“LEADER
America’s Largest Newspaper for Public Employees
Vol. XXXII, No. 40
Tuesday, June 6, 1972
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Capital District Meeting
See Page 14
© HONORED — 5. wintam campo, right, president of Ter
Bush & Powell, Inc,, was honored by a testimonial dinner given for
him by the New York City chapter of the Civil Service Employees
Assn. Campo, whe holds plaque “in recognition of valuable services
rendered to CSEA, is joined by his wife, Dorothy, who was recipient
of bouquet of red roses for the occasion, and by chapter president
Solomon Bendet.
Nassau Leads Counties
In Super Sign-Up Drive
ALBANY—CSEA has released figures showing total re-
turns of its County Division chapters in the current Super
Sign-Up/'72 Incentive Membership campaign as of May 16.
Sam Emmett, chairman of CSEA’s statewide member-
ship committee, said he was
hopeful that returns for State
Division chapters would be avail-
able next week and that updated
returns for all chapters would be
Published weekly thereafter. He
also stressed that the present
tabulation represents only the
County Division of CSEA and
SAMUEL GROSSFIELD
Install Grossfield
June 10 As Head
Of Western Conf
ROCHESTER Samuel
Grossfield, president of
Rochester chapter of the
Civil Service Employees
(Continued en Page 14)
extends only through May 16.
Pollowing are the latest fig-
ures from chapters in CSEA's
County Division:
Albany, 19; Allegheny, 0;
Broome, 11; Cattaraugus, 20;
Cayuga, 12; Chautauqua, 10; Che-
mung, 6; Chenango, 12; Clinton,
38; Columbia, 0; Cortland,
Delaware, 10; Duchess, 13; Erie,
182; Essex, 0; Franklin, 0; Ful-
ton, 9; Genessee, 4; Greene, 0;
Herkimer, 1; Jefferson, 14; Lew-
is, 1; Livingston, 12; Madison,
‘uvnanu aye auteanertnpnn cna tence
q
Top Recruiters
ALBANY — Super Sign-Up
Membership returns processed up
until May 22 show the following
chapters to be leading: Nassau,
381; Erie, 272; Westchester, 171;
Suffolk, 151; Rensselaer, 107.
Following are the leading re-
crulters; Irving Flaumenbaum,
99; Kenneth Cadieux, 73; J . K.
Maloney, 52; V. Marr, 37, and
Boris Kramarchyk, 32.
COTTA EL
26; Monroe, 23; Montgomery, 6;
Nassau, 153; Niagara, 61; On-
elds, 0; Onandaga, 42; Ontario,
0; Orange, 26; Orleans, 0; Os-
wego, 16; Otsego, 6; Putnam,
2; Rennaselaer, 87; Richmond,
0; Rockland, 2; St. Lawrence,
5; Saratoga, 21; Schenectady, 2;
Schoharie, 0; Schuyler, 0; Sen-
eca, 0; Steuben, 3; Suffolk, 90;
Sullivan, 2; Tioga, 0; Tompkins,
0; Ulster, 24; Warren, 8; Wash-
ington, Wayne, Weatchest-
er, 101; Wyoming, 2; Yates, @,
CSEA Wins Extension
Aides Charged With
Taylor Law Violation
Can Protest To June 9
(Special to The Leader)
ALBANY—State employees who have been charged with violation of the Taylor Law
on April 1 and 2 will have until June 9 to object in writing, to those charges. The exten-
sion of time to protest was the result of a court action brought by the Civil Service Em-
ployees Assn.
CSEA president Theodore C.
Wenzl said the extension will
allow those workers charged with
violations of the law to submit
affidavits to protest the charges
against them, assisted by CSEA
attorneys and fieldmen.
Originally, State employees
received letters charging them
with participating in the alleged
Easter week end strike, were
given 20 days to file answering
affidavits,
“CSEA \s offering help with
filing the protests, to every mem-
ber who wishes to object to the
charges against him,” Wenz!
said. “Any member can contact
his chapter president, his field
representative or CSEA head-
quarters to get help in preparing
the affidavits and protesting the
charges.”
Wenzl also said that when
employees are granted a hear-
ing, CSEA will then provide
legal counsel to represent them.
Further, if the results of the
hearing are against the employee,
CSEA will then Initiate court
action to have the decision re-
served, If the State would find
an employee guilty of violating
the Taylor Law without first
Anside The Leader
Welfare Fund Grows
—Sece Page 3
CSEA Staves Off
Layoffs In Long Beach
—See Page 2
Blast Niagara County
For Withholding Pay
—See Page 3
CSEA Will Experiment
With 4-Day Work Week
ALBANY—An agreement to experiment with the four-
day work week in at least one work location during the next
year highlights the recently
Civil Service Employees Assn, and
Health Research, Inc. (HRD
‘The pact includes a four per-
cent wage hike and a produc-
tivity bonus.
HRI employs more than 300
workers, most of whom are en-
gaged in cancer research and
treatment at Roswell Park
Memorial Institute in Buffalo.
South Conference
Installs June 17
The Summer meeting of
the Southern Conference of
the Civil Service Employees
Assn. will be highlighted by
the election of Conference of-
ficers, according to Nicholas
Puzsiferri, president
The Conference nominating
committee is still engaged in
drawing up its recommendations
for presentation to the dele-
gates at the 2 pm. business
meeting in the Boathouse at
Hudson River State Hospital,
Poughkeepsie,
The business meeting will be
(Continued em Page 14)
signed contract between the
the Management of
The corporation ts based in Al-
bany.
The one-year agreement nego-
tiated by # CSEA bargaining
team includes the experimental
four-day week, half-pay sick
leave and provisions for seniori-
ty in determining promotability,
pass days, shift assignments and
vacation periods.
‘The pact also provides a lay-
off procedure with vertical
bumping, no preference and a
Job pool for those lald off,
Other benefits are: Blue Shield
Plan C, and 50-51 coverage for
all workers, to replace the State-
wide plan; the four percent pay
raise retroactive to April 1, 1972,
and @ one and one-half per-
cent lump sum productivity ratse
on March 31, 1973.
CSEA's negotiating team ts
comprised of chairman Bar-
bara Pauser; Tom Krajewskt,
who is also president of the
Health Research Inc. CSEA cha:
ter; Ann Weber, and Mary Rob-
inson, CSEA collective negotl-
ating specialist Thomas J, Lin-
den assisted the team, Bargain-
ing began last January.
giving him a hearing, CSEA will
take that matter to court
Wenzl also said that his un-
fon was preparing court action
to have declared unconstitution-
al the Taylor Law provision
which imposes a penalty of one
year’s probation on alleged viol-
ators of Section 210 of the law.
Capital, Central
Confs Schedule
Joint Workshop
COOPERSTOWN This
picturesque city of museums
on the border between the
Civil Service Employees
Assn,’s Central and Capital Dis-
trict Conferences will be the site
of a history-making event June
9-10.
For the first time, the two
conferences will join together
for a combined workshop at the
Otesaga Hotel here. This is the
same location where Ernest
Wagner won a hard-fought elec-
tion for a second term as pres
dent of the Capital District Con-
ference last year
This time the suspense will
center on the outcome of the
elections for the presidency of
(Continued on Page 14)
> ia
—_——.
Repeat This!
Rights Of Managerial
Workers Threatened
By Appellate Ruling
OW that the Legisla-
ture is gone from Al-
bany and all of the grand-
standing is out of the way,
the period Is at hand for con-
gratulationg the Civil Service
Employees Assn, for the fine job
that it performed for its mem-
bers during the most trying year
Of the Association’s existence.
(Continued on Page 6)
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, June 6, 1972
ALBANY—The Civil Service Employees
Assn. has praised the actions of the State
administration and Legislature in sponsor-
ing and passing into law a bill which will
provide more than $12 million for improve-
ments in the State's prison system,
Terming the action “long overdue,”
a CSEA official, nevertheless, described the
recently signed bill as a “positive step to-
ward creating many needed jobs, and which
will rehabilitate existing programs and im-
plement new ones, overhaul debilitated
physical plants and go a long way, gen-
said.
MONROE
BUSINESS
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Jobs,
CS.E&R A.
SUMMER AND
while
Recreation Association for you and
“members of your family.
CHARTER JET FLIGHTS TO AND FROM AMSTERDAM & LONDON — 22 Days
Leaving July 1, 8, 28 to Amsterdam
Leaving July 2, 14, Aug. 4 & 12 to London
Leaving July 28 to Copenhagen —
EUROPEAN GROUP TOURS
An extensive 15 to 22 day all-inclusive tour program with
first-class hotels to SCANDINAVIA, BRITISH ISLES, SPAIN &
PORTUGAL and CENTRAL EUROPEAN COUNTRIES with frequent
departures during July and August at lowest
budget prices See teed
SEATTLE OR SAN FRANCISCO (K-3123)
Leaving New York July 3; Returning July 19, Air
Seattle $156.00 San Francisco $
Call (212) 868-2959,
SAN FRANCISCO — HONOLULU — LAS VEGAS (K-3418)
A 2-week tour from New York, Rochester or Butfalo
leaving July 8 and returning July 22 -_
from $999.00
‘ate Only.
85.00
$489.00
plus taxes
$178.00
plus taxes & gratuities
Including deluxe hotels, meals and free golf.
Leaving July 10, 17, Aug. 14*, 21 and 28,
*For members from the Albany district a special bus will be arranged
for the departure and return 1 and from Kennedy Airport ia coo.
jection with Aug, 14 flight
WEST END, GRAND BAHAMA — 8 Days] Nights
WRITE OR CALL: (212) 868-2959 FOR OUR MOST EXCITING
FALL PROGRAM includi
MUNICH “Octoberfest” Sept. 29-Oct. 6
PALMA DE MALLORCA - Sept. 28--Oet. 7
LAS PALMAS-CANARY ISLANDS Oct. 19—Oct, 21
WEST END — 4 Nights — 2 departures Oct. 9-Oct. 20
‘at fantastic low price of $199.00 plus taxes & grat.
LONDON (Thanksgiving) Nov. 22-Nov. 26
PARIS (Thanksgiving) Nov, 22—Nov, 26
ST. LUCIA/ MARTINIQUE Nov, 22—Aov, 28
SAN JUAN (Thanksgiving) Nov, 22—Nov. 28
TOUR CHAIRMEN
K-3056, K-3065, K-3418) European tripe
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Tel. (212) 868-3700,
Spain, Portugal, Spanish tslands—AL
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11778, Telephone ($16) 744.2736.
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ALBANY DEPARTURE ON AUG. 14; MISS ORA KNIFFEN,
Killean Park, Albaoy, N.Y. 1220! Home Teli
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Available Only 10 CSEARA Members aod Their Immedinte Families,
Vor Detailed Information and Fall Brochures write to
CSE&RA, BOX 772, TIMES SQUARE STATION
NEW YORK, N.Y. 10036
Tel: (212) 868-2959
K-3635¢
Praise Bill To Improve Prisons
erally, toward Improving working conditions
and easing tensions among the inmates.
