, $2,771 to $3,571, Three va-
cancies in NYC in the Department
of Mental Hygiene. Requirement,
either (a) two years’ experien
in the preparation of tissue speci-
mens for microscopic examination
and high school graduation, or
(b) course in histology plus one
year’s experience in histologic
work in a laboratory of general
histology or neuropathology, or
(c) equivalent. Fee $2. (Friday,
January 9),

6256. JUNIOR PHYSICIAN, $4,-
512 to $5,339. One vacancy at
Sing Sing Prison at Ossining in
the Department of Correction. Re-
quirements: (1) medical school
graduation plus State license to
practice medicine; and (2) either
(a) one year or nine months’
accelerated internship, or  (b)
equivalent, Fee $3, (Friday, Jan-
uary 9),

6249. COURT OFFICER AND
COURT ATTENDANT, First and
Second Judicial Departments, $3,-
500 ta $4,500, Openings in the five
boroughs of NYC, Nassau, Suf-
folk, Dutchess, Putnam, West-

chester, Orange and Rockland

either
three years’ experience in
court work in the State, or (b)
three years’ experience as a law
clerk or public law enforcement
officer, or (c) law school gradua-
tion, or (d) equivalent, or (e) ad-
mission to the B.r of the State.
Candidat's must be legal resi-
dents of the above counties. Fee
$3. (Priday, January 9),

6263, CAMP SANITARY AIDE,
$265 a month. Several vacancies
in field positions upstate. Require-
ments: either (a) high school
graduation plus six months’ ex-
perience as a sanitary inspector or
investigator; or (b) one year's ex-
perience as a seasonal sanitary
inspector or investigator, or (c)
two years of a four-year college
course with specialization in en-
gineering or sanitary science, or
(a) certificate to teach biological
or physical sciences in secondary
or higher school in the State, or
(e) bachelor's degree with six
eredit hours in general science,
biology, physics or chemistry, or
() equivalent combination of
above. State driver's license. Fee
$1. (Friday, January 9),

6259, HORTICULTURAL IN-
SPECTOR, $3,571 to $4,372. One
vacancy in a field position with
initial appointment at Geneva in
the Department of Agriculture and
Markets. Requirements: (1) two
years of college training in horti-
culture, entomology and plant

tholog: and (2) either (a)

helor's degree in one of the

above, or (b) two years’ exper
fence in orchard, nursery or other
horticultural crop work, including
Plant pest and disease detection
and control, or (¢) equivalent
combination of (a) and (b). Fee
$3. (Friday, January 9.)

6260. STEAM FIREMAN, §$2,-
611 to $3,411, Forty-four vacan-
cies at departments and institu-
tions throughout the State, Re-
quirements: one year’s experience
in the operation and/or mainte-
nance of either (a) high pressure
steam boilers, burning oil, coal or
gas, or (b) low pressure steam
botlers, burning oil, coal or gas,
plus course in fundamentals of
stationary engineering. Fee $2.
(Priday, January 9).

6261. BUOY LIGHT TENDER,
$2,316 to $3,118. Three vacancies
at Albany and one at Buffalo in
the Department of Public Works,
Requirements: either (a) one
year’s experience in the repair or
operation of gasoline-driven mo-
tor boats, or (b) two years’ ex-

| perience as a mechanic in the re-

pair of gasoline engines, or (¢)
equivalent combination of (a) and
(b). Fee $1, (Friday, January 9),

6258. BIOPHYSICIST, $4,053 to
$4,889. One vacancy in NYC at
the State University Medical Cen-
ter. Requirements: (1) bachelor’s
degree with specialization in bio-
logical or physical sciences; and
(2) either (a) one year’s exper-
ience in laboratory rescarch in
biophysics, or (b) master’s degree

in physics or biophysics, or (e
(Continued on page 1)

DELEHANTY Students Have Achieved

An Unequalled Record of Success...
im Our Nearly 40 Years of TRAINING SPECIALIZATION

COURSES APPROVED FOR KOREAN VETERANS
Visit A Class Session Of Any Course Ae Our Guest

Tues.

Persons Interested Are Ii

Preparation for Promotion to

STENOGRAPHER - Grades 3 and 4

ALL CITY DEPARTMENTS
Class of Our Course on "General

AN. 6th at 6 P.M. at 115 E. 15:
ited te Attend As Our Goo
Owe Secretarial Divisions In Manhatt

conducting special closses for the “Perfor

st.

and J

New Class Now Forming for Promotion to

CLERK -

Inquire for Complete Details

Grade 5

Residents of M. Y. City and Na:

Preparatory Ci

Applications Now Open — Close Ja

COURT ATTENDANT

SUPREME COURT — Ist, 2nd be 10th J
GENERAL SESSIONS & COUNTY URT!

81 oi igibte
Entrance Salary up to $5,065 a Year

Officicl Written Examination Hos Been Scheduled for Feb. 14th

os Feature a Complete Review

Be Our ony on MON, or THURS. ot 5:45 or 7:45 P.M.

iat Districts
‘S within New York
Suffolk Counties ell

w of All Exom Toples

for Open Competitive and Promotional Exams for

JR, ACCOUNTANT — N. Y. C. Depts.

This exomination is tentatively scheduled for March 21st
CLASS MEETS TUESDAY AT

@ PATROLMAN
Also Special Gym Classes

Complete Preparation for Writte
® SANITATIONMAN

Physical Tests for

for FIREMAN Candidates

Park Foreman
Surface Line Operator
Correction Officer

New Classes Now Forming
A

Inquire for Full Details

jtomobile Eaginemen

Maintainer's Helper
Trackmon

@ SOCIAL INVESTIGATOR

WATER SUPPLY EMPLOYEES
PURCHASE 2500 GIFTS

About 2,500 gifts, purchased with|
donations from employees of the|
NYC Department of Water Supply,|
Gas and Electricity, were distrib
uted to hospitalized veterans at
Kingsbridge, Fort Hamilton and
Kings Park Hospitals during the|
holiday season,

Contributions totaled $1,500,
with which William B, Vincent,
chairman of the drive, purchased
gifts valued at more than $4,000,

‘The annual event was sponsored
by American Legion Post No. 1008,
composed of employees of the NYC
department.

STATE

Classes Also Meetin

@ COLLEGE OFFICE ASSISTAN

@ CLERK - Grade 2 — Salary Range $2,110 te $2,720

Now for

— $3,260 a Year te Start

Dey & Eve. Classes in
Monhattas and Jamaice

@ STENOGRAPHY

@ TYPEWRITING

@ SECRETARIAL DUTIES

Attractive Positions Ploatitel

“Nearly 40 Years of Service

Executive Offices
115 E. 15ST..N.Y.3
GRameroy 34900

Qpen-Com titi
ASCE A TNDUMTETAL OREM.
(QARMENT SHOR)

he DELEHANTY %narceuts

Careers of More Than 450,000

OPYION BOURS: Mon. to Fu.: © om. to 0:00 pa Sat. to 2 Dm

Vocations! Treising
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Pie Six

Crvin SERVICE CEADER

Ciwil Sewiee

° LEADER

America’s Largest Weekly tor Public Employees
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations
Published every Tuesday by
LEADER ENTERPRISES, INC.
97 Duane Strood, New York 7, M. Y. BEckmon
Jerry Finkelstein, Publisher
Maxwell Lehman, Editor and be Penge of
5. J. oe Executive Editor Morton Yarmon, General Manager
ei N. Hl. Mager, Business Manager
2c Per Copy. Subscription Price $1.31% te members of the Civil
Bervice Employees Association, $3.00 to non-members.

TUESDAY, JANUARY 6, 1953

32-6010

Salary Information Is
No Military Secret
our topflight New York Times reporters, in a pane! on

F government public relations moderated by the editor
@f the Civil Service LEADER, made the point that the
worst fault of public officials in their relations with the
press is attempting to hide news. The result is frequently,
they said, exactly the opposite of what the official in-
tends. News is not a private commodity in a democratic
mation. It belongs to the people whom it concerns. Only
when they have full, swift access to the facts can they
make proper decisions.

Moreover, the hiding of news is rarely a successful
wperation. What happens is that the data dribbles out
fm bits and pieces, gets camouflaged by rumor and hear-
pay, and ends by confusing the people rather than afford-
fag them honest information.

All this is a prelude to the fact that a great big
pecret is being made of a salary survey prepared by New
Work State officials, The information, which concerns every
public employee, is being held close to the chest, as
though it were some deep military secret. It shows that
employees in private industry are doing, on the average,
mearly 6 percent better than State employees in the raise?
Mhey’ve been receiving. This newspaper asked an official
ef the State Civil Service Commission if there is a single
good reason why the employees of New York State ean-
met have the information. No good reason was given, ex-
wept that “it was agreed” the material should be “eon-
dential.” Many private employers had been eanvassed
for salary facts, and they might not want the data made
public, this official said. On top of that, however, The
LEADER was informed that a digest of the results — also
“eonfidential” — doesn’t tell the salary schedules by in-
@ividual employers. Neither report has been made avail-
able.

And just how confidential are the data anyway? The
report went out to some 200 participating employers. It
must have been seen by at least 50 other persons. Ap-
parently it’s no secret from anybody except the people
‘who are going to be affected by it — the State employees.

Civil Service Doesn't
Know How fo Recruit

ne of our readers, im a letter to the editor published

in last week's issue, made the excellent suggestion
that civil service commissions faced with recruitment diffi-
eulties, as all of them are, should put more xip into their
Promotional and exploitation methods.

The commissions find themselves m a predicament
wot all of their own making. Disappointingly small sum-
bers of candidates compete im exams limited to men in
the military age brackets. The utter impossibility of
Gilling some jobs in the professional and scientific fields,
wach as engineering and medicine, faces some government
agencies.

The task to be done falls inte the sphere of sales-
manship, one in which civil service commissions don’t
wenerally shine. Also, civil service commissioners should
take a more determined stand om the need for adequate
malaries to attract talent,

When commissions intend to hold a highly special-
feed type of exam they frequently eal! in experts to assist
them, but when it comes to recruitment, which is in the
fame category, they tend to assume that they alone can
ide this job extremely well.

The weual commission methods are for normal re-| Vi

feuitment, but they don’t cope with an emergency.
‘The commissions should experiment with igh-
Rewersd assistance, The regults may purprise them.

APTITUDE TEST

1. Distinguish an aptitude test,
‘an Intelligence test and an achieve-
ment test.

2. Why do not civil service
exams constitute IQ measure-
ments?

3. What are spatial relations,
and what Is skill with them sup-
Posed to indicate?

4. How is it possible to measure
Personality in terms of intelli-
gence?

5. A fixed star is one that never
moves. Right or wrong? Explain.

6. A star always twinkles but a
planet never does. Right or wrong?

Explain,
ANSWERS

1, An aptitude test is intended
to show whether a candidate is
suitable for training for a particu-
lar job; an intelligence test probes
awareness and information, as a
part of aptitude testing; an
achievement test determines
whether one already is capable of
filling a particular job.

2. Because IQ tests compare
past average performance at se-
lected ages, while in civil service
tests, no past average perform-
ances or present ages figure.

3. Spatial relations are the study
or comparison of objects in space.
Candidates are asked to compare
objects, as a test of mechanical or
manual ability.

4. Personality may be measured,
because most intelligent persons
also are industrious, conscientious,
emotionally stable, eareful, and
full of curiosity. The least intel-
Ngent ones are likely to be boast-
ful, unfair, nervous, wasteful,

5. Wrong. Pixed stars move fast,
but do not appear to move relative
to one another.

6. Wrong. The twinkle ts not an
infallible index. A star is a sun, is

burning, and twinkles. A planet is}

cold, but may give off the reflected}
Nght of the sun. Atmospheric par-
ticles, and other causes, may make
a planet appear to twinkle.

lz ie
CIVIL SERVICE
| NEWS|
— ,

NEW RULES and regulations, not Papers shifting of cme
Bloyees to better jobs, and other devices of an expiring Administration
are in evidence in the Federal government, But the Attorney General's
office is leaving to Herbert Brownell, the designee for that post, the
filling of all vacant jobs, as well as jobs that will become vacant be~
cause they're the patronage type. There's a job freeze on now in the
Attorney General's office, in central and district offices, including
U, 8. Attorney staffs.

THE PROPOSED new layoff plans of the U. S. Civil Service
Commission are an example of a controversial project voted just bew
fore the new Administration is to take office, although with an effece
tive date nearly a month later. That will give the new Administration
an opportunity to cancel the change. Behind the adoption of the new
Plan ig the fact that the Democratic majority in the Commission
wants to show its former Republican member, Arthur Flemming, now
& member of General Eisenhower's committee to improve governmen#
operations, that the former Commissioner's disfavor of present en«
actment of the plan was an incentive to speeding it up, Mr. Flemming
said the plan might draw the criticism that it served political pur=
poses, though he admitted that actually there was no political motivae
tion.

ANOTHER EXAMPLE was the insistence by the U. S. Bureau
rnal Revenue on closing the deal with Grand Central Palace,
space to house all the presently scattered district offices in NYC) Mi
said that a half-million-dollar project like that could wait
new Administration had an opportunity to pass on it.

FRIENDS of the man who'll head the new Classification Bi
of the NYC Civil Service Commission not only congratulated him, but
some of them offered commisseration, One fellow said, mimicking @
toastmaster, “I give you your friend and my friend, and a man whe
soon will be nobody's friend — Sidney M. Stern.”

THE RETIREMENT of Frank Caseot as clerk of records, Surro«
gates Court, New York County, recalls the days of his appointment
when the Hall of Records was newly opened. Tiffany Studios pro’
most of the decorations and furnishings. The crystal chandeliers,
marble fireplaces, and solid mahogany bench and trim made court=
|rooms look like millionaires’ abodes. Mr. Cassot noted the contrast
| with the present decor and, for various reasons, preferred the im«

terior as it is now.

Other States Protect
Firefighters; Why Not NY?

eart ailments of various types, incurred while one is

a member of the fire-fighting force of a government
department, are rated as occupational diseases in North
Carolina, while Florida, also by statute, rates tuberculosis
and heart ailments both, if they result in part-disability,
as having been suffered in line of duty.

In North Carolina, cities may adopt their own plans
of earrying out the intent of the Legislature.

The Associated Fire Fighters of Massachusetts sue-
eeeded in having that State enact a law, which also makes
a heart condition presumptive evidence that it was in-
eurred in line of duty. To controvert the presumption, the
empliyer would have to show proof to the contrary,

Connecticut has the same kind of measure, relating
te total or partial disability being presumed in heart cases.

O.K. When Joining

These laws, and supporting medical testimony, are
being used by the Uniformed Fire Officers Association
and the Uniformed Firemen’s Association, both of NYC.
to obtain legislation to the same effect statewide in New
York. Thus the presumption would apply to fire-fighters in
NYC employ, as well as those working for the State’ or
local governments throughout the State.

The fact that firemen have no heart trouble when
they join the department, and that so many get it in the
course of their employ, has led doctors to analyze the
reasons. The excitement of the work, insufficient oxygen
when fighting a smoky fire, excessive strain and exposure,
for instance, are cited by Dr. Hughes W. Day, of Kansas
City, who addressed the Fire Department Inspectors’ Con-
ference in Memphis, Tenn.

“We can never reduce the mortality of heart disease
im the fire service if we allowed damaged hearts to do
heavy work,” he warned, favoring light work or retire-
ment for disability.

The facts point elearly to the necessity of passing the
heart bill which firefighters are introducing in the 1953
New York State Legislature.

MAYOR Vincent R. Impellitteri has made a good
selection in appointing Dr, Charles Muzzicato a NYC
Civil Service Commissioner. Dr. Muzzicato, former State
Senator, was an aggressive and enlightened legislator, and
took an active part in civil service legislation,

WHENEVER eligible lists are established for filling

upper-bracket jobs which are filled by provisionals, road-| 248

blocks against the appointments from the list are not

»|Or mon = compe’

Comment

WANTS POLICE-FIRE
WIDOWS’ PENSIOY RAISED
Editor, The LEADER:

Some aid has been given te |
those retired public employees
whose pensions are below the sub= |
sistence level. But what has beem |
done for the widows of NYC polices
men and firemen killed in line of
duty? Nothing. They get the same
$600 a year now as they got years
ago, when $600 would buy nearly
twice as much as it does now,
You've heard about the forgottem
man. Well, now you're hearing
about the forgotten woman,

POLICEMAN’S WIDOW
SAYS NYC CAN LEARN
MUCH FROM STATE
Editor, The LEADER:

I've often wondered why NYG
doesn’t pattern itself more after
New York State, and haye overall
rules and regulations, afdvalso @
schedule of salary grades inte
which any salary of a competitive
ive calor
would be fitted. The State has
overall attendance rules, separate
for departments and institutionss
also a classification divistomgwWhich
NYC is about to start; also @ little
clearer demarcation between the
Civil Service Department,
does the administrative work, and
the Civil Service Commission, thas
makes rules and exercises jupisdice
tional powers, The salary appeals
method in the State is something
that it is hoped NYC will have,
as has been promised by Presi
dent Paul P. Brennan and Budges
Director Abraham D, Beame.

CONRAD WHITTLE
janhattan
COMBINED ACTION ASKED
IN CIVIL SERVICE DRIVES
Editor, The LEADE:

T'm sure that civil service emm=
ployees will accomplish more if
they will combine their efforta,
Some instances of such unity have
recently been shown, but there
should be more. Civil

all
strength to acl
officials listen mi
there's numerics
the arguments.