“It's unfortunate that such a program
was not adopted some years ago, but, In any
case, we can now look hopefully to the
future for improvement,” the spokesman
Thomas J. Linden, collective negoti-
ating specialist for civilian employees in the
State’s prisons, estimated that part of the
monies will provide “several hundred new
and much-needed civilian positions, putting
into effect a long-standing CSEA demand,”
Long Beach Unit Avoids
Layoffs; Suggests Ideas
To City On Cost Cutting
(From Leader Correspondent)
LONG BEACH—The Civil Service Employees Assn. last
week secured the cancellation of a threatened layoff of 44
employees of the City of Long Beach in an economy move
and ts working with City officials on proposals that would
saving
The agreement was made
known after a 3'%-hour meeting
between City Manager James
Nagourney and CSEA unit pres-
ident Thomas Carroll, unit law-
yer James Wood and officials
Steve Hayes and Thomas Stap-
leton. Nassau chapter president
Irving Flaumenbaum was active
in negotiations.
The City had earlier postponed
the threatened layoffs, which
were originally to have been
made June 1
Negotiations for a new con-
tract, due Nov. 30, were initiated
immediately.
Carroll announced a general
membership meeting will be held
June 8, in City Hall at 4 p.m.
to discuss cost-cutting proposals
to be presented to City nego-
tiators.
The possibility of renewed ef-
forts toward a layoff were kept
alive by City officials, however.
Carroll said the City reported
a deficit in the area of $600,-
000, and said the unit was pre-
Paring cost-cutting ideas that
would not hurt the employees.
Where The Money Is
He noted that the City was not
figuring on a possible $300,000 in
federal revenue sharing al-
though the State budget did an-
ticipate the new aid, did not
figure on a possible $250,000 in
sales-tax sharing from Nassau
County or on increased revenues
from beach, sewer and water
fees, mercantile ltcenses or sav-
ings from reduced garbage ser-
vice,
As an example of cost-cutting,
Carroll said the City could stim-
ulate early retirements by grant-
ing pay for unused sick leave.
‘Together with scheduled retire-
ments, this could produce @ say-
ing of half the claimed deficit,
he argued,
“We know they have a prob-
tem,” commented Flaumenbuam,
“CSEA is helping to find solu-
tions in cooperation with the
City officials, and we hope that
we can establish a mark in
labor-management partnership.”
Supv. Installations
Of the 55 open competitive
candidates for assistant super-
visor of mechanical installations,
25 have been declared not quali-
fied by the Department of Per-
sonnel, The remaining candi-
dates will be rated on thelr
waining and experience,
Nassau County And CSEA
Seek Grant To Study On °
Bargaining, Work Incentive
(From Leader Correspondent)
MINEOLA—In what was described as a national first,
the Nassau chapter of the Civil Service Employees Assn. and
the County have applied for a $350,000 federal grant to |
efficiency incentives and regional bargaining.
Nassau chapter president Irv-
ing Flaumenbaum and County
Executive Ralph G. Caso capped
five months of discussions on the
plan with a meeting last week
in Washington, D.C., with offi-
clals of the National Commis-
sion on Productivity.
Flaumenbaum commented:
“We are working together to
study improvements which could
make public service careers more
rewarding, both in material and
spiritual values. Because we can-
not predict the outeome of the
study, no commitments have
been made.”
Caso said that the study would
hopefully produce “standards of
performance that could be used
in determining merit pay and
Two Victories
For Southold
School Unit
SOUTHOLD — In one of
the first arbitration cases in
an eastern Suffolk County
school district, the Southold
School District unit of the Suf-
folk chapter of the Civil Service
Employees Assn. has won victory
in two grievances.
The grievances involved retro-
active pay for last Aug. 15 to
Nov. 14, and three job reclassi-
fications. After the unit's de-
mands had been rejected in the
third stage of the grievance pro-
cedure, the matters were sub-
mitted to binding arbitration be-
fore @ panel composed of a
Southold faculty member, a
business administrator from an-
other school district and a min-
ister.
Field representative Irwin M.
Scharfeld acted as chief spokes-
man, along with unit president
Janet Kehl. Officials credited
both the unit and the school
district for progressive policies
in their provision of a peaceful
means of resolving such differ-
ences,
Colby Re-Elected
By Parks Chapter
BETHPAGE — Louls Colby
has been re-elected president of
the Long Island Inter-County
State Parks chapter of the Civil
Service Employees Assn.
Colby will serve with the fol-
lowing slate: James E, Meehan,
first vice-president; Ignatious
Cucais, second vice-president;
Walter Boehme, treasurer; Ethel
Strachan, secretary; Mary Don-
ovan, corresponding secretary;
Thomas Cullen, sergeant-at-
arms, and Mary Osborne, assis-
tant sergeant-at-arms.
‘The group was installed by
field representative Roger Cillt
recently in ® meeting at the
Sealord firehouse.
other fringe benefits as well as
promotions.”
He added, “We want to replace
the classical adversary approach
to labor relations with a partici-
patory and cooperative team ef-
fort by both labor and manage-
ment."
‘The Nassau County CSEA con-
tract was reached earlier th
year only after 30 weeks of
gaining, repeated breakdowns of
the talks and bitterness never
before experienced in the county
talks.
‘The proposed study would last
two years and would be financed
by a grant, and federal officials
indicated the effort could pave
the way for a new trend in pub-
lic labor relations throughout the
nation.
CSEA and County officials
pressed confidence that the
grant would be approved. They
said Labor Secretary James D,
Hodgson had endorsed the plan,
The study and possible imple-
mentation would involve Nassau
County and the three townships
within its borders, where the
CSEA represents an estimated
20,000 workers.
With Flaumenbaum in the dis-
cussions were Town of Nort
Hempstead unit president Alex-
ander Bozza, Town of Oyster
Bay unit president Beatrice Jean-
son and Town of Hempstead unit
president Kenneth Cadieux.
Richter Heads New
Nassau CSEA Unit
MINEOLA—The newly r
organized Department o:
Public Works unit of th
Nassau chapter, Civil Service,
Employees Assn., has elec!
Robert Richter to head a tem-
porary slate of officers.
The department - wide unit,
representing almost 2,000 mem-
bers, s being restructured by de-
partment employees,
Richter, as president, heads a
slate including Richard com
vice-president representing tht
engineering division; Jack
Dempsey, vice-president repre-
senting plant and maintenance;
Sam Shirwindt, vice-president
Tepresenting highway mainten-
ance; Lillian Rosow, secretary;
Michael Fiorentino, treasurer,
and Marco Panclarello, sergeant~
at-arms.
Chapter president Irving
Plaumenbaum said officers for
regular term would be elec!
after the unit completes and
adopts # unit constitution
Cuplie tmptevese
Published Each Tuesday
648 Attontic, Serest
ontributions To Welfare
@ FOR STARTERS — 4 check tor $2,000 is presented to
CSEA president Theodore C. Wenz! by New York City chapter presi-
dent Solomon Bendet. The donation, voted by the chapter's executive
board as an “initial contribution” to the statewide Welfare Fund,
was presented the same evening to the statewide president as he
attended a chapter workshop at the Concord Hotel.
CSEA Fights
efor Geneseo
FSA Election
GENESEO —Employees of
the State University Faculty
Student Association (FSA)
here will have the opportun-
ity to choose an official bar-
gaining representative in an
election to be held on June 14.
The Civil Service Employees
Assn. will compete with Local
466 of the Hotel and Restaurant
Employees and Bartenders Inter-
national Union, AFL-CIO,
Balloting will be conducted tn
the Food Service Lounge of the
College Service Building on the
Geneseo campus, at a time to be
announced,
Paul Burch, CSEA collective
negottating specialist assigned to
FSA's across the state, said last
week, “CSEA ts very anxious to
represent this group. We repre-
went eight PSA's already, and
every time another PSA swells
the ranks, our position becomes
stronger and more secure. We
Jearn more and more all the
time about the employees and
their unique problems and the
intricacies pecullar to the unl-
versity campuses where they
work, We have done a good job
at other campuses, and I'm con-
Vinced we can do the same
here at Geneseo.”
W. Seneca Unit
Endorses Two
WEST SENECA—The 400-
member West Seneca school unit
of the Civil Service Employees
Asan, bas gone on record in fay-
or of Lorraine Danney and Agnes
B. Lillls for school trustees,
BIG BOOST — riomas McDonough, right, first vlce-prest-
dent and president of the Albany Motor Vehicles chapter of the
Civil Service Employees Assn., gives » mighty boost to the CSEA
Welfare Fund as he presents a check for $5,000 in behalf of the
members of his chapter to Hazel G. Abrams, fifth vice-president
and administrator of the Welfare Fund.
Remind Employees Taking Leave To Arrange
For Continued CSEA Membership, Insurance
ALBANY—State employees who will be taking leaves In
order to work in Federally-funded projects should contact
their Civil Service Employees Assn. chapter presidents to
arrange for continued CSEA membership, CSEA insurances,
and to get Information about pension and seniority rights
during their leaves, CSEA announced today.
CSEA president Theodore C, Wenzl sald that many em-
ployees, especially those in the Correctional Services and
Mental Hygiene departments, would be taking leaves from
their State jobs for varying periods of time in order to par-
ticipate in the Federal programs.
“In order to make sure that thelr CSEA membership
and its privileges, their Insurances, and their rights concern-
ing pensions and seniority are fully protected while they
are away, I urge employees to contact thelr CSEA chapter
presidents immediately,” Wenzl said.
The CSEA chief said that in order to get retirement
credit for such periods, employees must secure prior approval
from the State.
Assure Troy
Employees
Of Back Pay
(Special to The Leader)
TROY—four months after
a Court of Appeals order and
nearly two years after thelr
union began fighting for It,
Troy city employees were assured
last week that they will receive
back pay and compensatory tlme
for extra hours worked
A Civil Service Employees
Assn. spokesman said the City
Counell of Troy, headed by Act-
ing City Manager John Buckley,
had transferred enough money
from other funds to pay the
(Continued on Page 9)
Doyle Blasts Niagara
County For Withholding
5 Days’ Pay From Aides
(From Leader Correspondent)
LOCKPORT—The Niagara County chapter of the Civil Service Employees Assn. has
sent a letter to all Niagara County legislators vehemently opposing what the chapter sald
was the Legislature’s “unilateral decision" to withhold five days’ pay from County workers.
The letter, signed by William M, Doyle, chapter president, said in the letter that
withholding the pay violates the
contract between the CSEA and
the County.
He and James Stewart, CSEA
field representative, met with
OCSEA attorney, Earl W. Brydges
Jr., discuss the chapter's next
move in the situation,
Chapter To Act
The chapter plans to seck
either @ court injunction against
the decision or proceed under
the Taylor Law through the
Public Employment Relations
Board
The Legislature's committee,
despite two meetings with Doyle
and Stewart, refused their re-
quests to consult with County
Treasurer Lioyd H. Paterson on
the payroll problems, Doyle said.
The motion to withhold the
pay, contended Doyle, was not
scheduled on the Legislature's
agenda, but was pushed through
at @ late hour, with only three
legislators opposing the reso-
lution,
In the lever, Doyle told the
legislators that the resolution
was earmarked to overcome dif-
ficulties in payroll preparation
that did not exist,
Doyle also rebuked the legts-
lators’ contention that the Coun-
ty’s method of payment was con-
trary to State rules, “New York
State does not hold back pay
but pays in the same manner as
our present payroll,” Doyle wrote.
The procedure of the County
highway and water districts
(Continued on Page 9)
Fund Top $20,000
Pilgrim State,
Motor Vehicles
Lead The Way
(Special to The Leader)
ALBANY — The Welfare
Fund set up by the Civil Ser-
vice Employees Assn. to as-
sist members in financial
need, had reached-a total of
more than $20,000 at Leader
presstime.
The fund, according to its
administrator, fifth vice-prest-
dent Hazel Abrams, has been
boosted by contributions from
107 individual members, 26 chap-
ters and one allied organization
— the Metropolitan Diagnostic
Institute, which gave $100. The
fund will be used to help CSEA
members suffering financial
hardships resulting from the
April 1 CSEA action,
Ms. Abrams reported that two
chapters, Pilgrim State Hospital
and Motor Vehicle in Albany,
were having a race to get the
most individual coatributions.
The grand total of donations
as of May 3° was $23,149.
Those chapters who donated
money to the fund, as of May
31, are Genesee State Park—
$100; NYS Rehabilitation Hos-
pital at West Haverstraw—$100;
Syracuse State School — $150;
Pilgrim State Hospital — $5,210;
Pinger Lakes State Park (Tru-
mansburg) — $50; Suffolk State
School—$50; Transportation Re-
gion 3, Syracuse—$26; Creed-
moor Stabe Hospital — $1,000;
Buffalo City Chapter — $1,000;
Roswell Park Memorial Institute
$2,000; Metropolitan Division
of Employment — $500; Wassaic
State School — $300; Niagara
County — $400; Mid-Hudson,
Newburgh — $100; Suffolk Psy-
chiatric Hospital — $426.25; Ni-
agara Frontier—$172; Court of
Claims, Albany—$15; Motor Ve-
hicle — $5,000; Nassau County —
$1,000; NYS Psychiatric — $100,
and Industry School—$297.50.
Public Service Motor Vehicle
Inspectors chapter — $100; New
York City chapter—$2,000; Com-
merce chapter, Albany—$25; J.
N, Adams State School chapter
— $100; Newark State School
chapter—$500.
The majority of contributions
from individual members were
for amounts more than $5.00,
Fourteen members gave amounts
under $5; 33 members gave $5;
36 members gave $10; 17 mem~
bers gave from $15 to $25; one
member gave $40; five members
gave $50, and a social worker at
the Kortright Schoo] for Boys,
Dick Kenyon, gave $100. A total
of 107 individual contributors
had donated by May 31
Nassau Contributes
Thousand To Fund |
MINEOLA—A $1,000 donation
to the statewide Welfare Fund
has been voted by the Nassau
chapter, Civil Service Employees
Assn.
‘The chapter board of direotors
approved the recommendation
voiced by chapter president Irv-
ing Flaumenbaum, who said,
“The counties are ever-ready te
help our brothers in the State
service. We know that when we
have problems they help us”
ZLOL ‘9 Pung ‘dupsony “YFCVAT AOLAUAS TAD as
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, June 6, 1972
$10,699 To Begin
Part-Spanish Exam Slated
For Correction Candidates
For the first time, the title
of correction officer — for
both men and women — will
provide the option to take
the exam 60 percent in
Spanish. A separate exam,
completely in English, will
also be given.
‘These cOrrection positions of-
fer $10,699 on entrance, climb-
ing incrementally to $12,150 at
the end of three years of ser-
vice. There is also a uniform
allowance.
Applications are being taken
through June 28, with require-
ments listing only a high school
diploma or equivalency, Ameri-
can citizenship, local area res-
idence, and character and phy-
sical standards. Experience is
not required.
‘The maximum age fs 32; the
minimum, 20. Residents of New
York City as well as Nassau,
Westchester, Suffolk, Orange,
Rockland and Putnam Counties
may apply.
A written test has been sched-
uled for July 15. Questions are
expected on job situations; hu-
man relations; leadership situa-
tions; Intercultural relations as
well as figure analogies; spatial
relationships and mathematical
computations The problems of
delinquency will also be featured.
A qualifying physical test,
Special Notice
regarding your
CSEA BASIC ACCIDENT
AND SICKNESS PLAN
There have been changes!
WE HAVE INCREASED THE LIMITS FOR
THE DISABILITY INCOME BENEFITS...
Now,
if your
annual salary
Is
Less than $4,000
$4,000 but less than $5,000
$5,000 but less than $6,500
$6,500 but less than $8,000
$8,000 but less than $10,000
$10,000 and over
You can
qualify for a
monthly benefit of
FOR FULL INFORMATION AND RATES:
1, Please print your nanie, address, place of employment and employee item
number in the spaces provided on the coupon below,
2. Mail form to:
TER BUSH & POWELL, INC.
CIVIL SERVICE DEPARTMENT
BOX 956
SCHENECTADY, NEW YORK 12301
$100 a month
$150 a month
$200 a month
$250 a month
$300 a month
$400 a month
3. Or, call your nearest Ter Bush & Powell representative for details,
POWELL, .
KS Yasin?) a
SCHENECTADY
NEW YORK
FILL OUT AND MAIL TODAY...
Ter Bush & Powell, Inc, Schenectady, New York
Please furnish me with complete information about the changes In the CSEA Accident
and Sickness policy,
Name.
BUFFALO
SYRACUSE
Home Address.
Place of Employment
Employee Item No,
P.S. Don’t forget, new employees can apply for basic CSEA Accident.
and Sickness Insurance non-medically
luring the first 120 days ef
employment, providing their age is under 39 years and six
five-foot-seven in bare feet, and
their women counterparts, five-
foot-two.
Other physical standards for
both sexes include vision (20/30
in both eyes); color perception;
hearing (must hear whispered
voice); and being free from “any
disease, injury or abnormality
which would prevent perform-
ance of duties.”
The other major consideration
is good character. Grounds for
disqualification include convic-
tion of an offense indicating a
“disposition toward violence or
disorder” and repeated discharge
from employment showing “an
Inability to adjust to discipline.”
Addiction to drugs or an exces-
sive use of alcohol will also der
appointment to correction titles.
Announcements No. 2021, for
men, and 2022, for women, pro-
vide data on job duties and ex-
Plain the physical exam more
fully. Correction officers gener-
ally work rotating tours, includ-
ing weekends. See Page 15 of
The Leader under “Where to
Apply,” for instructions on filing.
320 NAMED TO
SPECIAL OFFICER
At a hiring pool on May 31,
320 eligibles were appointed to
special officer in a number of
agencies, Hiring was led by the
Dept. of Social Services with
189 appointees, with Health and
Hospital Corp. second with 95.
Of the 506 eligibles called, 382
appeared. The list number of the
last eligible appointed was 800
on the 2,357-name roster estab-
lished March 23 from open com-
petitive exam 1077.
SAVE A WATT ::
Lieutenant Exams
June 17 For HA, TA
‘Written exams for pesca
to leutenant in the Housing
Authority and Transit Authority
Police Departments will be held
June 17 at Seward Park HS.,
350 Grand St. in Manhattan.
Of the 212 applicants for TA
Neutenant, three were declared
ineligible by the City Depart-
ment of Personnel; of the 130
who applied for HA lieutenant,
20 were deemed ineligible. Filing®
was conducted in April.
‘The written tests, of multiple
choice format, will count 50
percent of candidates’ final
score; pasing score for each will
be the score of the candidate who
ranks 50th in comparative rat-
ing, with ties at that score con-
sidered passing as well. Seniority
and performance will be counted
the other 50 percent of final
score. @
Sr. Quantitative
Analysts
‘The Bureau of the Budget is
interviewing eligibles for senior
quantitative analyst to fill 12
$14,475 positions. Eligibles num-
bered 1 through 16 were certi-
fled May 23 from the open com-
petitive roster of May 17, 1972.
Fire Bells
A regular meeting of the Pire
Bell Club is slated for June 13
at 8 p.m. at club headquarters in
the Hotel McAlpin, suite 460-461,
Broadway at 34 St., Manhattan.
Visitors are welcome.
Claims Examined
The City Personnel Depart-
ment has eliminated 223 of
1066 applicants for claim ex-
aminer as not qualified accord-
ing to the terms of the
nouncement. Training and ex-
perience evaluations continue
for the remaining candidates in
bin open competitive examina-
WHY
CLP?
Because It protects you and your family with
tomorrow's medical care today...
@ PAID IN FULL BENEFITS FOR MOST COVERED SERVICES from
Participating Physicians, Family Doctors, and Laboratories —~
of what you earn
Free Choice of any licensed physician, anywhere
Preventive care to keep you well
regan
Office Visits
Doctor's visits for
medical care in hospital
@ Diognostic X-rays out of
hospital e
e
e
@ Home Calls
.
e
\G
Doctor bil benefits from the first day, from the first dollar without deductibles,
GROUP HEALTH Leo alld
THE GH! BUI
227 West 40th St, Mew York, roe \eore (212) 844-8900 ,.
@ Diagnostic lab exams out of
hospital
© Surgery
@ Anesthesia
@ Immunizations
@ Specialists’ Consultations
City Expands Thurs.
Technical Job Series
ptrofier Stenos %
Liteon gulgge nico) tell angeaendbred sin pea aus aru old
The City has unveiled an
expanded open - continuous
series for technical fobs with
the addition of several engi-
neering titles. These techni-
cal jobs are filled in person
only on Thursdays between 9
and 10 a.m.
The additions to the series
are assistant civil engineer and
assistant electrical engineer,
both offering $12,100. Junior
titles start at $10,500, while full
engineer positions have a $14,-
000 salary.
In general, junior-level en-
gineer posts require a bachelor's
in an appropriate specialty or a
state professional engineer's l-
@Wreense. Assistant engineers must
meet this requirement and addi-
tlonally have two years of rele-
vant experience.
The Intest rule is no written
test will be given to most en-
trants for engincer titles. Per-
sons who lack either an engineer-
ing degree or a professional l-
cense, will be given a written
exam on the date they file. At
the time noted, candidates should
‘appear at Room M-9, 40 Worth
St., Manhattan, to file their ex-
perience statements.
Architect applicants have sim-
ilar filing procedures, except no
written test will be given. Qual-
iffcations are similar in the en-
gineer title: bachelor’s degree or
state registration for junior-
level posts. A B.A. plus two years
of pertinent work history is
needed to be an assistant archi-
tect.
Advance coples of exam no-
tices are available at 49 Thom-
as St., Manhattan. However, fil-
ing procedures Msted on page 15
do not pertain to positions with-
in the open-continuous category.
‘The current open-continuous
City titles include:
© Air pollution control en-
wineer, Exam No. 1107;
© Architect, Exam No. 1108;
© Assistant architect, Exam
No. 1110;
© Assistant civil engineer, Ex-
am No, 1111;
© Assistant electrical engineer,
Exam No. 1112;
© Assistant landscape archi-
tect, Exam No. 1114;
© Civil engineer,
1117;
® Civil engineer-bullding con-
struction, Exam No, 1162;
Exam No.
© Civil engineer, highway
traffic, Exam No, 1118;
© Civil engineer—sanitary,
Exam No, 1119"
© Civil engineer — structural,
June 20 at 10:30 am. by the
City Civil Service Commission on
® resolution to delete the steno-
grapher to the Comptroller and
to classify assistant secretary to
the Comptroller, in the Office of
the Comtproller, in the Exempt
Class, Rule X. The hearing will
be heid in Room 401, 20 Church
St., Manhattan.