A. L. FORSHAW
Brooklyn, N. %

WAR VETERANS TO MEET
The New York War Veterang
in Civil Service will meet ‘Thurse
day, January 8. at 6:30 PM. af
West 4th Street, NYC, Pree
es

ion will be discussed,

unusual, eg., NYC Departments of Health and Hospitals.

veteran preference
uaa are aaa’ Per
al

Tucsilay, Jarmary 6, T9SS

“CIVIC SERVICE LEADER -

Continuing ifs policy of making new friends, The Civil Service Leader

offers another startling value—

PROTECTION FOR A RAINY DAY!

at approximately half the original cost.
$3.50 plus 15¢ for mailing and two coupons from the Civil Service LEADER

Rae

ee
ih

pe

tok

Milady’s ‘‘self-starter’’ umbrella

that opens automatically —
with a press of the button

This one’s not for lending! You'll want to keep this umbrella
for yourself, or give it to good friends. It's smooth... in the
way it slips open with just a flick of your finger on the button
at the handle; it's smooth . .. in fashion highlights, contrasting
shades of leather on the handle and carrying strap, extra long
steel rod for outstanding slim lines; it's smooth ... the way

Page Seven

‘“‘The Cover-All’’ for Men

an oversize mailman's umbrella
that's extra light

“Neither rain, nor snow™ ... will dampen you or your spirits
when you're keeping dry under this “mailman's™ out-sized um-
brella. It's big enough to cover you and all your packages and
a couple of friends as well. Light weight ... . although it's aa
oversize 36-inches when open ... the frame Is all rust-proof
aluminum, and the curved handle of dark wood makes it easy
to carry either open or closed.

And the price is the same as the lady's umbrella, only
$3.50 plus 15-cents for mailing and handling, with two coupons
from the Civil Service LEADER.

Now you need never get wet on a rainy day — with two um-
brella coupons from the Civil Service LEADER and $3.65 ($3.50
plus 15-cents for mailing and handling) either of these um-
brellas, the big, big “mailman's™ umbrella for men, or the
self-opening women's umbrella, is yours.

$1 RESERVATION PLAN

Or, Hf you prefer, we will reserve either umbrella up
te twe months for you, Just send $1.00 with your
mame and address and say “Save an umbrella for
me.” Don't forget te specify which type you wish.

i BOX 700

Civil Service Leader
97 Duane Street
New York 7, N. Y.

the acetate cover keeps you dry om the wettest of days.

Never before at this low, low price (look around, you'll

find the price tags reading $8.00 or more) has such a sturdily
constructed, yet fashionable appearing umbrella been offered
anywhere,

Please sond me ........ men's umbrellas; lady's
umbrellas. | enclose $3.65 jee plus |5-cents for mailing a
handling) and twe umbrella coupons from the Civil Service
LEADER for each umbrella. (Subscribers may substitute their
wrapper label for twe coupons). If seat to New York City, add
10c for sales tax.

NOMe .occcccccccerereceeeeseneneseeeeeeeeeeneeeee
Address cccccercccccsnreneeseraeeseeeneeeeseeeese .
TCITY cc ccceeccececrecceccsersensessnssseesemenes ‘

eit, At BEAR, Gk AOR RRA

188
Civic

SERVICE

LEADER

taal

Wiese aeaaday “

Last day to apply appears at
end of each notice, unless the
exam is open until further notice.
2-1-26 ENGINEERING
DRAFTSM. 2,950, Jobs at N.
Y¥. Naval Shipyard and other Fed-
eral agencies in NYC, Nassau,
Buffolk, Rockland and Westchester
counties. Requirements: two year's
drafting experience as a carto-
graphic, engineering or statistical
Graftsman; one year’s experience
may be met by work in allied en-
Gincering fields, or as physical
acience, engineering or cartogra-
hic ald, technician or mechanic,
involving use of drawings or maps;
high schoo] and college training
may be substituted for some or all
of the experience. Forms $7 and
6001-ABC. (No closing date)

2-39-2 (1952). GAGE CHECK-
ER, $1.52 an hour. Jobs at New
York Ordnance District, 180
Varick Street, New York 14, N. Y.
Requirements: one year's exper-
fence and/or training in the use
@f basic precision measuring in-
struments. Form 60 and 6001
ABC, (January 31)

SUPPLY CATALOGER, $3,410
te $5,060. Jobs in Brookiyn. Re-
Three to five years’

ftems of property, including the
ability to read and interpret blue~
ints, achematic diagrams, manu-
uurers’ catalogs or specifica-
tions. Experience must have been
im electronic equipment; electrical

equipment; building and con-
struction materials; metals and
alloys, plumbing material and
equipment; marine hardware;
@eck and hull fittings; ehemicals;
paints and varnishes; tools and
machinery; general hardware and
metallic fastenings; anti-friction
and plain bearings. Send filled-in
forms to Recorder, Board of U. 6.
Civil Service Examiners, U. 8.
Raval Supply Activities. New York,
Ord Avenue anc 29th Street,
Brooklyn 32, ™ Y. Gio closing
ete.

BLACKSMITH, $14.40 to $16.24
& day. Jobs in N. Y. Naval Ship-
Brooklyn, Requirements:
years’ apprenticeship or four
yous’ experience. Send filled-in
ms to Board of U. 8, Civil Ser-
Vice Examiners, N. Y. Naval Ship-
yard, Brooklyn 1, N. Y.

ABLE-BODIED SEAMAN, §3,-
386 to $3,675, Jobs are aboard
maval transports operating out of
WYC. Requirements: Coast Guard
endorsement as able-bodied sea-
man; age, 18 to 55, Bend form 60)
to Employment Branch, Indus-|
tial Relations Division, Military
Bea Transportation Service At-
Iantic, First Avenue and 88th
treet, Brooklyn #0, M. ¥. io
@osing date)

N, Y. and N. J.

2-44 (52). SHORTHAND RE-
PORTER, $3,795 and $4,205. Jobs
mm various Federal agencies in
MYC, Rockland and Westchester
eountics, N. ¥., and Bergen, Essex,
Mudson, Passaic and Union coun-
ties, NM. J. Requirements: written
test consisting of dictation for five
minutes st 160 words a minute
for the $3,795 job, and 176 words
& minute for the $4,208 job. GNo
hosing date.)

KITCHEN HELPER, $2,420.
Jobs are restricted by law to per-
sons entitled to yolerans prefer-
pce as long as they are available,
Other may apply but will be con-
sidered only the absence of
ference eligibles. Jobs are at
eterans Administration Hospital,
Worthport, WN. Requirements:
Ability to read and write English.
Send filled-in forms to Board of
U. & Civil Bervice Examiners,
Veterans Administration Hospital,
Borthport, L. 1

BSTENOGERAPHER, $2,750 to
178 and TYPIST, $2,500 to §2,-
60. Jobs located im NYC and
Vicinity. Requirements: Eligibility
fm written exam. Bend filled-in
to director, Becond U. 8.
Civil Bervice Region, 641 Wash-
ington Btreet, New York 14, N. ¥.;
@ Board of U. 8 Civil Bervice
Examiners, U. 8 Naval Supply
Depot, Bayonne, N. J.

3-1-2 (52), MACHINIST, $1.84
en hour, Jobs at Watervilet, N. ¥,
Requirements: four years’ appren-
teeship or four years’ experience
im the machinist trade. Send forms
@0 and 5001-ABC to Board of U. 8,
Civil Service Examiners, Waterv-

let Arsenal, Waterviiet, N. ¥. (No
closing date).

2-18 (51), TABULATING
a ori OPERATOR, CARD
(ALPHA-

NE OPERATOR, $2,750 and
$2,950, Jobs are in NYC area, Re-
quirements: written test
three to six months’ experience.
Send form 5000-AB to Second U.S.
Civil Service Region, 641 Wash-
ington Street, New York 14, N. Y.
(No closing date).

2-8-4 (50), TABULATING MA-
CHINE OPERATOR, $2,950, Jobs
are in Bayonne, N. J. Require-
ments: written test plus from
three to six months’ experience
Send form 5000-AB to Board of
U. 8, Civil, Service Examiners, U.
8, Naval Supply Depot, Bayonne,
N. J. (No closing date).

2-8 (52). ENGINEER, $5,060 to
$7,040, Openings in aeronautical;
Aeronautical research, develo}

internal combustion power plant
research, development
sign; maintenance; marine; ma-
terials; mechanical; naval archi-
tecture; ordnance; ordnance de-
sign; safety; structural; welding.
Jobs in N. ¥. and New Jersey,
Requirements: four-year engi-
neering curriculum or four years’
experience, plus 1% to 3% years’
specialized experience. Send forms
57 and 5001-ABC to Second U. 6.
Civil Service Region, 641 Wash-
ington Street, New York 14, N. ¥.
(No closing date).

TOOL DESIGNER, $4,205 to
$5,060. Jobs at Watervitet, M. Y.
Requirements: three years’ me-
chanical drafting experience, in-
cluded or supplemented by six
months’ experience in the draft-
ing or manufacture of tools, jigs,
fixtures or gages. College courses
mmy be substituted for experience
up to three years. Send forms 67
and 6001-ABC to Board of U. 8
Civil Service Examiners, Water-
viet Arsenal, Watervilet, K. Y.
GAGE CHECKER, $1.66 an
hour. Jobs at Watervitet, MN. Y.
Requirements: two years’ exper-
jence tm inspection of gages or
two years of college plus one year
experience. Send forms §7 and
5001-ABC to Board of U. B. Civil
Service Examiners, Watervitet
Arsenal, Watervilet, M. Y¥. G¥o
closing date)

NATION-WIDE

The following ls = lst ef jobs
open throughout the U. 8 in the
field service of the Federal Gov-
ernment. Applications will be re-
eelved indefinitely, Age limits are!
18 to 62, but with few exceptions
don't apply te persons entitled to
veteran preference. The list of Jobs
identifies by code number the
place to send the filled-In applica-
tion, but the application blanks
may be obtained at the U. 8. Civil
Service Commission, @41 Wash-
ington Street, New York 14, N. Y.

The code pembers and ad-

1. First Oly Service Reston, Pest Ofice

Fourtconth Cly® Service Megion,
Commerce St, Daline 3, ‘Tex
Civil Service Examiners,
Air Force, UB Bide, ut
ond Main 9. Darton, Ohio

Ba Civil’ Bervice Bxaminars,
I) Shipyard, Havel Base,

Teneo the Fratagon, Washington, D.
Board of Civil Service Examiners,
UD. & Havel Gus Posters, Washington,

and) 9.

ment and design; Lye rape Ls e

automotive; ehemical; etvil; eon- isises  wiceien: erkaarle
struction; electrical; electronics; | pepts of the Army, air Foros, and Navy,
general; hydraulic; industrial; | 220 Post Office Bide. Orden, Utah

and de-| Pep

UE | cation and/or experience. Agr

Examiners, Boston Naval Shipyard, Bos
ton 20, Mans,

21, Hoard of Civil Service Examiners.
Chicseo Quartermarter Depot, 1819 W.
Pershing Bd., Chiengo ® I
22, Board’ of Civil Service Examiners,
Shipyard, Naval Base,

25 "Board of Civit, Service Examiners,
Rock Inland ‘Arsenal. Rock Island. Tl.
24. Board ef Civil Service Kxaminers,

‘§. Naval Ordnance Plant, Indiana
polls, Ind,

26. Recorder, Board ef Civil Service
Feaminers, Portemonth Naval Shipyard,
Portsmouth, N. HL.

20. Board of Civil Service Bxaminers
Armed Forces Andit Agencies, 67 Broad

Pxaminers,
. 1700

I Servier Examiners,

U, 8 Naval Aviation Oninance Test Ste

Won, Chincotearu

30. Board ef Ciel Service Examiners

e, Room 004
100s

Aye,

34, Board of Civil Service Examiners,

Maral Supply Depot, Bayonne, K. 4
Board of Civil Service Examiners,

Euset Sound Meval Shipyard, Bremerton,
Wann,

37. Board ef Civil
2861

Service
Van

Framiners,
Dyke BA.

‘ef Civil Service Examiners,
Sen Francisco Naval Shipyard, San Fran
aco 24, Calif
$0, Board of Ciel Service, Mraminern
Pieatinny Arsenal, Dover, N.

Ga. Beard, 6 Civil Service“ Busvinare

White Sande Proving Ground, Lae Cruces,
B. Mex

The list of jobs follows:
ORDNANCE ENGINEE!
Mex. ($5,060 to $7,040): Add)
46. Va. ($5,060 to $8,360):

dress 29.

ENGINEERING AID, $2,500 to
$4,205.—Jobs are in States men-
tioned below. Requirements: Ap-
propriate engineering ald exper-
Jence, including some experience
in the field of engineering applied
for. Pertinent high school or col-
lege study may be substituted for
all or part of the required exper-
fence, depending on the grade of
position. For jobs in specialized
engineering fields, in localities and
at salaries shown, send spplica-
tions as indicated below:

Ohio, Ind., Ky (Options: Aero-
nautical, Civil, Electrical, General,
Materlals, Mechanical $2,500 to
$4,205): Address 6.

Ohio (Options Aeronautical,
an, Electrical, General Mechani-
eal, $2,750 to $4,205): Address 15.
Oreg., Wash., Idaho, Mont. (Op-
tion: Civil, $2,750 to $4,205): Ad-
dress 11.

ENGINEERING DRAFTSMAN,
200 to $5,060.—Jobs are in
tes mentioned below, Require-
ments: Pertinent experience and
or education. Sample of work
8 x 10% inches. For jobs in places
and at salaries shown, send ap-
Plications as indicated below:
Calif, (Option: Aeronautical, $3,-
410): Address 12, Ohio, Ind., Ky,
$2,500 to $4,205): Address 6. N. Y.
($2,950 to $4,205): Address 40, N.
J. ($2,750 to $5,060): Address 39,
Wash., Oreg., Idaho, Mont, ($3,-
£10 to $4,205): Address 11. Ohio
($3,795 to $4,205): Address 15.
Ti. ($2,200 to $3,450): Address 23.
Va. (Options: Civil, Mechanical,
Electrical, $2,750 to $4,205): Ad-
dress 29.

SS
Ad-

FARM MANAGEMENT SUPER-
VISOR, $3,410.—Jobs are in Iowa,
Minn., Nebr,, N, Dak., 8. Dak. Re-
quirements: Major In farm man-
agement or related agricultural
science, or other appropriate edu-

egre 18 to 35, Send applications
to Address 17,

STAFF NURSE, $3.410.—Jobs
are in N. Y., N. J.. Mo, Kans.,
Okla, and ‘Ark. "Requirements:
Nurses training course. Must be
registered as @ graduate profes-
sional nurse, Send applications to
Addresses 2 and 9,

INVESTIGATOR, $4,205 to $5.
060.-Jobs are in Ala, Fla, Gi
6. C.,, and Tenn. Requirement
Written test plus 3 years of legal
or investigative experience or 4
years of college study, or member-

*» For $5,060 jobs, an

7 ao mecorder, Beant. ef Givi Service

ip in a
sedition) year of appropriate ex~-

.| plemental Form 217 to Address Me

| quirements:
ers, | experience

“| hour;

Tones Send Form 6000—AB to
Address 5.

JUNIOR SCIENTIST
Metallurgist, Electronic

and ENGINEER, $3,410 and $4,-
205,—Jobs are in places mentioned
below, bande arcade Pogo
and/or experience in

ag Macs Age limits ine 410
8 to 35. For jobs in places
i a salaries shown, send ap-
Plications as indicated below:

N. Y¥., N. J. ($3,410 and $4,205):
Send spolications and Supplemen-
tal Form 217 to Address 2.

Ohio, Ind., Ky, ($3,410 and $4,-
205): Send applications and Bup-

(Physicist,
Beientist

LABORATORY ELECTRONI
MECHANIC, $2,950 to #3 0:
LABORATORY ELECTRONI
MECHANIC (Instrumentation,
Microwave Radio, Radio), $3,795
to $5,060.—Jobs are in Va. Re
From 2 to 6 years of
which involved the
application of the theory, princi-
ples, and techniques of electronic
apparatus. Send application to
Address 29,

MACHINIST,

$1.62 to $2.11 an
$14.56 to $16.88 a day.-
Jobs are in places mentioned be-
low. Requirements: Completion of
@ 4-year apprenticeship or 4 years
of practical experience in the ma-
chinist trade. For jobs in places
and at salaries shown, send appli-
cations as indicated below: Rock
Island, Til. ($1.81 to $2.10): Send
Form 60 and Form 205 to Address
23. Ogden, Utah ($1.62 to $1.88):
Send Forms 57 and 5001-ABC to
Address 33. Ky., Ind. ($1.82 and
: Send Forms $7 and 5001-

es 34, 244. ©. C.
($14.56 to $15.84): Send Form 60
to Address 19. N, ¥., N. J, ($14.96
to $16.88; $1.84 an hour): Send
Forms 60 and 5001—ABC to Ad-
dresses 31, 35, 40. Idaho ($1.87 to
$2.11): Address 42.

AIRCRAFT ELECTRICIAN,
$1.78 to $2.06 an hour; AIRCRAFT
ORDNANCE MECHANIC, $1.78
to $2.06 an hour. — Jobs are at
Ogden, Utah, Requirements: 3
years of appropriate experience,
Address 33.

AIRCRAFT SERVICE ME-
CHANIC, $1.78 to $2.06 an hour.
—Jobs are in Utah, Requirements:
3 years of mechanical experience
in a repair establishment, includ-
ing 6 months in the overhaul and
repair of aircraft, Address 33,

AIRCRAFT SHEETMETAL
WORKER (Junior, $1.65 to $1.91
an hour; Journeyman, $1.81 to
$2.09 an hour).—Jobs are in Og-
den, Utah. Requirements: 18
months to 3 years of appropriate
experience including, for the jour- |
neyman level, 6 months of exper-
fence in aircraft sheetmetal work.
Address 33.

YTRAL

OFFICE

TELE-

work including 6 months on cen-

PRR

one F

Where to Apply for Jobs
In Government Service

U, 8.—Second

Regional

641 Washington Street, New dh bie

to 5,

rege oa also obtainable

Monday through Friday;
a post

Hours 8:30 to 5, excepting

West

All of foregoing applies to exams for — Jobs.
NYC—NY‘ Commission, 96

1, N.

Broadway, opposite

Directions
Rapid transit Ines for reaching the U. 8., State and NYC Civil
Service Commission offices Im NYC follow:

State Civil Service Commission, NYC Civil Service Commission—

IND
Aven!

Main Street, Rochester, N.

. 'C Civil Service

NYC Travel

trains A, C,
jue line to

or CC to
lyn Bridge;

nga er local a City Hall,

UD.

Civil
Christopher Street station.

Data
Both the U, 8. and the

filled.

-out forms by mail, In

enclose return postage. If app!

stamped, self-addressed 9-inch or larger envelope. The State accepts
postmarks as of the closing date. The U. 8. does not, but requires
that the mail be in its offiee by § p.m. of the closing date. Because
of curtatled collections. NYC residents should actually do their mail-
ing no later than 6:30 p.m. to obtain # postmark of that date.

NYC does not issue blanks by mail or receive them by mat! except
for nationwide tests, and then only when the exam notice so states.

The U. 8, charges no application fees. The State and the local
Service Commissions charge fees

Civil
X

37% Broadway, New York 7. N. Y., Tel.
Butldin;

Kgs ng two blocks north of City Hall, fust west of
the LEADER office. Hours 9 to 4, excepting Sat-

. 9 to 12. Tel. COrtlandt 7-8880.

‘¥C Education (Teaching Jobs Only)—Personnel Director, Board

of Education, 110 Livingston Street, Brooklyn 2, N,

3:30; closed Saturdays. Tel. MAin 4-2800.

U. B. Civil Service Commissi
pas . Y. (Manhattan), Hours 3:30
thoeed Saturday. Tel. WAtkins 4-1000.
offices except the New York, N. Y.,

39 Columbia

'» Thursdays and Fridays, 9 to 6.
Duane Street, New York

Y. Hours 9 to

‘Chambers Street; IRT Lexington
BMT Fourth Avenue local or

1 Service Commision—IRT Seventh Avenue local to| ¥:

by Mail
application blanks and recetve
by mail for U. 8. jobs do not
for Btate jobs, enclose 6-cent

at rates fixed by law.

tral

Address 18.

DE.
and
Sill,

priate education
and registration as a dental hy-| years
gienist. Address 43

ECONOMIST, $5,060 and

940.—Jobs are in Ohio, Ind., and
Ky. Requirements: Prom 6 to 7
years of experience in research «

analys

Jobs
Expe
more
ment, C
receivers. No maximum age Mmit,
Adiress 44,

E

EL

office telephone equipment,

NTAL HYGIENIST, $2,950
$3.175.—Jobs are at Por
Okia. Requirements: Appro-
or experience,

is. Address 6.

CTRONIC EQUIPMENT
RER, $1.90 to $2.19 an hour
, $1.69 to $1.95 an hour). —

are in Calif, Requirements:
rience or train
types of el

including tran)

ECTRONIC MECHANIG,
to $17.28 a day. —J
alif. and 8. C. Ri

INSTALLER, $1.64 to| Completion of 4-year apprentice-|ad, Va.. W. Va. N. C. ($3,410
$1.82 an hour,—Jobs require trayel| Ship or 4 years of practical ex-| and $4,205): Address 4 Ohio ($3,-
between Army Posts and installa-| perience. Send epplitations as in-|41@ to $5,940): Address 15. Ala.,
tions throughout the U, §, and) dicated below: B& C. ($1480 tol mis, Ga, 6. C., Tenn. ($3,410 to
overseas, Requirements: 144 to 3| $16.64): Address 22. Calif, ($16.09) $8360): ‘Address 5. Pa. ($5,060):
years of telephone communication | to $17.28): Address 38. Address 16, Rhode Island (Op-

ECTRONIC SCIENTIST, §3.-

¢|and/or technical experience.

410 to $5,940.—Jobs are in New
England and Ohio, Requirements:
Appropriate —_ college spas
n

addition, for jobs paying $3,825
and above, from 6 months to 214
of professional experience,

Age limits for $3,410 jobs:
35. For jobs in places and
ries shown, send applic
Indicated below: New Bngland
Btates ($3,410): Address 1. Ohio
($3,410 to $5,940): Address 15.

ENGINEER, $3,410 to $10,800.
—Jobs are in the States mention-
4 below. Requirements: Appro-
Tied college education and/or

hnical experience. In addition,

18 to 35. For specialized engineer-
ing jobs, in locations and at sala-
ries shown, send applications as
indicated below:

AERONAUTICAL ENGINEER;

tions: Power Plants, General, $4,-

Exams Now Open for U.S. Jobs in NYC

205 to $5,040): Address 41.
orig oni roy oa

Mont, Minn., Nebr., N. Dak., 8. Dak. ($3,
Bee ee ee’ te ‘eaaio): 410 to $5,060): Address 8. Ky.
‘Addiees it; Wash. Ores. Ind. ($3,410 to $5,040): Addres:
A oT ena tae gk 208s; [34 Ohio (83,410 to $5,940): Ad-
Sareea oe Gress 18. Pa. (85,060): Address 16.

: Kans. Mo. Okla. ($3,410 t0

AUTOMOTIVE
37.

te)
410 and $4,205) : Address 11, Md.,
($3,410 and

Va, W. Va, N.C.

CIVIL ENGINEER: Ark., Kans.,
Address

ENGINEER:
Mich. ($5,060 to $5,940): Address

$5,060):

05); Address 4. Ne Dak. 8, | Address 45.
., Nebr. Zowa, Minn. “g5.410
to $5,061 Addresses 8, 17, 27.
Ky. in. iadai0 to $5,080): Ad
Als, Fla, Ga, 8. C.,|Ohio, Ind,

Tenn. ‘ts. 410 to $8,360): Address
. Mich., A te he al os to $5,-
Address 1, 060

6. Ii.
940);

to $5,940): aeiavoun’ ?_

CONSTRUCTION

Md., Va., W. Va., N, C. ($3,410 and

ENGINEER:

$4,205): ‘Address 4. Ala, Fla, Ga,
B.C, Tenn. ($3,410 to Sager
Address 5. Ark., Kans., Mo., Oki

($4,205): Address

TL... Mich,

Wis, ($3,410 to $5,940); Address 7,

1.205):

Ores.

jaho, Mont, ($3,410 and
Address 11. Calif. ($3,410 & $5,-
: Address 12. Pla. ($3,410 to
Ohio ($3,410 | abo

$8,360): Address 32.

to $5,940): Address 15, Ark., Kans.

Mo,

to $8,360
|. Mex. ($5,060 to $8,360
060): Address f

22.

Address 45, Pa. ($5,
16. Ind., Ky.
Address 34. N. ¥.,

Okla. ($3,410 to $5,940): ‘Ad-
Al Ga.

. Tenn.

($3,410 to $5,940):
N, J. ($5,060 to

$7,040): Address 2. Tm, Mich., Wis.
($3,410 to $5,940): Address 7. Tex.
($5,060): Address 14.

ELECTRONICS
Md., Va.,

and $4.205

$4,205): Address 11,

Ww. en &

ENGINEER:
($3,410

Adare Lge
Wash,, Idaho, Mont. ( ($3,410 and

Ohio ($3,410

to $5,940): Address 15, Calif, Be -
410 and $4,205): Address 12.
Ala., Pla, 8. C., Tenn. Ts 410 10

360): Addresses 5,

Wi
Address 1.
N. Mex,
dress 45. Ark.,

$5,060): Address 1
($5,060 to $7,040):
($5,060 to $7,040):

‘Tex. ($3,410 to $5,060)
14, Calif, ($3,410):

($5,060) :
($5,060 and $5,940): Ad-

Kans., Mo., Okla.
$4205 to $5,940): Address®, Pa.

23. Til, Mich.,

is. ($3,410 to $5,060): Address 7
New England States

($4,205) :
Address 20.

Y., MJ.

Address 2. Va.
Address 29.

INDUSTRIAL tipi dad acta
Address

"Acidrean 12.

MARINE ENGINEER: Md., Va.,

W. Va.,
Address 4. MN. HL
and $4,205):
Address 25. Wash.,
Mont. ($3,410 and
dress 11, N. ¥,, N.
$7,040): Address 2.

MECHANICAL

and $4,205):

ENG:
Va, W. Va., M. C.
Address

N, C. ($3,410 and $4,205):

Mass. ($3,410

Address 1, ($5,060):

Idaho, Oreg.
$5,060): Ad.
J. (95,060 to

($3,410
Ores.

4.
Wash., Idaho, Mont. ($3,41¢ and

Requirements

sion last week for the stenog-
rapher, grades 3 and 4, and the
tlerk, grade 5, promotion exams,

Applications will be received in
the stenographer tests from Tues-
day, February 3 to Thursday, Fel
ruary 19, and the written tests

In the clerk promotion, the ap-
dlication dates are Tuesday, March
10 to Wednesday, March 25, while
the written test is set for Satur-
day, June 27.

Promotion exams are open only
to qualified present WNYC em-
ployees.

Clerk, Grade 5, Requirements

‘The clerk promotion test will be
held for all City departments, ex-
cepting the Board of Higher Edu-
cation, and separate departmental
eligible lists will be established.
There will be no citywide promo-
tion list,

‘The exam ts open to any win
hold grade 4 or grade 5 titles in
the City clerical service, except

clerk, grade 5, Thus stenographers,

will be held on Saturday, April 11, |

Cal

motes
must

says,

and
The

oma
and

an eligible title for at least st
months prior to January 27, 1963,
Before any eligible may be peor

for at least two years. This mini:
mum period becomes one year if
&n open-competitive list im the
same title exists, the exam nothee

Bere clerk, grade 5, eXame of
Record and seniority count 90,

given in one session.
‘The application fee ts $3 based

ndidates must have been i

d from the list, however, be
have been in an eligible tite

but there are no open-com-

the written test the other
entire written test will

basic salary range of $403

clerk, | separate, too. Titles in grades 2 or

3 of the clerical service are eligi-
ble, excepting stenographer, grade
3, and the six-months, two-years,
possible minimum of one year
as in the clerk test.

written, 25; performance, 25. The
Performance test will be at 100

stenographer, grade
ble. Record and seniority

over,

Requirements in, Clerk, Grade 5,
And Steno.Promotion Exams

were announced many holding other than
by the NYC Civil Service Commis-| #rade 5, titles may enter the exam
for purposes of change of tithe, @
get on a promotion list that moves
faster than would one in theif
present title,

Transportation. No

attendant,
Court;

dates for re-

., Wash.,
$5,060):

Del., Md.,

$8,360.
fo Frodo):

ments:

Address 35.

machinist,

Ky.

Four years

education may be
as much as 3 years of experience,

21.
Address 28.

POSITION CLASSIFIER,
205 to $5,060.—Jobs are in
Wis, Requirements:

Mich.,
bre experience or pial
ee and experience.

TOOL DESIGNER, $4,620,
Positions are in Ky, and Ind. Re-
quirements: Four years
lence in tool and die making,
I designing. or as ® precision
(This experience may
include apprenticeship). In addi-
9} Heo, ‘pplicants mrust have had at
Jeast 2 years of experience in de-
signing tools and dies. No maxi-
mum age limit. Address 34.

TOOL DIE AND GAGE MAK-

Mich.,

ACCOUNTANT AND AUDITOR
(Manufacturing and Processing
Cost), $4,205 to $5,940.—Jobs in
Requirements:
‘Three years of accounting exper-
fence plus from 1 to 3 years of
specialized experience im cost ac-
counting, Send applications as
indicated below:
New England, N, ¥., N. J., Pa,
D. C., Va., W. Va., MN.
“ “sd to $8,360): Address 26.
Mo., Kans., Ark.
to ry 360): Address 9.
Ohio,

Ind., ie
940): Address 6,
ORTHOPEDIC ‘TECHNICIAN

(Metals and Plastics), $2,950 to
asi ers are bs ' honing

(94,205
($4,205 to $5,-

G.| gage,” fuel,

and Nationwide

060): Address 11, Tex. ($3,410
Address 14, Iowa,

Address 39.

'|applications as indicated below:
N, J. ($1.92 to $2.22):
60 and 5001 to Address 39. Pa.
($1.84 to $1.92):
and 5001 to Address 16, Ill,
to $2.31): Send Forms 60 and
5001 to Address 23.

2-43-2 (52). AIR FORCE PRO-
CUREMENT INSPECTOR, $3,795
to $5,060, Jobs in NYC, Long Is -
and and Columbia, Dutches
Greene, Orange, Putnam, Roc!
Jand, Ulster and Westchester coun-
ties. Options in aircraft propeller,
aircraft instrument (including ©
tics), radio and electronic equip-
met, rircraft engine, tool and
lubricant and chemi-
cals; packaging, and material and
Se cn Requirements: 3% to

ive years’ general and specialized
experience, Jobs elsewhere also,
(No closing date).

342. GEOLOGIST, $3,410 and

205. For duty in the Geological

ey, Department of the In-
terior, and other agencies. Jobs are
i" | country-wide; & few in territories
and possessions. Requirements:
ge Positions, bachelor's degree,
‘luding 30 credit hours in geo-

to | ey and allied subjects, or equi-

PACKAGING TECHNOLOGIST

i

se MECHANIC, $1440 to

; |i San Prancisco, Calif, Require-
ef practical
experience in the trade. Send ap-
Plications to Address 38.

STATISTICIAN (Mathematical,

tronis,

ciated flelds, or = Master's degree
in an appropriate field, Additional
experience required for jobs pay-
ing $5,060 and $5,940. Appropriate

substituted for

of ex-

valent training; $4,205, foregoing
education, plus one year’s exper-
fence or one year of graduate

205 to $8,360.—Jobs in Chicago, study. Form 6000-AB. (Janu
rs PECIALE A ‘op a ary
$00" to $1,040. PACKAGING | 43. HIGHWAY _ ENGINEER
ipeStagt tag $5,060 and $5,940.— TRAIN E, $3.175 and Alo, Yor
c 3 y e - Bureau ublic
ments: education | Roads, Department of Commerce.

Jobs are country-wide; a few in
foreign countries. Maximum age
Umit, 35. Requirements: $3,175
Post, completion of at least %
credits required for bachelor’s de-

im civil engineering; $3,410,
elor’s degree in civil engineer-
ing or four years’ experience.
Form 6000-AB. (Pebruary 10,
1953).

344. ACCOUNTANT (COMPRE-
HENSIVE AUDITS), $4,205 to
sels ® year, Jobs are in the

meral Accounting Office, eoun-
tion | try-wide. Requirements: three

fa | youre, and nine months to six

Years’ experience in public ac-
counting er related fields of
finance and management. Forms
67 one §001-ABC. Gio elosing

333. MEDICAL RECORD LI-
BRARIAN, Grades GS-5 to GS-12,

, | $3,410 to $7,040, Requirements for

GS-5: either (a) college graduate
with 24 semester hours of organ
twed theoretical courses in the
medical record library science cur-
riculum combined with practice
training; or (b) one year of study
in medical record library science.
and either (1) three years of col-
lege education, ov (2) three years’

Question,
Please

AS AN open-competitive asphalt
worker ex: Sean to be Bele Be N EC,
and as I am an eligible on the
poops Hist In that title, will
the open-competitive test hurt my
chances of promotion in any way?
Will similar experience in the

*|same type of work in the armed

forces count In favor of those tak-
ee ie open-competitive test?

Answer — The open-competitive
test will in no way reduce your
Promotion prospects. In fact. the
holding of an open-competitive
test is an indication that the NYC
Civil Service Commission does not
expect to be able to fill all the
Prospective vacancies by promo-
tion and therefore turns to the
general public in an attempt to
make up the difference. The law
requires that jobs be filled by pro-
motion, so far as practicable, and
Promotion lists are always favored
also as a matter of policy, The
Commission may accept related
pertinent experience in the armed
forces, Buch experience, however,
must be definitely of the same
kind required of eligibles whose
experience was in private industry.
The veteran's statement of his
armed forces experience will be
accepted, subject to investigation
and proof,

neyman. No maximum age limit.

TOOLMAKER, $1.84 to $2.31
an hour.—Jobs are in States men-
tioned below. Requirements: Com-
pletion of a 4-year apprenticeship
or 4 years of practical experience
in the trade, No maximum age | f
Imit for jobs in N. J. Por jobs in
Places and at salariés shown, send

Send Forms

Send Forms 57
($2.00

‘| following

experience in medical record H-
brary work; or (c) four years’ ex-
experience in medical record Hi-
work; or (D) any equivalent com-
bination of (a), (b), and (¢) above,
Additional experience require-
ments apply to higher grades. File
forms 57 and 5001-ABC with Ex-
ecutive Secretary, Céntral Board
of U. S. Civil Service Examiners,
Veterans Administration, Wash-
ington 25, D. C. (No closing date),

258. INTELLIGENCE RE-
SEARCH SPECIALIST, Grades 7,

9, 11, and 12, $: to $6,400 a
year, Requirements for GS-7:
Knowledge of a foreign country of

area; and either (a) bachelor's de-
gree with specialization in one of
the following fields: Internatio!

relations and international
political jence, economics
tory, sociology, or social or ¢ ural
anthropology; and one year of
Graduate study in such field; or

(b) five years’ experience in one
of the above fields, or research in
the field of intelligence; or (¢) any

equivalent combination of (a) and
(b), Additional educs 1 and/
or experience require for

on
higher grades. File forms 57 and
5001-ABC with U. S. Civil Service
Commission, Washington 25, D, C.
(No closing date).