Stationary Fireman
Because practical testing ‘s
still pending, the rating of can-
didates’ test papers for station-
ary fireman (exam No. 1087) Is
yet to begin. The written exam
was taken on March 18 by 511
candidates. Practical testing ls
slated tentatively for June.
© Civil engineer — water sup-
ply, Exam No. 1120;
© Jr. air pollution control en-
gineer, Exam No. 1061;
© Jr. civil engineer. Exam No.
1125;
© Jr. landscape architect,
Exam No. 1127;
© Jr. mechanical engineer,
Exam No. 0149;
© Landscape architect, Exam
No. 1129;
© Mechanical engineer, Exam
No. 1130;
© Plan examiner,
Exam No. 1132
Most of the above titles are
open in the promotional category
as well as the open-competitive
gtoup. Check with the Personnel
Dept. for details
buildings,
Dept. of Sanitation will meet for
installation ceremonies at 5:30
p.m. on June 8 at the German
Sports Club, 60-60 Metropolitan
Steam Fitting
‘The City Department of Per-
sonnel has declared unqualified
44 of the 157 applicants for
steam fitter’s helper, open com-
petitive exam No, 1088, Piling
Ave., Middle Village. was accepted In April.
New York's Sheraton Motor Inn
cares for your comfort.
And your budget.
$1350 single |
$1950 double
. including kids free*, parking free
Special Civil Service Rates
On the banks of the Hudson, overlooking the cruise
ships, and just five minutes from midtown. Close to
Lincoln Tunnel, just off the West Side Highway 42nd
Street exit, Enjoy a comfortable room with river view,
moderate-priced coffee shop, fine dining at the Compass
Points Restaurant. And a rooftop swimming pool in sum-
mer. Truly a special place to stay, at very
special savings for government employees.
*Children under 18 tree in parents’ room.
Sheraton Motor Inn-New York City
SHERATON HOTELS & MOTOR INNS. A WORLDWIDE SERVICE OF ITT
520 12TH AVENUE. NEW YORK,NY, 212/695-6500
ZL6L “9 Punt ‘sepseny ‘YaGVAT AQIAWaS TIAD
Exam No, 1222;
ACADEMY AWARD WINNER!
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR - BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
OFFICIAL
DISCOUNT
Approved By Many Civil Service Organizations
NEW CARS — Official car purchase plan , . . exactly $100 above dealers actual cost!
CARPETING — Specially negotiated discount prices on almost all national brands.
STEREO AND HI-Fi — stereo consoles, stereo cabinets and stereo components includ-
ing amplifiers, preamplifiers, tuners, turn tables, speakers and speaker systems and
tape recorders,
DIAMONDS — Uncontested value at lowest possible price!
PIANOS -Direct factory arrangement for special discount prices. Factory showroom
located in New York,
CAMERAS AND PHOTOGRAPHIC EQUIPMENT — Cameras and accessories, movie
cameras, still and movie projectors, editing, copying and developing equipment, lenses
and film.
ADDITIONAL SERVICES
MAJOR APPLIANCES — Televisions, air-conditioners, refrigerators, freezers, dish-
washers, washing machines, drye oaals, ranges, radios, humidifiers, dehumidifi-
ers, tape recorders and vacuum cleaners available at slightly above wholesale,
FURNITURE — ©
CUSTOM DRAPERIES, UPHOLSTERY AND SLIP COVERS — Exclusive service group
only through United Buying Service. 13 locations throughout the metropolitan area. |
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FURS — A prominent fur manufacturer and supplier to major department stores is
now contracted to offer t roducts it discounts exclusive to United Buying Service.
Fur available include Mink, Beaver, Leopard, Muskrat, Broadtail, Alaskan Seal, Per-
sian Lamb and a variety of Fun Furs,
* LUGGAGE — Products of all leading manufacturers at special discount prices,
United Buying Service Corporation
1855 Broadway, New York, N.Y. 100023
pe Races ‘he, tr RA NBiaN & New York: (212) LT 1-9494, PL 7-0007
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The Greatest Buying Power in Greater New York
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, June 6, 1972
America’s Largest Weekly for Public Employees
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations
Published every Tuesday by
LEADER PUBLICATIONS, INC.
Publishing Office: 669 Atlantic Street, Stemford, Conn. 06904
Business & Editorial Office: 11 Warren Street, New York, N.Y, 10007
212-BEeckman 3-6010
Bronx Office: 406 149th Street, Bronx, W.Y, 10455 =
derry Finkelstein, Publisher
Poul Kyer, Editor
Mervin Boxley, Executive Editor
Kjell Kjeitberg, City Editor
Barry Lee Coyne, Assistant Editor
WN. H, Mager, Business Meneger
Advertising Representatives:
ALBANY — Joseph T. Bellow — 303 So. Manning Bivd., IV 2-5474
KINGSTON, N.Y, — les Andrews — 239 Wall St., Federal 8-8350
1Se per copy. Subscription Price: $3,602 te members of the Civil
Service Employees Association, $7.00 te non-members, <i
TUESDAY, JUNE 6, 1972
Taxpayer Revolts Aimed
In The Wrong Direction
AYOFFS, forced “holidays and/or furloughs,” charges
L of inefficiency and lack of productivity: These are but
a few of the blows being aimed at civil servants from New
York City to Buffalo, and the goal is the same in our opin-
fon—when everything's going to hell, just put the blame on
public employees.
For years, this newspaper has denounced State and
local governments for putting programs-of steel and con-
crete before people and the services they need. During these
years, ribbons of highways have criss-crossed the State, the
Albany Mall has plowed through millions of dollars, the
Twin Towers have soared toward their final height in New
York City and the bills for these and other projects have
reached astronomical heights,
Money for these “glorious” reflections of a truly “Em-
pire” State have come from either taxes or bond issues.
There is only so much money to be wrung from these
sources, as public officials have wailed so loudly.
Since the attitude still remains In most governmental
quarters that the motto is to continue to be “Build We
Must,” cutbacks have had.to be made in some areas—and
they have been, Services to the public have been cut to the
bone in such vital needs as health, mental hygiene, main-
tenance of roads and buildings, inspection services of all
kinds and what have you.
To cover up the fact that fiseal follies, not public em-
ployees, have pushed the tax and bond bills beyond belief,
government has once again opted for making civil servants
the financial goat, It’s easy to do. The average taxpayer
does not see the work a ward attendant in a Mental Hygiene
Department institution does for an unfortunate person who
cannot take care of himself, The Mall, the Towers, and the
slick highways are visible—and have no visible price tags.
Legislators vote themselves pensions that outstrip those
of private industry officials—secretly, that ts, But a stern
finger is pointed at the “plush” pensions of rank-and-file
workers, 85 percent of whom make less than $8,500 a year
in a time when a $9,000 salary is considered barely adequate
by U.S. standards for a family of four.
One of these days a moment of reckoning will have to
come, When citizens finally are overwhelmed by dirty sub-
ways, filthy streets, Inadequate hospital care, etc., it will
dawn on them that they need people —civil servants —to
take care of these things. And it's bound to happen, Human
wants still need human hands and when this ts finally real-
zed there may be the kind of taxpayer revolt that is
properly oriented — toward people, not programs.
Elias To Youth Wenzl At Reception
Albert Elias, superintendent of
the New Jersey youth reception
and correction center at Yard-
ville and superintendent of the
NJ Youth Correctional Institu-
tion for Males, has assumed the
newly created post of deputy ex~
ecutive director of the New York
SBiate Division for Youth at an
@nnual salary of $35,000.
Dr, Theodore C. Wenal, presi-
dent of the Civil Service Em-
ployees Assn, and Joseph P.
Dolan, CSEA director of local
government affairs, were among
the guests of Goy, Nelson A,
Rockefeller at a reception for
the State's top labor leaders,
hosted by the Governor, in New
York City last week,
for the membership, but in main-
taining decent services particu-
larly in various State institutions.
No Time For Relaxing
Despite the gains made under
heavy handicap this year, there
is really no time for relaxing
on laurels. For all anybody
knows, next year may prove to
be an even more difficult year.
Of immediate moment and a
matter of vital significance to
the CSEA at the next session of
the legislative session is the re-
peal of chapters of the Laws of
1971, which provide that man-
agerial and confidential public
employees may not hold office
in or be members of an employee
organization in which employees
of the same employer are
members,
Based on these statutes, the
Public Employee Relations Board
is prepared to remove some 7,-
600 CSEA members from the As-
sociation and to deprive this
substantial group of public em-
ployees not only of the collec-
tve bargaining power of CSEA
but also of group insurance ben-
efits, the benefits of CSEA legal
assistance programs and of the
general representational benefits
of membership in CSEA.
The Appellate Division in Al-
bany sustained the right of the
Legislature to enact the statutes
depriving those in managerial
and confidential positions of their
membership in CSEA. The Court
ruled in that manner, even
though it conceded that the
laws in question destroyed con-
tractual rights of these members
particularly with respect to in-
surance contracts, Under the
circumstances, 1t would seem im-
perative to move forward with
an appeal to the State Court of
Appeals and possibly thereafter
to the United States Supreme
Court. Implicit in the action of
the Legislature, and in the con-
cession by the Appellate Division
that there will result # disrup-
tion of contractual rights, is
whether the State laws in ques-
tion do not violate the prohibi-
tion in the United States Con-
stitution against State action
that impairs the obligations of
contract,
First Order Of Business
Whatever may be the legal
ramifications of these laws, it
is clear that the legislative ac-
tion to deny to managerial and
confidential employees rights to
membership in CSEA involves
no policy other than a legisia-
five determinaiton to weaken
CSEA as a bargaining agent for
all employees of the State and
local governments. Repeal of
these laws becomes a first order
of business which must be dis-
posed of when the next session
of the Legislature meets in Nov~
ember,
SUPPORT THE ATTICA
FAMILY MEMORIAL FUND
ATTICA, N.Y, 14011
Civil Service
Law & You
By RICHARD GABA
inne
Mr. Gaba is a member of the firm of White, Walsh and Gaba,
P.C., and cbairman of the Nassau County Labor Law Committee.
The Right To Strike
The Erie County Water Authority deducted two days’ pay
for one day of absence from work by a substantial number of
the Authority’s employees on Sept. 15, 1970. The Union
representing the employees brought an action in the Su-
preme Court, Erie County, seeking a declaration that its
members were not public employees and therefore had a
right to strike. The Union also claimed in its action that
the New York State Public Employment Relations Board
had no right to take any action against the Union or its
members under the Taylor Law to determine whether or
not there was a strike and to determine whether or not the
Union was subject to forfeiture of the dues checkoff privi-
lege. The Union joined the New York State Labor Relations
Board as a party on the theory that since the Authority's
employees are not “public employees” they are under the
jurisdiction of the SLRB.
THE ERIE COUNTY Water Authority was created under
the Public Authorities Law as “a body corporate and politic
constituting a public benefit corporation .. . subject to the
provisions of the Civil Service Law. ..." The Authority was
formed for the purpose of taking over an existing water
company and the Public Authorities Law provided that the
Authority was deemed to be an employer within the meaning
of the State Labor Relations Law. In 1971, the State Legis-
lature amended the Public Authorities Law to delete the
reference to the Authority being deemed an employer within
the meaning of the State Labor Relations Board. The legis-
lative action was taken subsequent to both the strike and
the commencement of this action. The Union also claimed
that under the authority of Erie County Water Authority v.