258. MILITARY INTELLI-
GENCE RESEARCH SPECIAL-
, Grades 7, 9. 11, and 12,

$3,825 to $6,400 a year, Require-
ments for GS-7: Knowledge of a
foreign country or area, and either
(a) bachelor's degree with spe-
¢falization in one or more of the
following fields: Military science.
mathematics, physics, engineering,
chemistry, biology, bacteriology,
geology, geography, statistics, in-
ternational relations and interna
tional law, political science. eco-
nomics, history, sociology, social
or cultural anthropology, or foreign
languages; and one year of gradu-
ate study in one or more of the
above flelds; or (b) five year
perience in one or more
above fields, or in milit

any

gency research; (ec)

equivalent combin: of (a) and
>). Additional educational and
experience requirements for higher
grades. File forms 57 and 5001-
ABC with U. 5. Ci e Com-
mission, Washingto! D.C. (No

closing date

Bend filled-in applications for
the following to U. 8. Civil Service
Commission 641 Washington
Btreet, New York 14, N. Y.

U. &., and in the
Medicine and Surgery
tral VA Office
Requirements: (
with major emphasis in y
ogy; and (2) two to four ye
perience in a combination of
(a) vocatlc
ing in a clinical cente
the director of a physician, (
knowledge of inter
familiarity with the
of a variety of occupation

tren

gained

fm a guida' service, and (¢)
teaching expe ein v
counseling and guidance
responsibilities at the ¢ ,
level. Forms 57 and 5001-ABC, (No
closing date)

350. ACCOUNTANT (c
hensive audits), $3.410.
the General Ac:
Washington, D. rt
throughout the U.

Requirements: three

perience of the public ac
type, or in relat

d field: fir
requir
ady
counting, the teaching of acce

ancy or possession of a CPA cer-
tificate may be substite for
some or all of the experier re-
quirement. Form 5000-AB. Pues-
day, January 13)

9-14-1 (52). WOMEN CORREC~
TIONAL OFFICED
in the Federal Reform ute

W. Va, Require-
years of age; phy-
ter standard:

Form 5000-AB, (No

Women, Aldersc

written test
closing date?
346. RESIDENT IN HOSPITAL

ADMINISTRATION, $2 200

duty in The Ve s Admini

tion. Requirements: Master's de-
gree in hospital administration;

18 to 35 years of age, Send
in forms 57 and 5001-ABC te
tral Board of U. 8, Civ
Examiners, Veterans Administra-
(Continued on page 10)

Page Ten

* CIVIC SERVICE LEADER

Tuceday, January 6, 1905 |

Exams Now Open for Public Jobs

FEDERAL

(Continued from page 91
fen, Washington 25, D. C. (Feb-
Tuary 15, 1953).

346, RESIDENT IN HOSPITAL
ADMINISTRATION, $2,200. Jobs
&re in Veterans Hospitals through-
eut the country, Requirements: 18
to 35 years of age; master's de-
FS. in hospital administration.

m 57 and 5001-ABC, (February
16, 1953),

345, AUDITOR (industrial cost
dudits, internal audits), $4,205 to
$10,800. Jobs are in the Depart~
Ment of the Army, country-wide.
Men only. Requirements: Three
years of general experience and
from one to three years of special-
frec experience in Industrial cost

Budits or internal audits. Form|
6001-ABC and 57. Apply to Board
ef U. S. Civil Service

Pxaminers,
Armed Forces Audit Agencies, 180
Varick Street, New Yor

4No closing date)

FICER. Grades 7, 9, 11, and 12
$3,825 to $6,400 a year. Require
ments for GS-7: Knowledge of a
foreign country or rea; and either
(@ bachelor's degree with spe-
¢ialization in one or more of the
social sciences including interna-
tional law and foreign relations,
history sociology, geography so
¢ial or cultural anthropology, law
or statistic:
and one year of graduate study
with specialization in one or more
@f the above flelds; or (b) five
years’ experience in one or more
@f the above fields; or (c) any
equivalent combination of (a) and
(>), Additional educational
experience requirements for higher
grades, File forms 57 and 5001-
ABC with U. 8, Civil Service Com-
mission, Washington 25, D. C. (No
elosing date)

ENGINEER
4), $4,290 to

(STEAM
$4,695.

operating out of NYC. Require-
ments: Coast Guard license as
third assistant of steam or motor
vessels; age, 18 to 55. Send form
67 to Employment Branch, Indus-
trial
Bea Transportation Service At-

lantic, Fir’ Avenue and 58th
Btreet, Brooklyn 50, N. ¥. (No
elosing date).

LEGAL NOTH

of the partnership ie from De

hip. terminaten,

uses, frovesties

PY cy ‘ "eae Pvp wal

14, N. Y.|

FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF-|

or in the humanities; |

and}

aboard naval transports |

Relations Division, Military

eat the will

ers, On death of a

STATE
Open-Competitive
(Continued from page 5)
equivalent combination of (a) and

(b), Fee $3. (Friday, January 9).
6257 ASSISTANT RADIO-
Puy: ST, $4,053 to $4,889. One

vacancy at Buffalo in the Depart-
ment of Health. Requiremen'
(D) bachelor’s degree with speciali-
zation in physics or electrical en-
gineering; and (2) one year's ¢
perience in a laboratory including
physics work; and (3 either (a)
one more year's experience,
(b) 30 graduate c
clalization in physics or
engineering, or (c) equivalent.
(Priday, January 9),

STATE

Promotion

5219. (revised and reissued).
| SENIOR SUPERINTENDENT OF
CONSTRUCTION (Prom.), De-
partment of Public Works, $4,964
to $6,088, vacancies, ten
more antic Requirements:
one year as tant superinten-
dent of construction, Fee $4. (Fri-
day, January 2:

5124. (reissued),
LAND AND CLAL
(Prom.), Department of
Works, $5,414 to $6,537.

Publie
Vacancies:
five in Albany, one in Binghamton,

one in Buffalo, two in Hornell,
four in Rochester, one in Water-
town. Requirements: one year as

junior land

nd claims adjuster;
medical, pi

ical and character

requirements: driver's license. Fee
$4. (Priday, January 23),

5126. (reissued). SENIOR LAND
AND CLAIMS ADJUSTER
Prom.), Department of Public
Works, $6,562 to $7,992. Vacancies,
three in Albany, one in Pough-
keepsie. Requirements: two years
as assistant land and claims ad-
juster; medical, physical and
character requirements: driver's

leense. Fee $5.
23).

5245, HEAD STENOGRAPHER
(Prom.), Division of Municipal
Affairs, Department of Audit and
Control, $4,206 to $5,039, One va-

(Priday, January

|
|

|

NEW YORK

eancy in Albany. Requirements:
one year as principal stenographer,
Pee $3. (Friday, January 23),

5246. DIRECTOR OF CERE-
BRAL PALSY UNIT (Prom.), De-
partment of Health, $4,664 to $5,-
601. One vacancy in the State Re-
habilitation Hospital, West Haver-
straw. Requirements: one year as
senior occupational therapist,
senior occupational therapist (or-
thopedic), or supervising physical
therapist, Fee $3. (Friday, Janu-
ary 23).

5247. HEAD HEARING RE-
PORTER (Prom.), Labor Rela-
tions Board, $4,964 to $6,088. One
vacancy im NYC. Requirements:
one year as hearing reporter. Fee
$4. (Priday, January 23).

5248. SUPERVISOR OF SOCIAL
WORK (PSYCHIATRIC) (Prom.},
Department of Mental Hygiene,
$4,664 to $5,601. One vacancy at
Letchworth Village. Requirements:
one year as senior social worker
(psychiatric); and (1) two years
of graduate study im school of
social work, preferably with a mas-
ter's degree; and (2) either (a)
four years’ experience in social
casework with a social agency, of
which two years must have been
in psychiatric social casework in
consultation with a psychiatrist
and one year in a supervisory or
administrative capaicty, or (b)
equivalent of the above Fee $3.
(Priday, January 23).

5249. SENIOR SOCIAL WORK-
ER (PSYCHIATRIC) Prom.), De-
partment of Mental Hygiene, #4,-
206 to $5,039. Eight vacancies: two
| at State Psychiatric Institute, one
each at Middletown and Central
Islip State Hospitals, one each at
Rome, Letchworth, Syracuse and
Willowbrook State Schools Re-
quirements: one year as social
worker( psychiatric); and (1) two
years of graduate study tn a school
of social work, preferably with =
master's degree; and (2) efther
two years’ experience im social
casework with an agency, or (b)
satisfactory equivalent, Fee $3.
(Friday, January 23).

5250. SUPERVISING MOTOR
CARRIER REFEREE (Prom), Dc-

STATE JOBS

| partment of Public Service, $6,801
Foseren One vacancy in Albany.

5251. HEAD STENOGRAPHER
(Prom.), Department of Social
Welfare (exclusive of the institu-
tions), $4,206 to $5,039. One va-
cancy im Albany, Requirements;
one year as principal stenographer.
Poe $3. (Friday, January ah

5917. EMPLOYMENT
| GER, (Prom), Div. of Employment,
| Department of Labor, $5,189 to $6,-
313. Requirements: one year as
senior employment interviewer or
assistant employment security
manager. Fee $4 (Friday, Janu-
ary 23),

5231. SENIOR HORTICUL-
TURAL INSPECTOR (Prom.), De-
partment of Agriculture and Mar-
kets, $4,359 to $5,189. Two va-

one at Hicksville and one
at Newark. Requirements: one
year as horticultural inspector. Fee
(Priday, January 9).

to $5.039. Five
. Requirements:
jographie posi-

i

as

ton allocated to G-10 or
Pee $3. (Priday, January oo

ai INSURANCR FONR
ams MAN: (Prom,

Pund,
ment of Labor, $5,863 te $f 0m,
One vacancy in and

igher. Fee $4 (Friday, Januacy

5237. SENIOR INSURANCE
FUND DISTRICT MANAGES
(Prom.), Upstate offices,
surance Pund, Department of La«
bor, F tured “4 138, One vacancy
im Syracuse. Requirements: twe
years as insurance fund
manager or associate compensa
tion claims examiner. Pee $5. OPai-
day, January 9).

5238. ASSISTANT ADMINTS.
TRATIVE FINANCE OFFICER
(Prom.), Workmen's Compensa-
tion Board, Department of Labomy
$6,088 to $7,421. One vacancy tia
Albany. Requirements: one year as
head account clerk or two years ag
Principal account clerk or twe
years in a position allocated te
grade G-14 or higher, Pee @
(Friday, January 9).

Board,
Labor, $4,664 to $5,601. One va-
cancy in Binghamton. Require
ments: two years as principal com~
pensation clerk or as junior com
(Continued on page 11)

Resolution for 1953

y That Home

Now and for the Future.

LOOK FOR THE REAL ESTATE ADS
IN THE LEADER

oe

‘\ athe

ww

PHoTo by Con Edtaenm

Dressing the Rockettes.

on a home electric sewing machine would cost only 1¢ for electricity.
bgaeet household bargain!

babe at * plbite ty

To sew 3 of the Rockette costumes for
the Radio City Music Hall Christmas

Con Edison eletrlity 1
| Teeday, January 6, 1953

CIVIL SERVICE CEADER

STATE JOBS

Promotion
(Continued from age 10)

nsation reviewing examiner. Pee

. (Priday, January 9).

5240, JUNIOR COMPENSA-
TION REVIEWING EXAMINER
kg Workmen's Compense~-
ion Board, Department of Labor,

.731 to $4,532, Two vacancies in

'C, Requirements: either two

as senior clerk (compensa-
) and/or compensation in-
vestigator, or one year as senior
@lerk (compensation) and/or
compensation investigator and, in
addition, graduation from a law
school or admission to the Bar of
the State of New York. Fee $3.
MPriday, January 9).

5241. PRINCIPAL CLERK
(Prom.), Workmen's Compensa-
tion Board, Department of Labor,
3.411 to $4,212. One vacancy im
Jbany. Requirements: oné year in
elerical positions (including clerks,
stenographers, typists, and m:
ehine operators) allocated to

or higher. Fee $2. (Friday, Jan-
wary 9).
5242, ASSISTANT BRIDGE

MANAGER (Prom.), N. Y. State
Bridge Authority, $3,773 to $4,421.
One vacancy at Rip Van Winkle
Bridge in Catskill. Requirements:
two years as senior clerk or as
ma Fee $3, GFriday, January
».

5243, SENIOR CLERK (MAIN-
TENANCE), (Prom.), Department
of Public Works, $2,771 to $3,571.
One vacancy in each of the fol-
Jowing district offices: No, 1, Al-
bany; No. 2, Utica; No. 4, Roches-
ter; and No. 1, Watertown. Re-
@uirements: one year in clerical
Positions (including clerks, typists,
stenographers, and machine op-
erators) allocated to G-2 or high-
er. Fee $2. (Priday, January 9).

5026 (reissued). PRINCIPAL
COMPENSATION CLERK (Prom.)
Upstate offices, Workmen's Com-

ensation Board, Department of

bor, $3,731 to $4,532. Six va-
eancies: three in Albany, one in
Binghamton, one in Buffalo and
one in Syracuse. Requirements:
two years (a) as a senior clerk
(compensation) or compensation
investigator or in a position of a
higher level involving workmen's
compensation and/or disability
benefits claims examination and
evaluation; or (b) in @ position
allocated to grade G-6 or higher
id three years’ experience in ex-
nination, evaluation or investi-
tion of workmen's compensation
and/or disability benefits claims
pa Fee $3. (Friday, January

.

5148. (reissued). SENIOR COM-
PENSATION CLAIMS EXAMI-
NER (Prom), Upstate offices,
Btate Insurance Pund, Department
of Labor, $4,964 to $6,088. Three
vacancies, one in Albany and two

in Syraci Requirements: one
year as istant compensation
claims suditor. Fee $4. (Friday,
danuary 9).

5204. SENIOR REHABILITA-
TION COUNSELOK (Prom.), Ed-
ucation Department (exclusive of

schools and the State University),
4.964 to $6,088, Two vacancies.
equirements: two years as re-
habilitation counselor or super-
visor of vocational rehabilitation,
Pee $4. (Friday, January 9).

5914. PRINCIPAL MAIL AND
SUPPLY CLERK (Prom.), Divi-
sion of Employment, Department
ef Labor, $3,411 to $4,212. One
vacancy in Albany, Requirements:
ene year as senior mail and sup-

FLANTATION BOTA TES
relirement em
ia the
Modest Income of pens) ot year
Sound ducsie NEVER Mir BY HORM

CANRS, Comimunity Clubhouse

Quarier sore homesites $500 on easy
ferme tncind to Piorida. WE
BUILD beau FREE homes at
eurprii

For coniplete information, photos house
Blane, visit our N. Y. office—open daily 10

phone oF write
4 PLANTATION ESTATES
800 bum Ay. Tuk floor, H. ¥. a6, Wi 7.2020

* REAL ESTATE ¢

HOUSES — HOMES — PROPERTIES

BE 3-6010
BRONX LONG ISLAND LONG ISLAND LONG ISLAND
INVESTMENT PROPERTY SPRINGFIELD GARDEN
169th St. nr. Fox $9,450

$fomaity, with three storee (one store,

fast, Boral! Cost ‘and teres,

East 165th St.

EARLE D. MURRAY

LE 42261

Cash Only $3,975
LIQUIDATION SACRIFICE
ALL VACANT — 14 ROOMS
WEST BRONX — SACRIFICE

Grant Ave. — Two blocks #th Ave, ob
way. @rand Concourse164th St, mew oil
burner new brass plumbin, parquet floors,
combination winks, brick,
mew roof, new Frigidaire. Price
26%. CALL OWNER

MANHATTAN
APARTMENTS

BROOKLYN and MANHATTAN
2, 22, 3, 3V2 Rooms
NOW RENTING

Rrecything modern and completety Gene
over Reasonable rents, steam, mr. twee

portation
Carrolls’ Renting Service
eT S000

BIGGEST SACRIFICE
NO MORTGAGE
$3950—ALL CASH

Pree and clear, 6 tally, @ Kitchens,
Garner, meet be esl as) ones ¢

CALL OWNER, PL"? 6086

ply Cas Fee $2. (Priday, Jan-
wary 9

a, ASSISTANT PROPERTY
MANAGER (Prom), Upstate
Area, Division of Employment,
Department of Labor, $4,359 to
$5,189, One vacancy ‘in Albany.
Requirements: one year in a post-
tion allocated to G-10 or higher
and two years’ experience in rent-
ing, leasing or managing business
Property on a large scale. Fee $3.
(Friday, January 9).

»  Depart-
ment of Labor, $3,411 to Le spar’
Requirements: one year
clerical position allocated ay os
or higher, Fee $2.
uary 9).

COUNTY AND VILLAGE
Open-Competitive

6586, AS STANT SUPERVIS-

OR OF E WORK, Division of

Public A tance, Department of

Pamily and Child Welfare, Depart-
ment of Public Welfare, West-
chester County, $4,200 to $5,320,

One vacancy, Fee 4
uary 23).

6588. PHOTOSTAT OPERATOR,
County Clerk's Office, Westchester
County, $2,650 to $3,250. One va-
cancy, Pee $2. (Friday, January
23).

6595. CLINIC SUPERVISOR
(mental hygiene), Department of

(Friday, Jan-

Health, Westchester County, #,-
200 to $5,320. Three vacancies im
the Mental Hygiene clinics. Fee $4.
(Priday, January 23),

URRO-
$4,359 to
$5,189. One vacancy at Erie County
Surrogate's Office, Department of
Taxation and Finance. Fee $3
(Priday, January 9).

6579. STATISTICAL CLERK,
Tompkins County, $2,300 to $2,-
800. One vacancy in the Depart-
ment of Health. Fee $2. G'riday,
January 9).

and Child Welfare, De
(Continued on page 12)

READER'S SERVICE GUIDE

Mr. Fixit
PANTS OR SKIRTS

corner Broad
et up)

Worm $9817.68

TYPEWRITERS RENTE!

Measehold Meee ites

"you you nome MAKING
anor NERDS

‘sunken tubs, | plot

© yeom detached home. 30 x 160. Ot
heat, refrigerator.

Civilian Needs $1,000
SO, OZONE PARK
$8,250

ched honse. Expansion
modern kiteheo, ex.

DIPPEL OL 9-8561
115-43 Sutphin Bl d., Jamaica

WHITESTONE

mower

$15,500
EGBERT AT WHITESTONE
FL. 3-7707

BROOKLYN

BROOKLYN BARGAINS
HICKS STREET
6 bemnity, Yo and 2'/) Duplex terrace apts.
Mewly Renovated, $10,000
GATES AVE.
3 family. Cash $500
MACON 8T.
4 femily. Cash $3,500
LAFAYETTE AVE.
5 family. All vacant. 4 room apt.

Terms

MANHATTAN PROPERTY
WEST 117th STREET
Woo 10 family — Cash $2,000

LONG ISLAND BEST BUYS
8T. ALBANS
1 bemity, & large rooms — Cash $2,500
2 family, brick — Cash $2,500
2 family, brick, 9/2 rooms $14,000

2 emily, 10% rooms,
pleinty ef yerd space, $14,000
MASSAPEQUA VILLAGE

1 family, $8,000
RICHMOND HILL
1 bemity, $7,500

WEST MN. Y.. NEW JERSEY

2 family, § rooms, detached, garage
$11,500

MILCAR REALTY
BB Gotes Ave. Brooklya, ML Y.
ST. 9-0553
UL. 5-2336

HOME BUYERS

Your family desery aod at the
right price. Invest:
‘COMPARE! COMPARE:
LEWODEN FL (Basten ‘Parag  soetion)

1B family, $16,500

ROCHESTER AVE. (4. Marke)
© emily, $12,600

PACIFKC ®F. (Mosirand)
reome. ‘Terme arranse!

CUMMINS
2@ MacDougal St. (Cor. Kalph & Puiten)
PR ool

AB wecent, At

LIKE PAYING RENT
BUY YOUR HOME

9100 Gown payment & op
Lexington Avenue
famnlly houre

RUFUS MURRAY
1351 Pulton Street
MA, 2-2762
____s MA. 32-2763

INVESTIGATE!

10 ROOMS ONLY
$9,500
CLIFTON PLACE

Pesremion, A real investment with
99.000 cash. Many other foci buys at

CHARLES H. VAUGHAN

300 Howard Ave GL 3-7610
Brooklyn, MY

Bank Mortgages Arranged
Ist and 2nds
Bought, Sold, Refinanced

Town & Country
Real Estate Corp.

305 Broadway Suite 510
WO. 2-2228

‘SECURE YOUR FUTURE! |
G.I. & F.H.A. INSURED LOANS

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION OF THE FOLLOWING HOMES

SOUTH OZONE PARK: 1-family detached frame dwelling, 5
rooms, enclosed sunporch, tiled bath, parquet floors throughout,
steam heat. House in excellent condition.

Cash for veterans $1,000, mortgage $8,500. Price v
SPRINGFIELD GARDENS: Detached brick veneer, frame and
stucco, 5-large rooms, expansion attic, finished basement,
modern tiled bath, scientific kitchen, automatic steam heat,
hardwood floors throughout, cyclone fence encloses property,
2-car brick garage, screens, storm windows, Venetian blinds,
House in excellent condition. Cash for veteran $
$1,800 Joan $10,000. Price ......... seeeeee a

ST. ALBANS: 2-story and basement, solid brick dwelling, 6-
large rooms (3-bedooms), real wood-burning fireplace in living
room, modern kitchen with table-top gas range, modern tiled
bath, steam heat, oil burner, hardwood floors throughout, Broad-
joom wall to wall carpeting on Ist floor, stairway and 2nd floor
hallway, Venetian blinds, combination screens and 713.800 win-
dows. Mortgage reduced to $9,900, Cash ™ 900, $13,800
Reduced Price

LONG ISLAND'S BEST INTERRACIAL PROPERTIES
OTHER GOOD BARGAINS IN ALL PRICE RANGES

HUGO R. HEYDORN |

111-10 Merrick Blvd. — Near 111th Avenue
JAmaica 6-0787 - JA. 6-0788 - JA. 6-0789

@ice Houre: Monday to Saturday ® te 7 PM. — Sundays 12 Noon to @ P.M,
CALL FOR APPOINTMENTS TO INSPECT |

SPECIALISTS IN FINER HOMES

AT LOWER PRICES
READ THIS FIRST
THE BUY OF THE MONTH

ST. ALBANS: Solid brick detached eerner property, entirely
vacant, 6-extra large rooms and sunporch, spacious Ii ‘room
with log-burning fireplace, all newly decorated, modern tiled
mato stall shower. Excellent esesinsucnie

FOR THE FINEST IN QUEENS

ALLEN & EDWARDS

168-18 Liberty Ave., Jamaico, N. Y¥. Olympia 8-2014—8-2015

EXCEPTIONAL BUYS ON
BETTER TYPE HOMES

SPRINGFIELD GARDENS

2 family, detached @0 x 100, cont

SPRINGFIELD GARDENS
Seid brick, OM large modern rooms,
wieam beat. garage, Hollywood bath,
stall showers, extra lavatory, good lo
sation, exceptional value,

$12,500 $13,250
Many ether Good Buys in Rpeteefend Gardens,
St. Albans and Vicinity

TOWN REALTY

186-11 MERRICK BLVD, a GARDENS

HOLTSVILLE, Lal.

‘Sanat 9800 square few
SSeutirat soams’ estnes

~~ CAN. YOU RAISE
$2,000?

A HOME TO BE PROUD OF

SPRINGFIELD GARDENS

~ LOOK HERE
FOR BUYS

CALL JA 6.0250
The Goodwill Realty Ce,

Houses Wanted

We ma’ ailing for
wo vazere salting fer Ramen pnd
with we for s quick

ae
MILCAR REALTY
+60 OATES ave
™ pee od

WM. RICH

As # service to applicants for
civil service jobs, The LEADER
supplies free notary service at its

office, 97 Duane Street, NYO,

Have you been

across the street from the NYC
Civil Service Commission's Appli-
watlon Burcau.

LEADER's inderesting ‘aemanal Loy
Civil Service ey
fad 4 on s
EXAMS FOR PUBLIC JOBS|#e23e2|2-ecverm

Requirements: (1) bachelor’s de-

COUNTY LLAGE | 6507, DRAFTSMAN, Town of; Buffalo, Fee $3. (Priday, January | P@wulrem souioioey

‘ ogee Cheektowaga, Erle County, $3,000. | 9). ws mmad or aimee anual coraees
Open-Competitive One vacai

Fee $2 (Priday,| ggyg. ;

(Continued from Page 11) | January 9), Towne a em ig err and (2) efther (2) ee years’ ex-
Public Welfare, | Westchester! 565. ACCOUNT ADJUSTER,| County, $2,950 to $3,500. Fee $2.
County, $2,650 to $3,250. One va-| Erie County, $3,350 to $3,650. One| (Friday, January 9).

HI

ancy in the Department of Plan. ‘the Edward J. MMe; work, or (b) one year of soelal
| vacancy in the Edws . case work plus one year's grad-
ning. Fee $2. (Priday, January 9).| Memorial Hospital in Buffalo. 6575. COCUEAERONAE, THE. sang, we 0) eevee rates

6582. PROBATION OFFICER, | $3. (Friday, January 9),

in school of social work, or (d)

torium, Rockland County, $2,700
Westchester County, $3,670 to| 566. ASSISTANT ELECTRIC|to $3,100. One vacancy. Pee g2.|CTu Valent combination of (a), (b)
4,510. Fee $3, (Friday, January 9).| SUPERINTENDENT. Village of | GPriday, January 9). * and te), Pee $8. (Priday, January

6583. RECREATION SUPER-| Springville, Erie County, $3229.92.) 4.9, poop SERVICE SUPER-
VISOR, Village of Ossining, West-|One vacancy, Fee $3, (Friday,
chester County, $2,670, One va-| January 9), VISOR, Summit Park Sanatorium,

cancy. Fee $2. (Friday, January) 6563, POLICE PATROLMAN,|One vacancy.
Village of Fredonia, Chautauqua) January 9).

5‘ : mission,
6584. RECREATION SUPERVI-| County, $175 to $265 a month. g573 POLICE PATROLMAN, oat) i
SOR, Village of Scarsdale, West-|One vacancy, Fee $2 (Priday.|yijiage of Lake Placid, Easex ed x day, January

i
H
|
t
3
5
&3
“
i
ni
ag
RE

>.
chester County, $2,613 to $3,216.| January 9). County, $55 a week. One vacancy.
One vacancy. Fee $2, (Friday, 6564. PROBATION OFFICER, | Fee $2. (Friday, January 9). WORKER (RUBIIO ABSisTe
January 9). Chautauqua County, $3,136 to $3,-| 657%. VETERINARIAN (MILK e
6585. SANITARY INSPECTOR, | 643. One vacancy. Pee $3. (Priday,| CONTROL), Department
Westchester County, $9,110 to $3.-) January 9). Health, Erie oom, $5,950. One
. e vacancy in ie part- vacancy. (Priday.
ment of Health, Fee $3, (Priday,| 055%, POLICE  PATROLMAN, | 5,"
City of Rye, $3,780. Pee $3. (Pri-
January 9). Gay, January 9). 6571, SANITARY INSPECTOR,
6568. PLUMBING INSPECTOR, |“ ” Town of Thompson, Sullivan

Town of Amherst, Erie County,| 6570. PROBATION OFFICER, | County, $1,000. One vacancy in
500, One vacancy. Fee $4. (Pri-| Erie County, $3,850 to $4,350. Pee! the
y, January 9), $3. (Friday, January 9). #1. CPriday, January 9).

6569. PLUMBING INSPECTOR,| 6571. SENIOR ACCOUNT AD-| 6578. POLICE
Town of Tonawanda, Erie County,| JUSTER, Erie County, $3,780 to| Village of Groton.

010.89, One vacancy, Fee $4 | $4,160, One vacancy in the Edward | County, $60 « week. One vacancy.
APriday, January 9). |. Meyer Memorial Hospitel in! Fee $3. (Priday, January 9).

Would You Like to
are in a Dividend o
$7,900,000?

More than 306,000 Emigrant Savings Bank depositors are sharing in ® right
now. This dividend represents the Interest on their savings accounts for the

period from July Ist to December 31s8, 1952, compounded semi-annually af
244% per annum,

And it's the 247th consecutive dividend in Emigrant's 102-year histor,

If you want te share in EMIGRANT’S next big

Semi-Annual Dividend: Simply open your Emigrant savings ab
count by making your first deposit today er any day between now and
Jonvary 15th, And your savings will eam Interest from the very first day of
January! Keep adding to It regularly and your money will earn interest from
day of deposit thereafter,

Take advantage of thls New Year opportunity and you will share ia
Emigrant’s next big semi-anaval dividend, Stop in at Emigrant and open your
‘@ccount today,

If you're a regular Emigrant depositor, add more savings te your presen?
@ecount and let your savings earn more money for you.

Current Dividend 23% per annum

July Tet to Des: Stet; 1952
INTEREST FROM DAY OF DEPOSIT

One of America’s Great Savings Insiitutions

EMIGRANT

Industrial

SAVINGS BANK

51 Chambers Street 5 East 42nd Street

Now York & MW Dow Fook 17, HL We
pee Mondays ‘til 6 A, Mom—Frichoye "Wl 6 PM Opes Mondays Tl 7 A th —Pobdage OB lth
AAGMLBER POOLLAL DEPOWN INGURANE CORPOBA TOS

ment of Heal

either (a) six years’ experience ag
& sanitary inspector; or (b) twe
years’ experience plus high school
graduation including courses im
general science, mathematics and
chemistry; or (c) satisfactory
equivalent combination of the
above. Fee $2. Apply to Nassaw
County Civil Service Commission,
1527 Franklin Avenue, Mineola,
N. Y. (Friday, January 23).

6242. EXECUTIVE OFFICER
“D”, Suffolk County, $4,964 to $6,-
088. One vacancy at Riverhead in
the Alcoholic Beverage Control

. — Fee $4. (Friday, January
».

6248. SENIOR CLERK (SUR-
ROGATE), Albany County, $2,771
te $3,571. One vacancy at Albany
County Surrogate’s Office, Depart-
ment of Taxation and Finance
Fee $2. (Friday, January 9)

6583. RECREATION SUPER-
VISOR, Ossining, $2,670. One va-
cancy at: Ossining, Westchester
County. Fee $2. (Priday, January

COUNTY AND VILLAGE
Promotion

5457. PHOTOSTAT RECORDER

OPERATOR (Prom.), County

Clerk's Office, Erie County, $3,050

to $3,350. One vacancy. Fee $%
(Priday, January 23).

5458. SENIOR CASE WORKE!
(Public Assistance), (Prom.), Di
partment of Social Welfare, Erie
County, $3,350 to $3,750. Fee $&
(Friday, January 23).

5459, SOCIAL CASE SUPER-
VISOR, Grade A, (Prom.), Depart=
ment of Social Welfare, Er
County, $4,350 to $4,750, Fee $4
(Priday, January 23).

5460. SOCIAL CASE SUPER
VISOR (UNIT) (Prom.), Depart-
ment of Social Welfare, Erie
County, $3,850 to $4,250. Fee $&
(Priday, January 23).

5461. ASSISTANT SUPERVIS-
OR OF CASE WORK (Prom.), Di-
vision of Public Assistance, De=
partment of Family and Child
Welfare, Westchester County, $4.=
200 to $5,320. One vacancy. Fee $4
(Priday, January 23),

5462, INTERMEDIATE SOCIAL
CASE WORKER (Public Assist-
(Continued om Page 15)

i
70-ACRE SCENIC PARADISE
© Cold Weather Sports
© Social Activities Around @
th

ar
1g Pong, TY, Extensive
Record Libra:
® Delicious Food and Plenty of ®
BREE. POLK, BALLROOM
DANCING INSTRUCTION

EVERY WEEKEND
deoar Brand, Activities Dt

rector im Residence

NEW WINDSOR

Wrasse
TO CIVIL SERVICE
EMPLOYEES

© napios © Ranges

© CAMERAS = JEWELRY

© TELEVISION © SILVERWARE

© TYPEWRITERS © REFRIGERATORS
© ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES

ANCHOR RADIO CoRP,

ONE GREENWICH ST,
Kor, Bomery Mowe, M4

__Treeday, January 6, 1953 ,

CIVIDR SERVICE LEADER

Pege Thirteen

Lists Certified to | NYC Depts.

following NY NYC tnibe tists 4 Hospitals Wate Water le fveey, Ome ent and
been submitted to NYC depart-|Electricity, Trafic, and
may for ooo ger} Aviation; 7.

lore names usually are sul Office operator, grade
than there are job vac: carping | Bi area ol ga oe a
not all certified are talled to Job | Education, Civil
interviews. The title of the posi- + 102,
tion, the number of the last eligi-| Patrolman, Potice 7

ble certified, and the department | 3934.
er departments to which certified,
are given. “Y” means that the in-
vestigation of the eligible has not
been completed. “V” means non-
disabled veteran and “D” disabled
veteran,
OPEN-COMPETITIVE

Assistant elvil engineer (strue-| Surface line operator (appropri-
tural), Education; 27. ate), ; 688 Y.

Correction officer (women), Cor- operator, 1
rection; 109. Health; 171,

Inspector of pipe laying, grade
3, Water Supply, Gas and Elec-
tricity; V 12.

Inspector of pipes and castings,
trade 3, Board of Water Supply; 4.

Junior assessor, Tax; V 47.

Junior civil engineer, Education,
Traffic, Housing Authority, Trans-
portation, Marine and Aviation,
Board of Water Supply, Public
Works, Bronx, Richmond, Brook-
lyn, Manhattan, Queens Borough
President's Offices, Higher Educa-
ae Tax, Parks, City College; 14

rection; V 1384.
tion; 68.

“Assistant foreman (structures,

* junior _@lectrical engineer, ‘group B), NYCTS; 13.

PATROLMAN
MENTAL — PHYSICAL

d

t

MENTAL PREPARATION given by four of the most
structors in the field — E. B. SCHWARTZ, H. E O'NEILL, E. J. MANNING,
6. J, GERMAIN. Ask any police officer, of amy real, of the obility
these men.
PHYSICAL PREPARATION be the best equipped gymacshem be
oy = running track, swimming pool, meen. oem vteam room,
lividual instruction from 9 a.m. to % pm. every dey encept
FEE ie very moderate: payable im easy instalments,
CLERK — GRADE 2 (N. Y. C. Agencies)
Thursday class et 6:15 P.M.
CLERK PROMOTION — GRADE §
Monday or Thursday class et 6:00 P. M.
COURT ATTENDANT (State ane County)
Friday class ot ui8 F M.