Kramer, 167 N.¥.S. 2d 557 affd. by the Court of Appeals 184
N.Y.S, 2d 833 (1957), that the employees had a right to en- e
gage in collective bargaining and were not therefore public
employees.
The Taylor Law defines public employer as a public
authority, commission or public benefit corporation. It de-
fines public employee as any person holding a position by
appointment or employment in the service of a public em-
ployer.
In 1960, the Union entered into a collective bargaining
agreement with the Authority in which it was recognized by
the Union that the Authority’s employees were public em-
ployees subject to the Civil Service Law and did not possess
the right to strike. That agreement was renewed in 1969
with the same provisions,
THE COURT SAID there was very little basis in the
Kramer case to support the Union's position, since that case
merely sustained the right of the Authority's employees to
engage in collective bargaining, In that case, the court was
careful to point out, however, that the right to engage in
bargaining did not release the employees from the Civil
Service Law which denied them the right to strike. There
is no Inconsistency between requiring the Authority to en-
gage in collective negotiations with its employees even
though they fell under the jurisdiction of the Civil Service
Law.
The lower court held that the employees were not en-
titled to strike because they were public employees within
the definition of the Taylor Law. On appeal to the Appellate
Division, Fourth Dept., that decision was affirmed, The
court said, “In view of the state of the law in this area, as
fully recognized by the Union in its agreements with the
Authority, the statutes differentiating the rights of public
employees with those of private employees, and the clear
exposition made in the Kramer case, we find no substance
to the Union's contention that its members had the right to
strike or that at least the law was contradictory and con-
fusing so that neither it nor its employees should be pun-
ished for striking,” Local 930, American Federation of State,
County and Municipal Employees, AFL-CIO y, Erie County
Water Authority, 330 N.¥.8. 2d 695.
LETTERS TO
* THE EDITOR
Better Management
Editor, The Leader:
T just finished reading Paul
‘Thayer's column in the May 23,
1972, issue of The Leader. I'm
not a fireman; I'm not anti-boss
or anti-establishment, but I was
ery happy to see someone speak
t about injustices done to guys
trying to do a job by people hav-
ing no conception of the prob-
lems of the man “on the street.”
You made a great point of the
fact that better management and
not just more money is essential
tn doing a good job.
Ed Whalen
New Paltz
@& 1/2% Pay Boost For
Syosset School Unit
MINEOLA Irving Flaum-
enbaum, president of the Nas-
sau chapter of the Civil Service
Employees A: , announced this
week that the Syosset School
District unit had reached a con-
tract agreement providing for a
5% percent pay boost, an ad-
tional $200 boost for clean-
ers and groundsinen and an
$11,000 unit benefit fund.
Unit president Ben Gumin and
CSEA field representative George
Peak led the negotiating team
that reached the agreement to
be effective July 1. The two-year
contract contains a reopening
clause on wages and fringe ben-
efits
The new benefit fund may be
applied to increase life or health
@insurance at the option of the
unit.
Lindenhurst Schools
Unit Picks Officers
The new executive board for
the Lindenhurst Public Schools
unit of the Civil Service Em-
ployees Assn., elected May 20,
will be headed by Pat O'Co.inor,
@yresicent.
Other board members are:
Vinnie DiBrienza, first vice-pres~
ident; Virginia Schneider, sec-
ond vice-president; Charlie Iver-
son, treasurer; Frank Peterson,
recording secretary, and Pete
Aliano, sergeant-at-arms, Cho-
sen as delegates were Charlie
Sullivan and Walter Amos.
Scholarship Fund winners
were also announced. First prize,
*& portable TV, went to Tony
Wrasak, while a clock radio as
second prize was won by Molly
Haden, Dotty Watt, a high
school secretary, was recipient
of a bottle of detergent as the
third prize winner.
Ms. Lennon Elected
Plattsburgh Leader
PLATTSBURGH-—Betty Len-
@non has been elected president
of the Civil Service Employees
Assn. chapter at the State Unt-
versity at Plattsburgh, CSEA has
announced. She succeeds Barbara
Duesberg.
Dayle Prost, Buildings 4
Grounds Department, is the new
chapter vice-president, Other of-
ficers are Patth Wrisley, secre~
tary; Doris Bourdon, treasurer;
Jack MocCasiand, Dave Mayette
‘and Lyman Pageau, delegates,
and Prank Crimi, sergeant-at-
arms
BUY U.S. BONDS
1969 Nowa-4 Sedan 2 Dr,
1969 Opel 2 Dr, Sedon
196? Volkswagen 113
The real price of a car is the dif-
ference between what you pay for it
new, and what you sell it for old.
So in 3 short years, you could
have lost almost % of your original
investment. Or saved almost % of it,
1969 Datsun PL S10 2.0r,
1969 Toyota Corolla 2 Dr.
Loses shown reflect the average depreciation of there 1967 economy cars by comparing what they sold for new with the average retell prices they
rere sold for by used cor deolers ia Jon, 19/2 as quoted wm NADA Oiliiciol Used Cor Guide, Eastern Edition, Jon, 1972. OVolkswagen of Amerion, taal)
Ambyuile Mosler Motor, tid,
Auburn Berry Volkswagen, Inc,
Betevio Bob Howtes, Inc.
Bey Shore Tront-tsland Avtomobiles Corp.
Boyiide Boy Volkawagen Corp,
Binghamton Roger Kreage, Inc.
Bronx Avoxe Corporation
Bronx Bruckner Volkewogen, lnc,
Bronk Jerome VoRswagen, Inc.
Brooklyn Aldon Volkswagen, Inc,
Brooklyn Economy Volkswagen, inc,
Brooklyn Kingsboro Motors Corp.
Brooklyn Volkiwoges of Boy Ridge, Inc.
Buffolo Butler Volkiwagen, Inc,
Boffolo Jim Kelly's, Inc.
Cortland Cartland Foreign Motors
Croton jim McGlone Motors, Inc,
Bimford Howard Holmes inc.
Fores! Hills Luby Volkawagen, tng.
Fulton Hulton VoRiwagen, inc.
Geneva finger Lakes Volkswagen, inc,
Glenmon! Capito! Volhawagen, lac.
Glens Fath Bromley Imports, inc.
Great Neck North Shore Volkswagen, Inc.
Hamburg Hol Carey Motors, lac,
Hempste: ‘Small Cara, Inc.
Hicksville Walters Dongldsan, Inc,
Hornell Svbvibon Motors, Inc.
Wonaheads G.C. Mclwod, Inc,
Medion Colonial VaRawagen. Ine.
Huntington Fear Motors, lnc.
Wewood Votswagen Five Towns, inc,
Whaca Ripley Motof Corp.
Jamelia Manes Voikiwagen, inc,
Johrstown Vani Volkswagen, inc.
Kingston Amerling Vorswagen, Inc.
Latham Martin Nemer Volhwwagea
Lockport Volkiwogen Village, Inc.
Monena Seaway Volkiwage
Merrick Sober Motor Corp., id,
Middle lblond Robert Weiss Volkswagen, Inc.
Middletown Glen Vollawagen Com,
Monticello Philipp Volkiwogen, Inc.
Moun! Kica North County Volkswagen, Ine.
(New Hyde Park Ayslander Voltawagen, inc,
New Rochelle Covaty Aviomotive Co,, Inc.
New York City Volkswagen Bristol Motors, tac
New York City Volkswagen filth Avenue, Inc,
Newburgh J. C. Motors, Inc:
Niagara Follk Amendola Motors, ne.
Norwich Stowe Volkswagen, inc
Qcoonside Island Volkiwogen, Inc.
Olean Volkiwogen of Olean, inc,
Oneonta John Eckert, Inc
Platibwrgh Celeste Motors, inc,
Port Jefferson Sta, Jlfarson Volkywagen, Ine,
Poughheepuie B.£,Ahmed Motors, Ud,
Queens Village Wied VolLmmagen, Inc.
Rennslove Cooley Volliwagen Corp.
Riverhead Don Wald’s Aviohaws
Rochester Ridge Ear! Volkswagen, Inc.
Rochester FA, Mators lnc.
Rochester Mi, Read Volkswagen, inc.
Eaut Rochester Irmer Volkiwogen, ina,
Rome Valley Volkewagen, inc.
Roslyn Dor Moon, Ud.
‘Seretogs Spo Voikewogen, inc.
Seyville Bianco Motors, Inc.
Schenectady Colonie Motors Inc.
Smithtown George and Dalton Volkswagen, Inc.
Sovihompton Lester Kaya Votkiwogen, Inc.
Spring Valley C. A. Haigh, Inc.
Staten load Siaten tsland Small Cory, Und
Syrecne Don Cain Volkewagen, lnc.
faut Syracuie Precision Autos, lnc.
orth Syracuse Finnegan Vokrwagen, Inc.
Tonawanda Gronville Motor, bac.
Utica Martin Volkawogen, Inc.
Valley Stream Vol-Siream Volkswagen, Inc,
Wotertown Harblin Motors, lnc,
‘West Nyock Foreign Con of Rockland, tng,
Woodbury Courtery Volkewagen, Inc.
Woodside Queensboro Vokwagen, Inc.
Yookers Dvswoodie Motor Corp,
Yorklowa Mohegan ¥oliwagen, lng
ZL6r ‘9 aung “epsony “YqaVaT ADIAAS TIAID
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, June 6, 1972
A panel of insurance specialists faces New
York City chapter members to explain various
facets of plans that serve the members of the
Civil Service Employees Asan. From left, they
GHDI;
are T. McCracken, Civil Service Department,
City Chapter Honors
Campo At Workshop
LAKE KIAMESHA—J. William Campo, president of Ter Bush & Powell, Inc., was
honored May 30 with a testimonial dinner given by the New York City chapter of the
Civil Service Employees Assn.
Health Insurance Section; L.
M. Salerno,
The testimonial, an annual event at the chapter's workshop, was in Campo’s honor
this year “in recognition of valu-
able services rendered to CSEA,”
Last year's recipients were the
presidents of the six conferences
into which the Civil Service Em-
ployees Assn. Is divided.
In addition to a plaque from
the chapter, Campo also received
an AM-FM radio presented by
Christian Paul, vice-president of
Travellers Insurance Co. for
whom Ter Bush & Powell acts
@s its agency.
Campo's wife, Dorothy, re-
ceived a bouquet of roses. The
president Theodore C, Wenzl.
The previous evening, the
chapter's first vice-president had
been honored on the occasion of
his retirement. Peter O'Regan,
who was cited for his 32 years
as a member of the chapter,
during which he had served as
third, second and first vice-pres-
ident, was presented with a
number of gifts.
The presentation began with
@ box of Postum, a plaque and
a check for $300 to O'Regan, and
former Mrs. America contestant
was escorted to the dais to join
her husband by statewide CSEA
&@ bouquet of roses for his wife,
Jean.
In {ts business meeting, the
Among top-ranking CSEA officials who were seated at
head table during testimonial dinner were, from left,
statewide secretary Dorothy MacTavish; statewide second
vice-president A, Vietor Costa and Metropolitan Confer-
ence president Randolph V. Jacobs.