STENOGRAPHER PROM. — “GRADE 2 AND 4
Tuesday Class et 6:00 P.M.

ATTEND A CLASS SESSION AS OUR GUEST

SCHWARTZ SCHOOL

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

operator
Civil |3, — Authority; 4.
SPECIAL

grade 3,
mt oo

Btock assistant (revised),
thase; V 22.

MILITARY
Conductor, Transportation; 8663

‘Office appliance operator, grade
2, Youth Board, Brooklyn College,
Educat; Defense,

Service Commission; 136 MY.
Surface line operator, Transpor-
tation; 4938 Y.

Aircraft Inspector
Jobs to $4,205

Jobs as aircraft material and
equipment inspectors, at $3,795
and $4,205 a year, will be filled
from an exam to be held by the
VU. 8. Civil Service Commission,
‘Three and one-half years of
‘technical, mechanical or manufac-
‘turing experience, and testing in
‘an inspectional capacity of Reign
required f

perience are needed for the high-
er salary.

Openings are in NYC, Nassau,
Suffolk, Columbia, Du
Greene, Putnam, Rockland, Ulster
and Westchester counties in New
York, in New Jersey and im Pair-
field county, Connecticut.

Apply to the Board of U. 8. Civil
Service Examiners, Eastern Air
Procurement District, 780 Broad-

ther notice.
The
2-43-2 (62),

15 Patrolmen Switch
To NYC Fireman Jobs

Fourteen patrolmen and one
Lean gaa Patrolman have re-
from the NYC Police De-

firemen, %
was announced last week by Police
Commissioner George P, Monag-

Pay will be the same, and pen-
sion rights are trasferable.

‘This is the largest number of
resignations at one time from the
Police force.

is Mo,

Filing January, Kuam March 21

JUNIOR ACCOUNTANT

W.Y.C.—All Deportmonts

$3,385 to $3,865
Regine Sammars 18 mt G:1s Fat.
Given by Lincoln Orme, OPA

or DIVISION WA 4-608)
School ef tnd

SCHOOL DIRECTORY

Academie a0 Commercial—Osilege Preparetery .
BORO HALL ACADEMY—Fistbueb Mxt Cor, Pullen 1. Ektya Regents appr

200-7th Ave, HX. 1 (et 2780.)
Phones write me, tres, shew peur
Jualer Accountast Course
(Print).

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WASHINGTON, Jan. 5 — An
‘appropriation of $50,000 from the
President's executive fund has
been granted for the study of U. S.
pension systems, which is headed
by H. Eliot Kaplan, former Deputy
Comptroller of New York State, in
which capacity he administered
the State Employees Retirement
System. Mr. Kaplan is recognized
as one of the nation’s outstanding
pension experts.

‘Temporary quarters are being
occupied by the study group with
the U, 8. Civil Service Commission,
but negotiations are being con-
ducted for a location at 18th and
G Streets.

Am organization meeting was
held last week, and the study thus
has officially gotten under way.

A Year's Job

‘The work Mr, Kaplan will do is
expected to keep him in Washing-
ton about two days a week.

‘The final report is to be sub-
mitted by year's end to Congress,
which unanimously voted in favor
of the project. To be sure, it was
the previous Congress, but the
83rd Congress is expected to back
up the project just as completely,
as the study is entirely removed
from any partisan controversies,
as indicated by the unanimous

way, New York 3, N. Y., until fur-/ vote.

President-elect Dwight D. Eisen-
hower's civil service advisers are
reported to have recommended to

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Have you been reading the
LEADER’s interesting new column,
Civil Service Newsletter? You'll

7)

470 E. 161 $4, M. ¥. 56 - ME 5-7800

Kaplan’ s Study
Of U. S. Pensions

ted

him that the new A

get wholeheartedly behind the
project, President Truman him-
self appointed Mr. Kaplan, on the
recommendation of his advisers
that Mr. Kaplan, because of his
freedom from politics and his pen-
sion knowledge, was just the type
of man about whom any Adminis
tration would be enthusiastic,

Priends of General Eisenhower
say that he was glad that Mr,
Kaplan was selected.

One of the questions that the
committee headed by Mr, Kaplan
will study will be the relationship
of Social Security to the U. 8. Civil
Service Retirement System, Among
the other Government retirement
systems that will be studied will be
Railroad Retirement, District of
Columbia, State Department Por-
eign Service Retirement, and the
retirement systems of the Tennes-
see Valley Authority and the Fed«
eral Reserve,

Besides Mr, Kaplan, former
executive director of the National
Civil Service League, members will
include the Secretary of the Treas=
ury, the Secretary of Defense, the
chairman of the Federal Reserve «
Board, the Budget Director, and
the Chairman of the U, 8, Civil
Service Commission.

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Page Fourteen

CIVIC SERVICE LEADER

Tuesday, January 6, 1933

NYC

The January sexjes of NYC
mea hae tens and promotion
examy has beew announced by the
Municipal Civil Service Commis-

pion.

Applications will be sccepted
from Wednesday, January 7, to
Thursday, January 22, except the
laundry worker (men) title, for
which application may be made
only on Tuesday, Wednesday and
‘Thursday, January 27, 28 and 29.
‘There are more than 100 vacan-
eles for laundry workers to be
filled, No written exam will be
held, Salary is $1,990 a year.

Except where noted, candidates
must be NYC residents.

‘The exams are:

NYC
Open-Competitive
6679. ARCHITECT (MATER-

TALS RESEARCH AND SPECIFI-
CATIONS), $5,846. One vacancy
in the NYC Housing Authority.
Exempt from NYC residence re-
quirements. Requirements: bache
Jor's degree in architecture and six
years’ experience in specifications
writing, of which not less than
three years shall have been in
Specification writing for housing
Projects of the multi-family type,
and State license as an architect.
Fee $5. (Thursday, January 22).

6632. ASPHALT WORKER, $4,-
100 (when assigned to asphalt
Jaboring work); $4,260 (smoothing
or top shoveling); $4,290 (tamp-

; $4,420 (raking), Require-
years’ experience
laying sheet asphalt pavement;
maximum age, 45 years. Pee $4
(Thursday, January 22),

6692. ASSISTANT CIVIL ENGI-
NEER (SANITARY), $4,771. One
Vacancy in the Bronx Borough
President's Office, Requirements:
bachelor’s degree in engineering
and three years’ sanitary engi-
neering experience, or satisfactory

equivalent. Fee $4, (Thursday,
January 22),
6684. CHIEF MATERIALS EX-

PEDITER, GRADE 4, $7,250, One
vacancy in the NYC Housing Au-
thority and one in the Department
ef Education, Exempt from NYC
residence requirements. Require-
ments: five years’ experience as
chief materials expediter for a
construction company engaged on
fireproof housing construction or
office building construction, or sat-
isfactory equivalent. Fee $4,
(Thursday, January 22),

6576. CHLORINATOR OPERA-
TOR, $2,960. Six vacancies in the
Department of Parks and the De-
partment of Water Supply, Gas
and Electricity. Requirements:
one year's experience in the op-
eration and maintenance of a
chlorine plant, Fee $2, (Thursday,
January 22).

6599. CONSTUCTION MANA-
GER (BUILDINGS), $7,500. Four
vacancies in the Department of
Education. Exempt from NYC
residence requirements. Require-
ments: ten years of building con-
struction experience, at least three
years of which must have been as
® general superintendent on work
comparable in size to projects of
the Board of Education. or satis-
factory equivalent. Fee $5. (Thurs-
day, January 22),

6619. DISTRICT HEALTH OF-
FICER, GRADE 4, $7,900. Nine
vacancies in the Department of
Health. Open to all qualified U.
6. citizens. Requirements: medical
school graduation, one year as an
interne, State license to practice
medicine, and elther (a) master's
degree in public health or (b) five
years’ experience as a health offi-
cer or assistant health officer. Fee
$4. (Thursday, January 22).

6685. 0 ISTRATOR (CITY
PLANNIN! $3,770. Five vacan-
cies in the Department of City
Planning, Requirements: bache-
Jor’s degree with specialization in
art and one year's experience in
the illustration and interpretation
of statistical reports and data in
graphic forms. Fee $3. (Thurs-
day, January 22).

6603. INSPECTOR OF STEEL
(SHOP), GRADE 3, $4,016. One
vacancy in the Board of Trans-
portation in Bethlehem, Pa, Open

18,905 Examined By
Medical-Physical Unit

The Medical-Physical Bureau of
the NYC Civil ¢ Commission

examined 18.9 ns in 1952.
Of these 15,885 were original}
medical tests, 1,648 were medical

fe-examinations, le 627 were
competitive physicals, and 745
were for disabled veteran prefer-
ence claimants, Paul M. Brennan,
director of the Bree, reported
ithe figures to the

Tests

to all qualified U. S. citi . Re-
quirements: three yeass’ experl-
ence in the inspection in a shop
of the process of steel fabrication,
at least one year of which must
have been on welded structures
and one year as foreman, super-
intendent or inspector. Fee $3,
(Thursday, January 22),

6738, INSTRUCTOR (TAILOR-
ING), GRADE 1, $2,995. On
permanent and one temporary va.
cancy in the Department of Cor.
rection. Requirements: six months
as a tailor, or satisfactory equi-

valent, Fee $2. (Thursday, Jan-
uary 22).
6796. JUNIOR ACCOUNTANT,

$3,385. Several vacancies. Require-
ments: (a) bachelor’s degree in-
cluding or supplemented by six
credits in accounting; or (b) high
school graduation, six credits of
accounting of college grade, and
two years’ experience in account-
ing work; or (c) satisfactory equi-
valent combination of education
and experience. Fee $2. (Thurs-
day, January 22).

6709. SUPERVISOR OF CUS-
TODIANS, $7,500. Four vacancies
in the Department of Education.
Requirements: high school grad-
uation or equivalent; plus at least
ten years’ experience in buildings
similar to school buildings either
(a) in charge of maintenance or
(b) in building construction in an
executive or supervisory capacity
or (c) as a graduate civil or me-
chanical engineer on building op-
eration and maintenance, or sat-
isfactory equivalent. Fee $5.
(Thursday, January 22),

6674. SENIOR HEALTH PUB-
LICITY ASSISTANT, $4,646, One
vacancy
Health. Requirements: (a) mas-
ter's degree in public health; (b)
three years’ experience in com~-
munity health education develop-
ing community health education
programs, one year of which must
nin @ supervisory or ad-
istrative capacity. Fee $4
(Thursday, January 22).

6660. SUPERVISING TABU-
LATING MACHINE OPERATOR
(IBM EQUIPMENT), GRADE 4,
4,016, One vacancy in the NYC

jousing Authority, Exempt from
NYC residence requirements, Re-
quirements: two years’ experience
as a supervisor of an IBM instal-
lation, or satisfactory equivalent.
Pee $3, (Thursday, January 22),

NYC
Promotion

6567, ASSISTANT SUPERIN-
TENDENT OF CONSTRUCTION
(BUILDINGS), GRADE 4 (Prom.)
NYC Housing Authority and De~
partment of Education. Require-
ments: six months as inspector of
construction (including all spe~
cialties), grade 4; inspector of
carpentry and masonry, grade 4;
inspector of heating and ventila-
tion, grade 4; electrical inspector,
grade 4; sanitary inspector, grade
4; inspector of repairs, grade 4;
inspector of steel (construction)

ade 4; general inspector, grade

3 OF eral inspector of con:
struction (including all special-
= Fee $4. (Thursday, January

>,

6780. DEPUTY CHIEF, FIRE
DEPARTMENT (Prom), $8,200
total, Requirements: one year as
battalion chief. Fee $5. (Thurs-
day, January 22).

6595. MESSENGER, GRADE 3
(Prom.), City Court, $3,421 and
over, Requirements: six months

grade 2, or messenger, grade 2. Fee
$3. (Thursday, January 22).

6732, ATTENDANT, GRADE 3
(Prom.), City Court, $2,831 to $3,-
420. Three vacancies, Require-
ments: six months as attendant,
grade 1, or messenger, grade 1.
Fee $2. (Thursday, January 22).

5929. (amended notice), SU-
PERVISOR (MEDICAL SOCIAL
WORK), (Prom.), $4,140 to $4,620,
Three vacancies in the Depart-
ment of Hospitals. Requirements:
six montis as medical social
worker, grade 2. Pee $4. (Thurs-
day, January 22),

6735. TERMINAL FOREMAN,
GRADE 2 (Prom.), Devartment
of Marine and Aviation, $2,891 to
$3,420, Three vacancies, Require-
ments: six months as deckhand or
ticket agent, Fee §2, (Thursday,
January 22),

~ LABOR CLASS

6729. LAUNDRY WORKER
(MEN), $1,900. One hundred va~
cancies, Requirements: no formal
educational or experience require-
ments, but training or experience
in @ commercial laundry is desir-
able; maximum age 55 years, te

$1, (Apply Tuesday, Wedne
-_ ‘Thursday, January 27, 28 pe

in the Department of | 93

as attendant, grade 2; watchman, | bw

Vincent &, Impellitteri prom
at the NYC pence force wit

Mayor

PoliceTest Open

To Servicemen
Until Feb. 28

Servicemen have until Saturday,
February 28, to apply in the NYC
patrolman test. When the last ap-
plication was received from the
general public, on December 22,
the number of applicants totaled
8,869,

Anybody who was in military
service during the normal applica~
tion period, or any part of that
period, may apply until February

‘The written test will be held om
Saturday, March 14,

Pass Marks
The written test and the physi-
cal test will be competitive. In the
physical (est the pass mark will be
70 percent. No announcement has
been made concerning the pass
mark in the written test, and it
may be announced for the first
time on the exam paper itself. It
would then probably be between
65 and 70, inclusive, But the Muni-
cipal Civil Service Commission
could announce the mark sooner,
since it now knows that, including
prospective servicemen and candi-
dates, it will have about 9,000 ap-
plicants, This is only about one-
third the usual number, hence the
Pass mark may be less than 70, to
assure @ sufficiently large eligible
list. The Commission would like at
least 5,000 eligibles and could set
the pass mark as the score of
the 5,000th in relative standing in
the written test.
Pay
The entrance salary is $3,725 a
year and rises to $4,780 after three
years, Ages are 20 to 29 for appli-
cation, although nobody under 21
is appointed, and three years’ con-
tinuous residence in NYC immedi-
ately preceding appointment ts re-
Veterans may deduct from
their age, if above 29, the length
of time spent in the armed forces
during war,
There are no educational or ex-
perience requirements,

aan aes ena acepee aE.
Basic Requirements In
NYC Patrolman Test

The minimum requirements fol-

‘There are no formal educational
or experience requirements.

Ages are 20 to 29, but veterans
over 29 may deduct the length of
time spent in the armed forces
during war or the Korean conflict.

Minimum height, 5 feet, 8
inches, bare feet; weight not ill-
Proportioned, but there are no
rigid standards of proportion, and
age is not a proportion factor.

Minimum vision, 20/20 Snellen,
in each eye separately, without
lasses.

Residence in New York State
and U, 8, citizenship,

be brought wp to full quota [ust es| sh

By H. J. BERNARD
WHEN the war veteran prefer-

stitution became effective, on
January 1, 1951, it substituted
point preference for absolute pref-
erence, but in the application of
the new law a problem arose re-
garding special military lists.

When a list, on which a veteran
is one of the eligibles, expires
while he is on military duty, he
would be penalized for that ser-
vice, if no provision were made
for keeping a list alive for him.
So special military lists are estab-
ed. The question arises: Does
int preference, or absolute pre-

ference, or any preference at all
apply to special military lists?

With one exception, the answer
is No.

Same Principle Applies

‘The reason is not that the vet-
eran is discriminated against, on
the point preference*score, when
his name goes on a military list.
On the contrary, veteran prefer~
ence on a special military list is
no different than preference on
any other competitive list, and is
granted in the same manner and
under the same circumstances,
terms and conditions, as is prefer-
ence on general lists, Naturally,
with respect to veteran status ac-
quired after the establishment of
&® list, an eligible may not perfect
& claim of point preference under
the new provision, on any military
Mst, if he could not have perfected
ft on the original list, That is the
core of the whole matter,

Reastin for the Rule

‘The cutoff point of the old law,
which marked the beginning of
the new, made it impossible to
apply either form of veteran pre-
ference because neither benefit
was earned in time. Under old
law, all who passed an exam were

e on the eligible Uist in this or-

: disabled veterans first, non-
disabled veterans next, non-vet-
erans last. Within each group the
eligibles took their relative stand-
ing on the basis of their percent-
ages, Under the new law, in open
competitive exams disabled vet-
erans who pass the test get 10
points added to their earned score,
non-disabled veterans 5. In pro-
motion tests these respective
values are halved.

Since primary preference is
abolished, it can not be granted
to veterans restored to an eligible
Mst after January 1, 1951, whose
veteran status arose prior to that
date. Neither may preference
Points be added for benefit of such
veterans, since no point prefer-
ence existed at the time their
veteran status arose. An inciden-
tal point is that on # special mill-
tary list, since it ls composed only
of veterans, any veteran prefer-
ence effect wouki be of lesser
consequence than on a list which
included non-veterans,

Military Rights

While if the original Mst ex-
pired prior to January 1, 1951, no
Preference points are added for a
Veteran placed on ® special mili-
tary list, his status as a veteran
is noted, and he becomes entitled
to his “military rights.” This
phrase distinguishes point pref-
erence from other benefits, Mill-
tary rights include retroactive
seniority, retention and other
valuable make-good for otherwise
Jost opportunities.

Retroactive seniority means that
th. veteran, on appointment or
Promotion, is entitled to the same
seniority as that of the next lower
eligible who was appointed or
promoted and who had the same
or lesser, or no, veteran status,

military rights is, in general, to be
divorced from the establishment
of veteran preference, since the
“rights” depend on Section 246 of
the Military Law, and the “pre-
ference” on Section 21 of the Civil
Service Law and the constitutional

Sanitation Te

‘The written test im the sanita-
tion man, class B, exam will be
held by NYC on Saturday, Febru-
ary 14. By the time applications
close for men in military service,

000 men will have applied.

closed.
By serviceman is meant ang

Saturday, January 31, rom ot.
Eaaee not in service, applications
have

Servicemen May Apply In

st to Jan. 31

body who was im military service
during the normal filing periods,
November 10 to 26, and December
, 8, 1, both Bare Service

~ lal hose periods te

‘The jobs pay $75 a week te

start. The maximum age is 40,

There are no educational er ea-
requirements,

perience,

‘

However, the establishment of | boot

No Point Preference
On Special Military Lists,
With a Single Exception

the justification of military rights

ence amendment to the State Con-| of Appe

statutes be read together. But =
situation quite similar to the one
on which the court ruled is un«
likely to arise under the new con~
stitutional provision.

Take a list that was in existence
on January 1, 1951, and that ex-
pired subsequently. Again, the
veteran's name may go on & spe~
clal military list and without
point preference, since the old law
was in existence when his veteran
status arose, and the absolute or
primary benefits under that law
may not be invoked after January
1, 1951. In effect, the January ly
1951 date takes care of situations
that existed prior to

conversion to the point system as
of that date. a a rights ap-
ply, however, as in case of
veterans on lists that copied Price
to that date.
The Sole Exception
If, after January 1, 1951, a vet~
eran on a revised list was
over, but he was not passed over
prior to that date, he becomes en-
titled to added points on the spe-
cial military list, if the original
list expired after January 1, 1951,
‘This is the sole exception. Now for
the first time his name has been
sd over, and he is entitled toa
compensating benefit. In this case
retroactive seniority is determined
on the basis of veteran's
standing on the revised original
list, not the special military list.
Members of the armed forces
who serve only during the Korean
conflict, or any part of that period,
no matter where they serve, who
are passed over while on military
Service do not get point preference
after the list expires. Their names
go on & special military list. They
get all the other military rights,
however. Veteran preference would
not apply because they were not
discharged from the armed forces
prior to Brg establishment of the
original It:
War Veterans Only
Tt is therefore important to dis-
tinguish between the two types of
veterans that figure in the det
mination of point preferen
military rights. Ordinarily, when
one speaks of aeveteran, he means
‘any person who has served in the
armed forces. Under civil service
law, in this regard, only war vet-
erans are meant, and are of two
types: (1) those discharged prior
to the establishment of the list,
and who mect all the other re-
quirements for point preference,
Including New York St
dence at time of induc:
(2) those who were not d
rior to the esta!
» and therefore aren
to point preference. bit
Jess of where they lived wher in-
ducted, did serve in the armed
forces during a war, or any other

officially recognized perind, of
which the Korean conf is an
example, and acquire thevchy intli+
tary rights. Thus both these bene-
fits—point preference and mil'tary

rights — apply only to war vet~
erans, and not to veterans gen-
erally.

Special Clothes Keep
Civilians Warm At
40 Degrees Below

Techno Efficiency Council, &
Hanson Place, Brooklyn 17, N. Y4
is now offering to the public cloth-
ing that keeps one warm in ex
cessively low temperatures, as well
as an enlarged line of Thermo-

LS.

Two civil service employees
Salvatore V. Gianola and Domli-
nick Maglio, were assigned by the
U. 8, to buy equipment for the
troops In Korea, where the tem=
perature drops as low as 40 de~
grees below zero, The problem of
keeping @ fighting force warm af

and Development Division, and,
with the Navy's

honor as added asset,

in business,

_Tismay, Jensry 6, 1953

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER

Page Fiftees

Employee Groups Hail
Job Study and Want

Funds Voted

the Board of Estimate

weau of the Municipal Civil Service
Commission, the plan as outlined
by Mayor Vincent R. Impellitter!
be sinted to go through.

Employee groups have indorsed
the project, including the Govern-
ment and Civic Employees Or-

zing Committee, CIO;
ican Federation of State,
County and Municipal Employees,
APL, and the Civil Service Forum.

“We're strongly in favor of tt,”
ead Raymond FE. Diana na-
Wional representative of the CIO

“We know that the Commission
fe prepared to make a genuine
and constructive effort to produce

@ workable and satisfactory re-
Siassifieation of the City service,”
gaid Eugene Schwartz, special rep-
Seaantatve of the AFL group.

Schwartz deplored the de-
by in voting the funds.
Opinions Differ

Some civic organizations found
@ault with the proposed personnel
for reclassification, which would be
undertaken by a staff drawn part-
ww from the Commission's own
ranks, partly from eligible lists,
@nd partly through the hiring of
@pecialists In connection with any
problem the Commission feels re-

fires supplemental sifting. The

unions, also, wanted safe-
guarding assurances, such as that
an employee's salary would be
raised to that of the new grade
fmto which his title might be

Quickly

placed, in every instance, Instead
of being Jeft in his present grade,
if that grade becomes lower be-
cause of pay raised in higher
Grades,

The unions seemed to take for
granted that the present division
of jobs into services, and the se-
parate grading of each service,
would be continued. The Commis-
sion has been asked by others to
give particular attention to the

the| method used by the Federal and

State governments, whereby there
is just one series of ascending
grades, and all jobs, regardless of
the nature of the service, are
assigned to one of the grades, and
in general without pay overlaps,
Importance Stressed

The APL unions particularly
called City employees’ attention
to the tremendous importance of
the project to them, and advised
that, despite technical aspects, ft
should be followed closely, and
every effort made to see that the
employees benefit from {t.

Sidney M. Stern, one of the
Commission's top examiners, has
been appointed to head the pro-
ject. Quarters for the new bureau
have been made ready in the north
wing, fourth floor, 299 Broadway,
tm _the Commission's suite,

Voting on the appropriation
resolution was deferred at the last
meeting of the Board at the re-
quest of Comptroller Lazarus
Joseph. He said that some mem-
bers of the Mayor's Committee on
Management Survey wanted to
study the project some more, He
did not identify them or say what
their doubts were.

EXAMS N

COUNTY AND VILLAGE

Promotion
(Continued from page 12)
ance) (Prom.), Department of

Pamily and Child Welfare, Depart-
ment of Public Welfare, West-
ghester County, $3,180 to $3,830,
Wee $3. (Friday, January 23).

5463, SENIOR SOCIAL CASE
WORKER (Public Assistance)
(Prom.), Department of Family
and Child Welfare, Department of
Public Welfare, Westchester Coun-
fy, $3,670 to $4,510. One vacancy.
Pee $3. (Priday, January 23).

5464. SUPERVISOR OF CASE
WORK Public Assistance, (Prom.),
94,610 to $6,050, and SUPERVISOR
OF CASE WORK (Hospital Divi-
sion) (Prom.), $5,280 to $6,840,
Department of Family and Child
Welfare, Department of Public
Welfare, Westchester County, Fee
W. (Friday, January 23),

5465. ADDRESSOGRAPH-GRA-
PHOTYPE OPERATOR (Prom.
Rockland County Treasurer's O!
ce, $2,500 to $2,900. One vacancy.
Pee $2. (Friday, January 23)

5466. EXAMINATION CLERK
County Clerk's Office,

ie County, $3,650 to $3,950. One
vacancy, Pee $3. (Friday, January

».
Mei, JUDGMENT CLERK

OW OPEN

(Prom.), County Clerk's Office,

Erie County, $3,350 to $3,650. One

eee: Pee $3. (Priday, January
».

381 New Firemen;

50 Promotions
Go Into Effect

Appointment of 381 NYC fire-

men and promotion of 38 first-| four,
grade firemen to Neutenant and 15)

captains to battalion chief became
effective on New Year's Day.

‘The group was sworn in by Fire
Commissioner Jacob Grumet at
ceremonies at City Hall,

Commissioner Grumet praised
the department, an organization
“without peer im all the world,”
for its outstanding record of
achievement, despite the hazards
of firefighting “where injuries are
not uncommon, and death, too of-
ten, takes its grim toll.”

Eleven promotions to captain
have been held up by a court case
contesting the establishment of an
eligible list from the recent promo-
tion exam.

One vacancy as deputy chief of
department will be filled as soon

as a list in that title is established,
Probably in March.

If You Have No Experience
Or You're Highly Trained
There's a Job for You Here

WANTED . . . Window cleaners,
outside ledge work,
belt, $60 week. . . . Stationary en-
gineers,

and high pressure licence or un-
limited refrigeration permit. Ap-
Ply Hotel Placement Office, 40
East 59th Street, NYC.

WANTED Stenographers
and typists for Japan, over 20
years old, must be citizen. 2-year
tour of duty, $2,960 plus 10%
bonus, Apply at Commercial Office,
1 East 19th Street, NYC.

WANTED : . . Registered oce'
pational therapist, man or wom-

an, to work with young adults |

confined to hospital for special)
treatment. Must be graduate of
AMA accredited school of occupa-
tional therapy, $2,950 a year; also
® physical therapist to work with
children suffering from cerebral
palsy. Must be graduate of AMA
accredited school and have New
York State license, $3,260. Apply
Nurse and Medical Placement
bean 136 East 57th Street, NYC.

'ANTED ... Double needle op-
eae, woman experienced on
corsets and bras, piece work aver-
age $45-$70; also single needle
operators, women, experienced on
housecoats, complete garment or

section work, piece work, union or)

non-union, $50-$80. Apply Man-
hattan Needle Trades Office, 225
West 34th Street, NYC. See Miss
Miller.

No Experience Needed

WANTED , . . Turret lathe fore-
man, set-up and operate turret
Jathe, acting as assistant foreman
or jead man. Will help in laying
out and coordinating jobs, check-
ing set-up and following through
on work schemes, must have su-
pervisory experience, $2.51 an
hour... . Car washers, 85¢ hour,
Ro experience necessary.
station attendants $45-$70,
have driver's license and be able
to read and write English... .
Auto mechanics, $70-$90, have own
tools... . All around sheet metal
workers, knowledge of blueprints
and power machines to $2.08 hour.
Bench and floor nepagug Hom) for
foundry to $2.05 hour. . . Iron
workers, some shop ca Ml $2
hour. . Iron erectors $2.50...
Apply Queens Industrial Office,
Bank of Manhattan Building,
Queens Plaza, L. IC.

WANTED .. . Machinists, $2
hour up. ‘Tool and die makers,
$2-$2.50 . . . Machine shop fore-
man, $100-$125 week... . Sewing
machine operators on wigs, $34
week, .. . Steel rule benders, $1.50-
$2... . Engravers, pantograph op-
erators $1.25-$2 hour. .. . Auto-

CHEMICAL INSPECTOR EXAM
TO CLOSE ON JANUARY 9

Priday, January 9, is the last
day to apply for fuel lubricant
and chemical inspector jobs in
New York and New Jersey, the
Second U. 8. Civil Service Region
announces,

Charles Muzzicato, M. D., Cancer
Specialist and Former State Senator,
Is Named NYC Civil Service Member

Dr, Charles Muszsicato of Man-
hattan, a former State Senator,
was enjoying a vacation in Puerto

when he received a telegram

Sens Bien to Re '86 Cy Hall on
uary 1 to be sworn in as NYC
ice

rent
puLH
é

g

Curran, As
York County Republican leader,
en submitted Dr. Muzzi-
name for the Commissioner-

that not) ment of Health and the
ledical

political party, President
P. Brennan and Commis-
sioner Thomas B, Dyett are Demo-
crats. Representative Fino is a
Republican.

Dr. Muzzicate feels that he can

same
Paul

committees that dealt with many
civil service matters. He said he
was surprised and delighted at the
appointment,
Cancer Specialist

Dr. Muzzicate attended public
schools in NYC, got his pre-medi-
cal education at Alfred University,
and his degree from Loyola Uni-
versity School of Medicine in 1928,

He served his interneship in Met-| Al:

ropolitan Hospital, » NYC tnetitu-
tion, and took graduate courses at
Columbia University School of
Medicine tm radiology. He also
made studies at Brookhaven Na-
tional Laboratories, on Long Is-
land, of radiological effects of atom
bomb explosions, on the recom-

manele of te Gels Denes.

County Mi
Me heli

Veterans Administration in 1933
and "3. He is now assistant
roengentologist at Goldwater Me-
morial Hospital and specializes in
cancer diagnosis and treatment.
Recipient of Honors

The Alfred University alumni
honored him last year in a citation
“for achievement and services in
the fleld of medicine that reftect
honor on the university.” He was
twice decorated by the Italian Goy-
ernment, whose medical institu-
tions he studied for the American
Relief for Italy, He was national
chairman of the relief committee,
1045, ‘46, and ‘47, He is a Com~-
mander of the Crown of Italy and
holder of the Star of Solidarity,
so, he is a Knight of Malta, by
appointment of the Pope, Last year
Police Commissioner George Mon-
aghan appointed him an honorary
Police surgeon,

Dr. Muzzicato ts a member of
the Medical Advisory Board of the
Divas of Athletics, State Depart-

of Health, reappointed last
ye or Governor Dewey for a
‘year term. He is 51 years old.

is Dan. Wess

using safety |erators $1.50.

matic or hand

. . Glass blowers

chine experience, to $50... .
tinter $75-$100 week,
Manhattan Industrial
Madison Avenue, NYC.

WANTED
workers,
burners,

* Office,
are welders,
electricians,
caulkers, iron workers,

ANTED

seale....
Perience, nites, $70-$90. ..

perience, $2 and up.
press feeders, hand, me

Ink
Apply

Shipbuilding
acetylene
ship fitters,
sheet metal workers, chippers and
riggers,
$1.80 hour, plus 7% for nite work.
Apply Shipbuilding Trades Office,
165 Joralemon Street, Brooklyn,

. S&S wrappers,
finishers on paper boxes, women
only, must be experienced. Union
Bakers, Italian bread ex-
» Plumb-
ers with jobbing and alteration ex-
. Platen
|, $1-$1.25
hour, school or shop experience ...

crew machine op-| Cattle splitter, man, $75 to start

-Blueprint and|.
photostat machine. operators, $40- | $2.! 50 hour. .
$60-$70 week, must be|$70 week.
experienced and have NYC steam| laboratory apparatus $1.50-$2. .

Sheet metal bench hand $2
. . Electrician's help-
ers to help maintain power distri«

on
.|butors, lighting signals and similar

Jig boring machine operator $2.10, |electrical work. Must be citizen
. Watch dial printer, Swiss ma-

and pass physical, $1.56 hour. ...
Oil burner servicemen, ligne 5 bos
heavy oil, $14-820 a day, . .”.

ply Brooklyn Industrial Office, 208
Schermerhorn Street.

WANTED . . . Beauticians and
hairdressers, all boros, $40-$55
week, plus 30 to 50% over double
|commission. Also barbers, $50 week
plus 50% over double commission,
|Apply Beauty Culture Unit, 40
|East 59th Street. Ask for Mra
Fracentese.

WANTED .. . 100 hospital work-
ers, men and women, 5 days, ro+
tating shifts, ward attendants,
$2,500-$2,759 a year with yearly
increases. Must be citizen and
read, write and speak English,
Meals and uniforms furnished. Ap-
ply Industries Office, 40 East 59th
Street.

87

ARCO

Hy
FF
é

Chemist ..........

Clerical
(Colleges)

Clerk 3-4-5

NYS Clerk-Typist

Conductor .....
aerated Offic

Dietitian ...........

WONDERFUL NEW

HERE IS A LISTING OF ARCO
COURSES for PENDING EXAMINATIONS
INQUIRE ABOUT OTHER COURSES

$2.50
Clerk CAF i-4 —. $2.50
$2.50
Clerk, Gr. 2 —._-$2.50

Deputy pi Collector =e
Electrica! Engineer ——-$2.50

$. Diplome Tests $3.00
pita! Attesdont —.$2.00

internal Revenue Agent $2.50
tor (Fed.) —.$2.50

! New York City Government.”

COURSES

OD Mise. Office
Machine Oper. $2.00
$2.50

Patroimar (PD) mw
Playgroend Director -....
See

Reliroad Clerk
Rea! Estate Broker

$2.00
= $3.00

State Clerk (Accounts,

Fite & Supply) $2.50
State Trooper $2.
Stationcry Engineer &
Fireman $2.50

(J Steno-Typist

aa $1.60
<} Steno Typist (CAK-1.7) $2.00
O Stenogr: d

7] Stock Assistant

OQ Structure
O Stadent
"] Substitute Postal

ee Y. C. Arce Book—
You Wil Receive an invaiuable

New Arco “Outline Chart ot

ORDER DIRECT—MAIL COUPON

ome

LEADER BOOK STORE
97 Duane St., New fork 7,
Please vend me

Mame ...0+
Address

Ds for 24 how special delivery
S ©. D's Me entre

AY oc ceneseesttceesetiveescsseess State

N.Y.
copies of books checked shore,

{enclose shock or money order fer $.<cenenereesreseesscmenesrens

steeecececees

Page Sixteen

CIVIC SERVICE LEADER
——$————

———$__—______

Tuniay, January 6 1968

- Activities of C ‘ivil” Service Employees in N.Y. State

Social Welfare,
Albany

NEWS of Sng Social Welfare

on December 23, Carol sing-
was led by Fred Cue, Rose
Alexander and Marjorie Luce.
Games were played under the di-
rection of Nancy Glass. The buffet
Supper was served from a table
ily decorated in keeping with the
liday season. Music for dancing
was furnished by Mitchell Brown,
Kenneth Edson and Fred Cue,

The affair was arranged by Olive
Bourgeois, Mrs. Virginia Corrigan,
Nancy Glass, Mrs. Carolyn Viall
and Pred Grimm, co-chairmen, as-
sisted by Mrs. Dorothy Bowdy,
Lillian Lansing, Marjorie Luce,
Mrs, Kathryn Westgate, Thomas
Carey, Robert Cozzens and Floyd
Jones.