Leader editor Paul Kyer, left, engages in table talk with
CSEA treasurer Jack Gallagher. Kyer himself had been
honored by NYC chapter testimonial a couple of ycars gag,
chapter executive board, dis-
cussed a number of controversial
subjects. Among these were the
statewlde contract, union affilia-
tion, a dues increase and the
chapter membership roll.
City chapter third vice-pres-
ident Frank Sanders seeks
information during work-
shop meeting on insurance.
Pizer,
HIP; J. MeDonnell,
MONY; R. Thomson, Ter Bush & Powell; R.
Lacey, Ter Bush & Powell; panel moderator
and City chapter treasurer Seymour Shapiro; e
J. Ferlauto, Retirement System; M. Saslow,
Medi-Screen; J. Cuddy, Blue Cross/Blue Shield,
and S. Mueller, Metropolitan Life.
GHI,
(Leader photos by Ted Kaplan)
J. William Campo shakes gift package presented to him
at testimonial dinner in his honor, as NYC chapter presi-
dent Solomon Bendet stands by to lend a hand. Gift was
from Traveller's Insurance Co., for which Ter Bush &
Powell acts as its agency. Campo is Ter Bush & Powell
president.
Southern Conference president Nicholas Puzziferri and
his wife, Marge, were among guests who attended work-
shop. The Concord Hotel, site of the meeting, is within
area covered by Southern Conference.
a
an “in” joke.
Peter O'Regan, first vice-presid
the New York City chapter, receives
check for $300 from second vice-presi-
dent Martha Owens. The check, in
honor of his retirement; was in addi-
tion to a plaque and a box of Postum,
The Postum, so it was explained, was
lent of Jean O'Regan, wife of the retiree, was
presented with a bouquet of red roses
at the Banquet honoring her husband
during the NYC chapter workshop at
the Concord, She was cited by toast-
master Seymour Shapiro for her un- e
derstanding and patience as the “wom-
an behind her man.”
Buffalo CSEA
Holds Panel
On News Media
BUFFALO — The media
and the Civil Service Em-
ployees Assn. was the topic
explored at a recent meeting
of the CSEA Buffalo chapter.
More than 125 chapter mem-
bers and thelr guests heard the
subject discussed by Joseph Rou-
ler, CSEA director of public
relations, Marvin Baxley, execu-
tive editor of The Civil Service
Leader, and Lee Coppola, a re-
porter for the Buffalo Evening
News and Leader correspondent
in Western New York.
Roulier, speaking on rela-
tions between the CSEA and
New York State, stressed the
need for expanded public rela-
tions .personnel to promote the
image of the state worker,
Celeste Rosenkrantz was
chairman of the panel discus-
sion. The chapter plans its an-
nual dinner and dance at 7 p.m.,
June 23, in the Hearthstone
Manor in suburban Depew.
Doyle Blasts
(Continued from Page 3)
withholding a week's pay “evolv-
ed through the years” and was a
“result of management doing as
they please and not conforming
to rules and regulations for Ni-
agara County employees,” Doyle
added.
Doyle also pointed out that the
County computer system, anoth-
er reason cited by the legisla-
tors, “is working excellently
under the present system” and
holding back a week's pay in
June would cause hardship to
some employees, “You will hold
the week's pay until the retire-
ment of each employee, 10-15-25
years?” he asked.
He also stated that the $12,-
000 of interest accrued by hold-
ing back a week's pay—$200,000
—'is employees’ money,”
“We generally would expect
to be notified in advance on any
change in procedure as drastic
as this, as we are politically or-
fented, and certainly would have
expressed our individual feelings
to you personally and by tele-
phone. We do feel indignant con-
cerning this action,” he con-
eluded.
Sas
SUNY/ALBANY INSTALLS — new ofticers of the
Civil Service Employees Assn. chapter at the State University of
New York at Albany celebrate their Installation. Left to right are
Jean Smith, recording secretary; John Burke, second vice-president;
Troy Back Pay
(Continued from Page 3)
employees in cash for up to a
maximum of 106 hours, with the
remaining time to be made up
in compensatory time off.
The CSEA had taken the case
to court when former City Man-
ager Ralph DeSantis had forced
City employees to work 37%
hours instead of the 30 hours
they had worked before he be-
came manager. There was no
corresponding increase in pay.
CSEA, protesting, maintained
that its negotiated contract for-
bade any change in working
hours without mutual consent.
The CSEA protest culminated in
a Court of Appeals ruling last
February which ordered the City
to work out a formula for mak-
ing up for the upaid time.
CSEA field representative
Thomas Whitney assisted the
‘Troy City unit in fighting the in-
creased working hours.
CSEA ~attorney James D.
Featherstonehaugh represented
the Troy City employees
throughout the court proceed-
ings.
Whitney, an outspoken critic
of DeSantis, whose anti-em-
ployee decision led to a serious
morale problem, had high praise
for acting manager Buckley and
the Troy City Council for “put-
ting labor-management relations
back on an even keel,”
BUY
us.
BONDS!
CHAUTAUQUA IN s T "i LL
Celebrating their installation as officers of the
dinner, are left to right standing, Pat Bigelow, secretary; Russell
Certo, first vice-president; Eliena Wagner, board ef directors; Don-
ald Sewejbka, president; Darlene Smith, third vice-president, and
Steve Pajerski, board of directors, Seated are Wanda Gustafson,
beard of directors, left, and Betty Cross, treaaurer,
vice-president,
Dorothy Gusbertl, treasurer; Frank Gilder, president
Donough, CSEA first vice-president; Bee Woodruff, corresponding
secretary; Harry Healing III, delegate; Dr. Theodore C, Wenzl,
president of CSEA; John Miner, delegate, and Bill Harting, first
$ ‘Thomas Me-
Charles Ecker: From Basketball Star
To Central Conference President
SYRACUSE — Charles J. Ecker re-
members 1933—when the United States
was still in the throes of the Great
Depression.
That was the year that “Charlie”
Ecker—not long out of high school—
became a state employee. He joined
the workers at the Syracuse State
School as an attendant.
This spring, the president of the
Civil Service Employees Assn.’s Central
Conference, brought his 39-year career
as a public employee to a close.
This year also will produce two other
milestones for Charlie. He completes
his second year as president of the
Central Conference—and probably his
last as an officer in the CSEA, an or-
ganization he has been active in for
more than 30 years.
And, on June 9, he will be married
(here's a real scoop for you, he says)
to Ms. Cleo Cobb, an employee of
Harpur College and a member of Bing-
hamton chapter, The couple will make
their home in the Binghamton area
after the wedding.
Charlie also remembers
point about 1933.
“We worked 12 hours a day, six days
a week then,” he says.
“Since I have been active in CSEA,”
he continues, “we have obtained the
eight-hour day and 40-hour week. We
have obtained improved vacation and
holiday credits. And we have obtained
sick leave, accident and health, hos-
pitalization and life insurance,”
another
Retired from work, but
not from life,
Ecker plans June 9 wedding
with Ms, Cleo Cobb.
Charlie is a charter member of
CSEA’s Syracuse State School chapter
organized in 1941. And he has been
active in it almost from the first.
At the school for the mentally re-
tarded, Charlie Ecker went from atten~
dant to assembly hall custodian, to as-
sistant recreation instructor to indus-
trial arts instructor to social worker
to colony supervisor to senior colony
supervisor and finally to youth pro-
gram supervisor for the Syracuse insti-
tution,
Charlie's first office in the CSEA
chapter was as treasurer, He followed
this by being elected delegate, vice-
president and then to his first two-
year term as presiden'
CHARLES ECKER
in 1959, Ecker was elected president a
second time. He continued as head of
the CSEA unit for seven years this
time.
His activities in CSEA's Central Con-
ference have paralleled those in the
chapter. When he completes his pres-
ent term, he will bring to a close elght
years as third, second, first vice-presi-
dent, respectively, and finally presi-
dent.
Charlie also has been active in CSEA
on the state level. He has served on
the education, membership, mental hy-
giene, restructuring and fiscal com-
mittees, and as a member of the State
Executive Committee and Board of Di-
rectors.
And he has been the Mental Hygiene
representative for both the Western
and Central Conferences (simultane-
ously) on CSEA’s Board of Directors.
Charlie Ecker was born in Warners,
not far from where the Syracuse State
School has its colony. He has resided
in that same area since then, He ts
a@ graduate of Warners High School
where he played baseball and basket-
ball and was selected for the all-star
county basketball team during his last
year there, He also has attended Syra-
cuse University,
He was married to Dorotha Resseguie
in 1934, Mrs. Ecker died about a year
ago. Thelr two daughters both reside
in the Syracuse area, Ms, Ann Wolff
is an employee of the Onondaga Coun-
ty computer department. Ms. Janet
Muscarella is secretary to the vice-
He continued active after that, and president of the A. H. Pond Co. |
aaVaT FOIAwdS TAD
ZLOL “9 Punt *depsony *y:
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, June 6, 1972
Health Workers Sought
In Diversity Of Field:
An assortment of specialty
jobs in medical, therapeutic
and related fields is available
to qualified applicants on
the basis of training and ex-
perience alone. No written or
practical exam will be given.
The City Personnel Depart-
ment’s health job series is open
continuously and contains six
very different titles at present
dental hygienist; occupational
therapist; physical therapist;
public health nurse; x-ray tech-
nician, and veterinarian
For all positions in this cate-
gory, applications are accepted
in person only on weekday morn-
ings before 11 a.m. Applicants
should stop by at Room M-1,
40 Worth St., Manhattan, to ob-
tain and fill out the required
Experience A Form.
‘These are the general require-
ments for the health series
titles:
* Dental Hygienist (Exam
No, 1121) — You need a cur-
rent registration certificate of
the State’s dental hygienist i-
cense, Salary now $7,800.
* Occupational Therapist (Ex-
am No. 1138) — You need wo
be a graduate of an approved
school of occupational therapy,
Do You Need A
High School
Ectivaloncy
r iploma
for civil service
for personal satisfaction
6 Weeks Course Approved br
N.Y. State Education Dept
Write or Phone for
Information
Eastern School Al 4-5029
721 Broadway, NY 3 (at 8 St)
Please write me free about the
High School Equivalency clase
Name
Addeoss
Boro ..
1
Y
e
E A
w D
Hy r)
1 mimtos aponessens, E
i STENOTYPES
STEMOGRAPHS for sete R
R88 rent. 1,000 others =
s low-Low Prices
ALL LANGUAGES
TYPEWRITER CO, Sipe
or registered by the American
Occupational Therapy Assn. Sal-
ary now $9,850
© Physical Therapist (Exam
No, 1131) — You need a State
license to practice physical ther-
apy or a one-year certificate of
eligibility to practice; also ac-
ceptable will be such a certifi-
cate plus a recommendation let-
ter from @ licensed psychiatrist
or physician and five years of
paid experience In physical ther-
apy. Salary now $9,850.
* Public Health Nurse (Exam
No, 1134) You need a State
license as a registered nurse to-
gether with a temporary or
permanent registration; In ad-
dition, requirements specify the
choice of either a bachelor’s de-
gree in nursing, or a nursing
diploma or associate’s degree
supplemented by 30 college
credits in a nursing program, or
an educational equivalent. Salary
now $9,500.
© X-Ray Technician
No, 1208) You need a license
as a general x-ray technician
issued by the State. Salary now
$8,250.
© Veterinarian (Exam No.