Antonio A. Sorieri has been pro-
Mmoted to deputy commissioner in
charge of the Division of Welfare
and Medical Care, He fills the va-
ancy caused by the recent resig-
nation of Harry O. Page, who
Joined Community Research As-
sociates, Inc., N. ¥., as associate |
director. Mr.’ Sorieri, who joined|
the Department of Social Wel-
fare’s social service staff.in 1937,
has been a public welfare execu-
tive for nearly 20 years, serving In
local, State and international pub-
ie social service posts, In 1943, he
Obtained leave from the Depart-
mment to serve in the United Na-
tions Relief and Rehabilitation
Administration and in the Inter-
mational Refugee Administration,
returning to his State post in 1948,

James E. Christian

Memorial
THE JAMES FE. CHRISTIAN
Memorial Health Department}

chapter, CSEA, extends a happy
and healthy New Year to all mem-
bers, CSEA officers, all department
Officials, and the Editor and staff
of the Civil Service LEADER.
Chapter news chips: The Office
of Personnel Administration held
& luncheon at O'Connor's Restau-
rant on December 18 for two
members of the staff. Robert Win-
chester, personnel administrator,
is leaving to take a position with
the Philadelphia City Bureau of

Streets. The former Patricia Sul-
livan, now Mrs, Richard Belleville,
was the other guest of honor, Both
Mr. Winchester and Mrs. Belle-

ville received gifts presented by
Sylvester Bower on behalf of their
Co-workers. In addit
@ very humorous
‘specially for Mr. W

nehester and |

Ter
Agency. Mr. O'Brien outlined the
features and benefits of the acct-
dent and health insurance plan.

Following the speakers, ques-
tions relative to retirement and
employee problems were answ

A rising vote of thanks was ex-
tended George Courtney for his
work’ as chairman of the arrange-
ments committee for this dinner
meeting.

Mrs, Marie Cain was elected as
secretary to replace Myra Fries
who has resigned.

Rockland State
Hospital

WILLIAM A. LYONS, & meat
cutter in the Rockland State Hos-
pital butcher shop, was awarded a
certificate for meritorious service
and $25 for a suggestion he sub-
mitted to the State Merit Award
Committee, which would improve
operations in the hospital's but-
cher shop.

‘The certificate and check were
presented to him on December 9
by Dr. Alfred M, Stanley, senior
director, at the request of Gran-
vill Hills, secretary of the Merit
Award Committee.

Mr. Lyons, who has worked at
the hospital since 1938, suggested
that beef carcasses be unloaded
from freight cars by means of an
overhead rail installation running
from the butcher shop to the rail-
road tracks:

A workshop for nurses, based on
the dynamics of human relation-
ships, was held at Rockland St
recently and included a large
group of psychiatric nurses from
other State institutions,

Two hundred twenty-six nurses,
representing Psychiatric Institute,
Harlem Valley, Hudson River,
Middletown and Rockland State
hospitals, attended the event. The
workshop ran for two consecutive
weeks with a different group at-
tending each week. At the first
session, November 9 to the 14,
there were 116 nurses present. At
the second session, November 16}
to the 21, 110 attended.

The workshop was sponsored by |
the Department of Mental Hygiene
and was under the directorship of

Dolan, Irene Slike, Nellie Walsh, |The
Alfred West,

| Agriculture & Markets

THE FOLLOWING verses were
written by Marjorie H. Alden,
hearing reporter in the Albany of-
fice of Agriculture & Markets. Ap-
propriate for the season.

On the road of life,

For the stars are there,
The moon is, too.

‘They will make the way
Lighter for you.

There will be some clouds,
There is no doubt,

‘You can always turn
Them inside out.

When the night fs o'er
And day breaks through,

Give thanks to the Lord
For guiding you.

Woodbourne

THE SECOND annua! Protest-
ant Communion breakfast was
held on December 7 in the Re-
formed Church at Woodbourne.
Guest speaker was Edwin H,
Miner, president of Orange Coun-
ty Community College, who
dwelled on the need for developing
Inward resources of life through
practice of Christian faith. Among
those present were Col. Wilson
Dunn, Supt. and Mrs. Dunn; Asst,
Supt, J. LaVallee and Mrs, La-
Vallee, Assemblyman _ Hyman
Mintz, District Attorney Ben New-
berg and Sullivan County political
leader Harold Cole. Mr. and Mrs.
Vincent Mancusi, Mr, and Mrs.
Donald Buchanan, Russel Gowdey,

te|Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Prince, and

the Rev, and Mrs. C, Everett Wag-
ner...

Ross Kelley badly hurt in an
accident while working. ... Ray
Johnson just back from the hoept
tal, for more surgery... . Joe
Woods hurt in an auto accident.

. . Mr. Busch, new shoe instruc-
tor, was badly hurt in an auto ac-
cident. Get well fellows, your col~
leagues miss you, ‘SEA and
chapter members!

|the highest level ever, thanks to

the bod work of Ed Wichern and
| William Shaw, Ray Jobpson. .. .
Father Wilkins through his many
friends brought a terrific stage

Edith Morgan of Psychiatric In-
stitute. fon Crotty, of Hudson
River te Hospital, was acting
associate director.

The following is a list of em-

St on Here |pioyees who have recently joined
"Tis the same old shillelagh that eager Heetel Sats)
his father should've used, that Bo | heir membership recently:
Mie that he'd abuse. Ten|, Edgar T. Taylor, Arthur J. Man-
shyly BE He ne ierjown ta | heim. George Cornish, John E.
is Re 2 |Condlin, Royal W, Taplin, An-|
shout, there's & smile upon ata nina . Olivo, Charles ‘Brown,
ee ane otk C290) Ae hectic, | ames McBreen, George H, Sobak,
Mehiecee at a hectic. | Mildred V, Sobak, Philip W. Hort,
j b 2 Hannah 'M. Dooley, Kathleen
eee tron With 1,000 |Caliahan, Irene Pook, Dr. Daniel
fee the same shillelagh slick mh | eee Wiiiione #. Se
the dear old Bureau of Streets... | Besos 3 hice it 2 vile
Lang since he should have given eolage aaa a

woos another Philly . . .
him juck; for fillies ‘buck, And
ome ridere toss with ease. But]
Bob's a guy who flies far and high|
and the job should be but a
breeze.”

With the traditional Yuletide
parties a matter of history and a
young infant New Year about to
baw! out in lusty fashion, the
chapter should plan early to bring
into the fold the few non-members
still looking on from the outside.
Let's hope that this task may be
accomplished before another year
ereeps around and 1953 will see
100 percent membership.

Orange

THE REGULAR meeting of the
Orange chapter, CSEA, was held
on December 8 at the Hotel New-
burgh, with President Percy Van

Leuvan presiding

Guest speaker was J, Allyn
Btearns, 3rd vice-president of the
CSEA, who addressed the group on
the subject of chapter organiza-
tion, He recommended that indi-
vidual city and township units be

established within the chapter as
& means of more adequately soly-
ing employee problems, Mr.
Btearns, while advocating this
plan, stressed the need for chapter

“Basically,” he said,

Basi A

| guerite Day, Gerard P. “Day.
Louisa Smith, Carolyn L. Sher-
wood, Paul Reynolds, Frances
Lake, Elizabeth I. Cambell, Olivia
M. Morse, Josephine Taulman,
Ruth A, Daube, Mary Holloway,

Margaret Pull, Grace K, Simpson, |, .

Grace B. Nelson, Rachel Kanten-
wein, Theresa Helder, Lela Hutsell,
William G. Rohan, Ella V. Cleary,
Mary C. Sullivan, Royal Bonville,
Francis H. Hodge, Sam Wood,
Anna Lawlor, Margaret D, Kear-
ney, Frank Grenier, Jr,, Benea
Shich, Dr. Milaln Radinger, Mich-
ael FP, Star, Marguerite Ahern,
Elsie Prince, Doris B, McMillan,
John Mott.

Mary J. Gross, Ann E. Hopkins,
Florence M. Surbley, Cornelius
Howard, Veda Gonyea, David W,
Campbell, Norman Greenwood,
Loretta Rourk, Dr. Lawrence P.
Roberts, Grace Greenwood, Arthur
Vv. Marks, Keith Crook, Francis
Giannine, Joseph Arno, William
Keeshan, Louise Rohan, Charles
E. McCarroll, Hattle Nelson, Mary
L. Newell, Cora Welch, Isabella R.
Wiliams, Julia J. Bauer, Frances

|M. Etrie, Arthur Davidson, Nicho-

las Durantino, George BE, Christ-
man, Emma Tarver, Jeanne Win-
kle, Isador A, Saphite, LeRoy
Drooger, Mary Whitmore,
Heinsohn, waster Green-

show to the institution for Christ-
mas, ... Dr. Leon Small getting

|ready to build a mansion {n Wood-

bourne, + Plenty of housing

favailable in and around Wood-

bourne, ... Ken Green has anoth-
er tax exemption, a girl born on
Christmas Day. Good luck |
Capt. Irvine has moved into a
State house on the grounds
W. C, T. bowling team starting an-
nual March of Dimes benefit bowl-
ing matches with Wallkill and
apanoch. . . . Bill Van Leuven
fl soon be in his new home, just
built... ne Schoonovers |
hickens ‘are back in shape again
and Gene has those fresh eggs
again, that’s for me.» .. Adam
Zuhoski sporting a 1953 Plymouth,
he can afford it, he's single... .
A committee going to Southern
Conference meeting January 17,
Duncan, Solod, Becker, Roberts
and Paro. ... New guard, Thomp-
son transferred from Greenhaven,
& very good bowler, welcome fel-
low. . . . Guard differential pay
getting @ going-over again, hope
\t gets straightened out this year.
. Did you get your auto Nability
insurance yet? What a jump! ., .
New York City employees are all
going on a 40-hour week with the
same pay they now get for 44 and
48. How about State employees
who work 48 hours? Jack Solod
wants to know,

Napanoch

NOTES FROM Napanoch Insti-
tution chapter, CSEA; Gloom con-
tinued to hang over the em-
ployees at Napanoch with the news
of the sudden death of Guard
Albert Rode,
known to all,
close to his former co-workers, Bill
Oakley and Sgt, O'Bryon,
holiday season was further dark-
ened by the sudden death of the
son of Roy Langabeer,

Ken Bradford, machinist, had |»

an accident recently, Luckily, in-
juries were confined to his han

‘The | McCauley,

at his
first civil service the other
day at the Institution, meet-

Ing was well attended, and there
were ited discussions on insur-

‘spirit
ance, cost of vg raises, 5, 25-year awarded

pension and the 40-hour week. At
the meeting the "crowns
made for the extra lucky guards
who were to get Xmas and New
Year's off.

Christmas week was a busy on
at Napanoch. On the 23rd, the
employees had their annual party
with seven acts of vaudeville for
entertainment. On the 24th, the
employees held the annual party
for all the inmates. Each inmate
was given @ gift package. There
were eight acts of vaudeville for
this show. On the 25th, there were
church services, a big dinner and
movies in the P.M. On the 27th,
there were movies and on the 28th
there were six acts of vaudeville
from NYC for all inmates,

Salty Rowan must be going to
stay awhile, Recently bought a
new house, Charlie Eck was afraid
of his new car so much that he
kept the emergency brake on for
a few days. DeVere Smith (Ret.)
is confined to his home. Get well
soon, DeVere!!! Richard Lane and
Robert Elmendorf are being trans-
La to Green Haven on January
st.

The officers of the Napanoch
chapter wish to extend a happy
and successful New Year to all
the employees.

‘They would like to take this op-
portunity to urge everyone to at-
tend the next meeting where
many pertinent topics will be
under discussion and Delegate
Arthur Drew will bé instructed in
his representation of employees in
the coming Correction Conference
meeting.

Gratwick

EMPLOYEES of Roswall Park
Memorial Institute entered the
season of festivities by having a
Christmas party, All in attendance
enjoyed themselves and acquired
the Christmas spirit. Dear Mr.
Santa Claus was present in his
traditional dress, portrayed by Dr.
Anthony Hey. What a jolly Santa
he was, as he distributed both
practical and humorous gifts to
all. Needless to say, the humorous
gifts “brought the house down,”
and some even brought about faces
to match the color of Santa's
cheeks,

Providing entertainment for the
employees and their honored
guests, the Ladies in Gray, was a
chorus composed of employees who
sang Christmas carols and led the
others in_a community song fest.
Arthur Crosson, noted organist
and pianist of Buffalo, played
| several Christmas selections, Later

‘| in the party, after Mr. Santa made

his appearance, Mr, Crosson ac-
companied Dr, Hey as he played
his musical saw.

Not only was there fun and en-
tertainment but delicacies as well.
Through the efforts of Miss Mur-
dough and Miss Speno and their
committees, there were dainty
sandwiches, Christmas cookies and
candy, Presiding in the servers’
positions were Hilda Golts, Mrs.
Pauline DiLallo, Mrs. Grace Shon-
go, Mrs. Kar! Wahl, Anna Mosner,
Ruth Blair and Marie Janis.
‘Through the efforts of many will-
ing employees under the direction
of Ethel Chandler and Miss Speno,
who worked on and behind the
scenes, the annual Christmas party
Was & success.

At this time the members of
Gratwick chapter, employees of
the Rosewall Park Memorial In-
stitute, wish to extend to all the
members of other chapters and
employees of other State institu-
tions, their sincere wish for an
exceedingly Happy New Year,

Brooklyn
State Hospital

THE MEDICAL staff of Brook-

Palmer, assistant directors, James
business officer, and
Edith Weingarten, senior occupa
tional therapist, all of whom re-
ceived promotions recently. Or-

He it, lt ak home recuperating. |G io of the
Phil McGowan had @ narrow es-| Board of Visitors, as well as many
“ lately, coming out of it with | former medical officers of hos-

Henry
“alll ier, Margaret E. Rooney, Margaret

smashed car,
Now for some brighter nows,

and 53, Judges were Mrs, Paul I,

view of the attractive and colorful
decorations on each ward,

Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs,
Daniel Schultz who recently be-
came the proud parents of a baby
boy. Congratulations also to Mrs.
Mescia, of the social service de«
partment, who became a gran
mother for the sixth time when
baby girl was born to her son and
daughter-in-law, Mr, and Mrs,
Nicholas Mescia,

Mrs, Ethel Farrell is flying to
Brazil to visit her son who is a
priest there.

‘The following employees are en-
joying winter vacations: Leroy
Sims, Irving Griffiths, James Mic-
tari, Mr. and Mrs. William Beh,
Vincent DePasquale and Mrs,
Fanny Gallop, Mrs. Blanche Baker
is on an extended vacation in her
home town of Utica,

The following employees are
making good recoveries in_ sick
bay: Mrs. Josie Thompson, Helen
Scarborough, Melvin Keyes and
Aaron Berger.

Our sincere sympathy to Mr.
and Mrs, Innez Martinez on the
recent loss of Mr, Martinez's bro-
ther.

Arnold Moses, president of the
CSEA chapter, wishes to take this
opportunity to thank all the em-
ployees for their very kind and
generous holiday gift to him,

Open house is being held at the
home of Thomas Shirtz, who is
giving railroad engineering in-
structions on his son's Lionel
trains,

New York City

THE PLAN Acceptance Unit of
the Workmen's Compensation
Board held its Christmas party
early, this year. The date was
December 18. The employees of
this unit claim that the party was
the “best” affair of the year. The
committee, under the able direc-
tion of Bill May, arranged a spread
that will be remembered for many
a day. Herman L. Federman, the
chief examiner, was the genial
host.

One of the “special” guests,
Jacob Schutzbank, the administra-
tor of Claims, came over to see how
many of his transplanted boys and
girls were doing in their new home,

Al D'Antoni brought a tape re-
corder and recorded Santa's visit.
Ben Chase photographed the event
and Irving Gold was the chief bar-
nder. (All the bosses worked.)

George Franck, of the N. ¥,
Motor Vehicle Bureau, has just re-
turned from Florida, His wife and
daughter will remain under the
palms until spring. George is try-
ing to convince the Bureau to
open a Miami! branch office,

One of the boys at 80 Centre
Street has invented a new type of
brake lining for cars that may
revolutionize the industry, It is
guaranteed to stop on a dime, at
50 miles an hour, The “genius”
stated that he is now working on
an invention that will prevent the
driver from going through the
windantent when he steps on the,

rake,

Brooklyn and Jamaica Motor
Vehicle Bureau:

The Christmas party was held
on December 22 and was attended
by employees of both offices, Guesta
of honor were Deputy Commis-
sioner Wiliam 8S, Webb, Aalst:

joner

surprise, Julia Montesani received
& very “modest” Xmas present, @
gold band on the third finger, left

Dr.| hand, plus a beautiful coat, Her
Haire.

new name, Mrs.

Another delightful Xmas sur~
prise, @ Cadillac automobile to
Helen Jennings from her darling
husband,

Girls, any more of this calibre of
husband left?

Best wishes for a real
New Year from a Renaet,
president, and the ae
representatives ng ow, York New ¥

Metadata

Containers:
Reel 4
Resource Type:
Periodical
Rights:
Image for license or rights statement.
CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
Date Uploaded:
December 22, 2018

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