1210) — You need a yalid State
license to practice veterinarian
medicine. Salary now $11,850,
Advance details on job duties
and the routes of
appear in the
notices. These
by contacting
of Personnel.
Page 15 of The Leader out-
lines filing instructions,
(Exam
promotion
relevant exam
may be secured
the Department
Prepare Now For Your
acd SCHOo,
uivalenc
r D —
IN JAMAICA,
Tues & Thar, 5:45 of 7:45 P.M.
SPECIAL SAT. MORNING
CLASSES NOW FORMING
information
Phone: GR 3-6900
DELEHANTY INSTITUTE
115 E. 15th St, Manhottes
91-01 Merrick Bivd., Jomelce
SCHOOL DIRECTORY
MONROE INSTITUTE — IBM COURSES
Special PREPARATION POR CIVIL SERVI
NCR Book machine, HLS
VAST TREMONT "AVI ke
Ty RAST. SORDHAM
ce
UV ALENCY
BOSTON BRE
ROAD,
Approved for Vets amd Foverge Sindents. Accred. N.
Computer
Reynanch Basco
TESTS. “Swiichboard,
Day & Eve Clames.
" hy 23800
BRONX — 935
YY. State Deve mu Education
CM
~P RSIAN * ITALIAN® AMERICAN
TEHERAN a" sais! snd" Scathis “* | Geass
AIL LOUNGE
DINNER
TULL.
She began in the early
50's in the old Lower Man-
hattan Rent Office of the
Temporary State Housing
Rent Commission and has
now emerged as the top wo-
man civil servant in the
Housing and Development
Administration as special as-
sistant to the rent commis-
sioner.
A native of Mississippi, Bar-
bara Butler came to New York
City at five and grew up in the
tenements of Washington
Heights, When she landed the
post of rent examiner in the
1950's, she was one of the
youngest examiners in that title
“I was a fresh smart-alecky
kid in those days; I took a great
delight in arguing,” said Ms.
Butler. She takes pride in the
fact that her mother ts an ad-
ministrative assistant with the
‘Transit Authority In Brooklyn
while her sister is a kindergar-
ten teacher at P.S. 44 In Man-
hattan,
Job Freeze Hardship
‘As to her new job duties, Ms
Butler claims the challenge comes
in “trying to run an efficient
operation with decreased per-
sonnel
“We've had a freeze on em-
ployment over the last couple
of years, particularly in the Of-
fice of Rent Control. People have
dropped out, left to take pro-
motions and others have re-
tired,” she said.
It’s difficult to deal with the
human aspect in code enforce-
ment and rent control,” she add-
ed, noting the “established pro-
cedures required by law.”
New Rochelle Slates
Custodial Supy. Exam
‘The New Rochelle Civil Ser-
vice Commission is holding an
open competitive exam for the
title of assistant to the plant
maintenance supervisor, a $12,-
045 post in the Department of
Development, Municipal Prop-
erties and Grounds. Application
must be made by June 16.
Applicants need not be New
Rochelle residents, but must have
been residents of New York State
for at least four months, Experi~
ence requirements inelude five
years tn building maintenance
work involving operation and
care of mechanical equipment,
Plus some building cleaning ex~-
perience. Responsible supervisory
experience plus graduation from
high school is also required.
For more information, contact
the Municipal Civil Service Com-
mission, City Hall, 515 North
Avenue, New Rochelle, NY.
—— —
F "High School
Equiv, Course
1 5 Weeks . $60
Carma by
sae
leading © @
Shae seh
BOOKLET
PL 7-0300
1 Roberts Schools, Dept. L,
517 West 57th St,
L
New York, N.Y, 10019
Barbara Butler,
Judge In Rent Feuds |
By BARRY LEE COYNE
Pointing to the controversial
Emergency Repair Program, she
sald there is a need to redefine
“emergency.” For example, a
defective elevator |s not now
considered an emergency. “But
to a sick or elderly person lv-
ing on the 11th floor, it moat
certainly is critical. And our
hands are really tied.”
The Inflation Squeeze
‘The area of rent control ts an-
other problem situation she dally
confronts: “These rents have not
kept up with inflationary trends,
such has the cost of fuel, of labor
and taxes.”
Looking at the other side of
the picture, she noted: “Senior
citizens in particular just are
not able to keep up with these
mandated increases (in rent).
BARBARA BUTLER
To Mediation
Richard H, Nolan, of East~
chester, has received a recess
appointment to a $31,325 post
as a member of the State Media-
tion Board, In announcing the
appointment for a term ending
Sept. 30, Governor Rockefeller
indicated his intention to nom-
inate Nolan for a full six-year
term.
‘Hoveuannnen env UaeUOELOFOVELAGEEEUOE SE OEIELEAS
We do have a senior citizens
exemption, but that’s due to ex-
pire this June 30 if the State
doesn't provide some means of
reinbursement.”
On a typical day, Ms, Butler's
Job involves “dealing with trate
landlords and tenants,” and
handling “administrative prob-
lems” in rent control. Much of
the emphasis now goes to devis-
ing methods to carry out the
new rules based on computerized
rents.
She was a soctology major at
Hunter College, but now spends
@ good deal of time with de-
partmental committees. The
chief one ts the Real Estate Ad-
visory Committee in which mem-
bers of the real estate industry
bring problems they have to
HDA's attention.
Already Liberated
Turning to women’s liber-
ation, Ms. Butler declared:
don't think women’s lib has af-
fected my career at all. I per-
sonally haven't had any prob-
lems because I've been a wom-
an. In many instances, this has
made it easier for me to 4o
through my day-to-day work.”
But the supervising examiner
(her official title) and assistant
to the rent commissioner does
have one outstanding gripe about
the civil service structure.
“One of the things that
bothers me ts lack of mobility
from agency to agency,” she
stated. “If you have experience
in the housing field and are
& supervisory rent examiner or
a district director, certainly you
should have some mobility to go
into a related agency as a
manager or project director, I
see absolutely no need to start
at the bottom,
“The way civil service ts struc-
tured, you have to go each step
by step, one by one, and if you
happen to go to another de-
partment, you start all over
again.
“I understand the rationale,”
she summed up, “but it really
is very constricting to some em-
ployees.”
te you
to your job
ing to civil service,
the job you want
scription now.
If you want to know what’s happening
to your chances of promotion
to your next raise
and similar matters!
FOLLOW THE LEADER REGULARLY!
Here is the newspaper that tells you about what is happen-
hat ls happening to the
Make sure you don't miss « single tssue. Enter your sub-
The price ts $7.00 That brings you 52 issues of the Civil
Service Leader. Milled with the government Job news you went
You can subscribe on the coupon below:
Job you have and
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
1) Werren Street
New York, New York 10007
I enclose $7.00 (heck or money order for « year's subscription
to the Civil Service Leader Please enter the name listed below:
an
CITY ELIGIBLES
EXAM NO. 0062
POLICE ADMIN, AIDE
‘This eligible list for police ad-
ministrative aide was establish-
ed March 29, consisting of 816
names, During the February,
1971 filing period, 2,971 applica-
tions were received; 1,265 ap-
peared for the written exam, held
March 27, 1971; 447 failed and 2
withdrew. Salary for this open
competitive title ts $7,300 to $10,-
250 yearly. Highest score this
week is 81,3.
(Cont. from Previous Editions)
521 Harold W Smith, Jose C
Freemonde, Juanita J Brothers,
Frank E Garcia, Edward A Por-
to, Susan T Perez, Ernestine
Vanduyne, Vivian C Gregory,
Elyse M Teller, Isabel M Aguir-
re, Elaine L Dingwall, Ruth E
Dye, Veronica L Ashby, Shirley
T Gilliam, Marion Brown, Glor-
ia J Pensante, Michelle V Wil-
Mams, Heather E Levi, Earline
M James, Dianno M Bragg.
541 Albert A Brathwaite, Flaine
Monroe, Gordon Raines, Vernes-
tine Headley, Juan Conde, Aud-
Tey Trotman, Mary W Ducalo,
June A Beckett, Frances L. Ey-
ans, Walter Hough Jr, Steven
Gruberger, Joseph C White 3rd,
William J Groce, Frank Landi,
Leonard Lasala Jr, Peter T Mc-
Anuff, Robert A Clark, Carolyn
Melvin, Jacqueline Beaty, Lynda
D Allen.
561 Martin Schwarty, William
EK Kollar, Jacqueline Edwards,
Ernestine Norwood, James A
Kiernan, A C Walker, Janice M
Hawkins, Gloria Myers, Philip
Witherspoon, Providence Cotto,
Helen Pierce, Diane M Wash-
ington, Phyllis Bongiorno, Cora
Davis, Bernadette Hardy, Alice
V Hunter, Veronica T Uhl, Dan-
sel E Hutter, Leyinska Ortiz, Ver-
non Grant.
581 Glendell J Hall, Mary E
Brown, Sandra M Jeffrey, Pa-
tricia A O'Neill, Judith M Jef-
frey, Ronald Pfenning, Cesar
Melendez, Howard W Baker, Ed-
win Laracuente, Geore J An-
droulakis, Pred Wright Jr, Ho-
ward W Koenig, Carlos A Nunez,
Raymond E Murtha, Joseph @
Garber, Matilde Rodriguez, Sar-
ah H Wilson, Sheryl P Jackson,
Sandra I Williams, Donald R
Blood.
LEGAL NOTICE
— ‘THR PEOPLE OF THE
STATE OF NEW YORK, By the Grace
‘of God Free and Independent,
TO: AGNES MOSLER MARX, HENRY
B. MARX, SALLY MARX SKIRBALL,
DRED SKIRBALL,
CITATION
se infant under the age of fourteen
years; ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE
STATE OF NEW YORK; ARTHUR W.
PAEG! ing and, it dead, bie
ators, distribucees:
‘And assigns, whose mames od post office
addresses are unknowa aod cannot after
inquiry be ascertained by the
the nate of OTTO. MAR:
who at the ime ot bie douche 8
New York,
Sead Greeting:
ot Heary M. Mars,
ac ‘Pembroke slund, ‘Byram,
ut 10573 and Owe Mars, Jr,
Fesuding at 2 East @8th Street, New York,
N 10078.
‘You and each of you are hereby
to show cause before the Sur wee
Coun of New York Gee My “
the Courthouse ia the Coumsy of New
Mei oa ee Soak doy of Suns, 1972, at
ethiny o'clock im thé forenoom
that day. why the account of
of it ‘Marx and Owo Mars
the Will of Ono
tbe judicially” setsled,
as ses forth in Schedule © of the Exe-
eure’ Accom’ should mor be approved
by Court,
|, Attested and Sealed, May 9b,
1972,
(LS) HON, MILLARD 1. MIDONICK
Surrogate, New York Cowmy
David 1. Sheebsn, Jr.
Gilet Check.”
Kramer, Marx, Greenlee ‘he mi
arora nn ‘oad
S New Woks Nove 10006;
01 Denis A Thomas, Gale L
Page, Mary Y Jones, Gloria M
Calloway, James M Cavanagh,
Rosemary Herzog, Edith A Law-
ton, Gloria A Byrd, James E
Ryan, Norma N Ifill, Felix Huer-
tas 3rd, John O Boyce Jr, Yvon-
ne T Bryant, Rosalind King,
Cynthia William, Christina Hath-
away, Evelyn L Brown, Louis Lo-
wenthal, Marie Dillon, Marie A
Soafidi.
621 Dolores A Washington,
Louls M Romano, Carolyn J
McCoy, Bille Mollette, Juanita
P Gibson, George E
Rose M Russ, Eugene J Davis Jr,
Constance Batts, Suzann Rat-
iff, Catherine Smalls, Mary L
Diggs, Lucille Ferraro, Bernard
J Kamenker, Richard A Calliste,
Michael Chamis, Carl E Caputo,
Jacqueline Reaves, Lawrence W
Parrish, Irene F Taylor.
41 Carolyn D Brunson, Carol
Rolon, Marsha L Mills, Martha
Ferguson, Bettie J Meaders, Jes-
se L Lewis, Arthur Cutler, Jay
G Helfgott, oJan B Preston,
Claud N Stephens, Carmelita
Wilkerson, Hollis Thomas, Jac-
quelyn Spencer, Frances A Cioffi,
Wayne A Waites, Zenaida Rent-
6, Dollie Mantanona, Mary L
Gargonnu, Shirley Green, De-
Jores E Hall.
661 Robert J Bruno, Steven J
Thomassen, Harvey S Cohen,
Geraldine Solomon, Barbara L
Gayle, Jean M Moessner, Diane
Delrosso, Clementine Wallace,
Rordigue Lombard, Geraldine
Kiely, Camilla Holmes, Laverne
Lindsay, Lugeria Taylor, Dorothy
J Nelson, Carolyn A Mena, Su-
san L Blake, Joan A Holliday,
George H Pletz, Michael J Ru-
mola, Elmer 'T Showers.
David, Vera E Whitehurst.
701 Patricia Mitchell, Maurice
Edwin D_ Silver,
V Pinckney, Doris Lightfoot, Al-
bert R Hines, Mary F Rameeur,
ArleneY Pitt.
721 Lacy A Mushatt, Bruce
Bereck, Victoria M Makar, Mary
P Hayes, Claire Rappaport, Bru-
nelle ~Davis, Sandra E Moses,
Virginia Hahn, Delores M Mon-
tes, Allida Y Pope, Pauline
Wright, Winston D Lawrence,
Betty M Harris, Richard Gross,
David Weiss, Althea L Miley,
Stephen G Helfant, Diane L
Jordan, Leonard A Renixix Jr,
Alice C Benjamin,
741 Elbert 8 Benjamin, Jean-
nette B Spencer, Arthur L Hawk-
ins, Ronald F Guerrier, Janet
Allen, Iris A Windham, Jean-
niene Owens, Joel M_ Glick,
Gladys Perez, Jose L Bianchi,
Elizabeth Defranco, Blanca I
Delgado, {Lnda C Carr, Mary A
Nared, Clifton E Jones, Suzanne
M Gallison, Ann M Farrish, Bey-
erly J Brown, John L Rimsa,
Ronald W Crhistian.
761 Sandra Pinero, Raymond
Lewis, Bernardine Parker Jo-
seph Tardo, M H Ramseur, Glor-
(Continued on Page 12)
Wedding Sterling at Special Savings
SAVE 25% on Cold Meat Forks,
Butter Knives, Sugar Spoons,
Gravy Ladies and Table Spoons
OFFER EXPIRES JUNE 24, 1972
Rogers & Rosenthal Inc.
105 Canal Street
w York City WA 5-7557
on four,
five and six
piece place
settings
in 19 Lunt
Sterling
patterns
One iee NEW mebvedere”
set den Sones only)
TO HELP YOU PASS
GET THE ARCO STUDY BOOK
BOOKS
Accountant Auditor
Administrati
gi
Civil Service Arith. & Vocabslary
Civil Service Handbook
Exem 5.00
4.00
5.00
Firemon in ey State O.P. 4,00
Foremon __ 5.00
General Entrance Series 4.00
General Test Pract. for 92 U.S. Jobs 4.00
4.00
3.00
4.00
5.00
3.00
00
5.00
5.00
5.00
4.00
5.00
4.00
4.00
Machinists Helper — —— 5.00
Maintenance Mon =e" Sra 5.00
— 4.00
4.00
Maintainer Helper Group 5.00
+ & administes tion Quizzer 5.00
4.00
o>
4.00
Notory Public 4.00
Nurse (Practi —5.09
Parking Enfo:
— 6.00
5.00
4.00
Pharmacists License Test 4.09
Playground Director — Recreation Le
Reliroad Clerk _
Real Estate
.
Sr. Attendant
Stationary Eng. & Fireman
Sterebeeper Stockmen
Tress Sag
Contains Previous Questions and Answers
Other Suitable Study Material for Coming Exams
ORDER DIRECT — MAIL COUPON
0c for 24 hours special delivery
LEADER BOOK STORE
11 Warren St, New York, N.Y, 10007
Please send me———copies of bo cheched ebove.
Lenclose check or money order for $.
PROMO ccsccrcscctcccsenccsccccncaessccdovonestensonce
Address . . se
Be were te include 7% Seles Tax
— —
w
ZL6I “9 Sung ‘Mepsany, ‘YaCVAT ANAUAS THAD
nu
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, June 6, 1972
Eligible Lists
(Continued from Page 11)
fa A Jones, Charles 8 Macil,
Julia P O'Plaherty, Barbara J
Washington, Victor 5 Spina, Ber-
nadette Henry, Veronica K Rose,
Shirley A Rogers, Elnora Smith,
Jackueline Carthen, Suzette Mon-
tuort, Ona G Abrams, Mary Cot-
ten, Margaret M Cahill, Angelo
Pardl.
781 Albert D Barry, Hazel E
Walker, Dieare D Greene, Celia
A Carter, Eleanor M Phillips,
Mary A Jones, Alice Rivera, Le-
nore F Mosely, Anthony M Tra!-
nor, Jon C Bemus Jr, Lorraine J
Merriman, Howard B Jackow!tz,
Joel B Goldberg, Adrian I Gor-
don, Maria Patti, Bernice V
Washington, Ethel Mones, Ma-
tina French, Iris N Mulligan,
James L Miers.
801 Emanuel Speros, Margie
H Mushatt, Carletta Thomp-
ton, Ronald T Soorvzelll, Linda
R Parrilla, Helen 8 Elliott, Ro-
bert A Tyson, Ricardo Martin,
Martin O Lauen, Marie Munafo,
Beverly P Burchette, Anna Hub-
bard, Keith Gardner, James H
Johnson, Loulse H Hampton,
Bruce E Snyder.
EXAM NO. 0088
COMMUNITY LIAISON
WORKER
There were 1,108 eligibles
drawn from the 1493 applicants
for community liaison worker,
open competitive exam No, 0088,
Candidates filed between March
3 and 31, 1971, and were rated
on their training and experience.
Salary ranges from $7,650 te
$10,700, This list was established
March 9, Highest test soure
achieved was 110.0.
Highest score on this week's
installment is 74.5,
(Cont'd. From Previous Editions)
781 Ernest W Wiggins, Ray-
mond J Bowens, Barbara C Mi-
ner, Philip K Miller, Raul Mer-
cado, Susan § Peterson, Robert
R Hawes, Harry Rosenthal, Wan-
da Kaluzs, Christine Cherry,
Flossie Wilson, Vera Gregg, Me-
gan H Pettolina, Jerri S Len-
nard, Pauline Peterson, Barry
Zahn, Saundra L Sapp, Virginia
Mahon, Julia Paz, Valarie &
Hughes,
801 William E Moore, Pearline
Harris, Leonard Wilensky, Mari-
lyn G Gelber, Alice Simpson, La-
mont P Bradley, Ronnie L Edel-
man, Joyce Batts, Salvador Cruz,
(Continued on Page 15)
Noon to 7:00 P.M.
EVERY SUNDAY
The New York atl
ANTIQUES
ARK
At Gth Avenue and 25th Street
Admission $1.00
TA Hispanic Society
To Hold Dance Gala
The Hispanic Society of the
NYC Transit Authority will hold
its seventh annual Dance Gala
at Manhattan Center, West 34th
St, at Eighth Ave. on Satur-
day evening, June 10.
‘This year's event, sccording
to the Society's president and
founder, David Felix, will com-
bine dancing and entertain-
ment with organizational pur-
pose. a
The Society will confer hon-
orary membership on Congress-
man John J. Rooney of Brook-
lyn; Ralph S. Rosas, regional
director, Migration Division, of
the New York Office of the
Labor Department of the Com-
monwealth of Puerto Rico, and
Christopher Marchhauser, super-
intendent of employee services,
NYC Transit Authority.
To Promote 11 Men
To Correction Capt.
Eleven vacancies have been
reported by the Department of
Correction for captain (men),
which will be filled from among
the 18 eligibles certified May 24
by the Dept. of Personnel. To be
considered for promotion to the
$12,774 post are eligibles be-
tween number 33 and 49 on the
165-name list established March
23, 1972,
Test Housing Firemen
The City has called 97 can-
didates for housing fireman, open
competitive exam No. 1082, for
practical testing at Gov. Smith
Housing Project, in the rear .of
7 St. James Place, in Manhat-
tan, Testing will run June 12,
13, 14, 15, 16 19, 20, and 21
Award HA
Police Team
A pair of Housing Authority
patrolmen, Louls Telano and
John Sepe, known as “The Lont
Ranger and Tonto,” were honor-
ed with American Federation af
Police Awards by borough prem
ident Sebastian Leone in cere-
monies at Brooklyn Borough
Hall last week.
The partners were cited for
Investigating work which resulted
in the arrest of «
rapist who had been terrorizing
residents in the Linden Houses
at Wortman and Stanley Aves.
in the East New York section
of the borough.
After the rapist had struck
five times in the early part of
the year, at the Linden and
Boulevard Housing Projects, the
Lone Ranger and Tonto were
assigned to the case by HA
Police Inspector Richard Beckel.
The awards, signed by execu-
tive director Gerald 8. Aren-
berg of the American Federa-
ation of Police, state:
“In recognition of apprehen-
sion and arrest of a criminal
whose acts were a danger to
the public welfare, This officer's
display’ of courage, dedication
moved from the community a
potential threat to the safety
and well being of every citizen.”
Delay Consumer Insp.
Exam Till October
The popular title of consumer
affairs inspector, for which an
exam was originally scheduled
on June 10, will instead have
an October test. The decision
was made at a recent City Civil
Service Commission meeting.
Have You Read
The New Column?
*& MORE FEATURES
* NEW, BIGGER
HOROSCOPE
* TOP COMICS
* A NEW-STYLE TV SECTION
It Goes on Sale Thursday and All Week, 25 cents
Some months ago in Harlem T
stood by, waiting for 30 Truck to
roll in, first due, They arrived
second due, at about 20 miles an
hour and hopped off an old
spare rig, furious. They took me
over to thelr rig and, pointing
at the rear tire on the tractor,
said: “We called this flat in
at seven this morning. Here it is
four in the afternoon and no
replacement yet!" I was appalled.
I learned the next day that they
didn’t get the thing fixed until
about 11 p.m, I made a note to
comment upon It but never got
to it because of the press of
other material.
On May 12 Engine 37 limped
into « box at Amsterdam Ave.
and 137th St. and the troops
came over with the amazing
word that they called in a flat
on their rear dual tire on May 3.
Here it was May 12 and the tire
still had not been replaced! I
find now that the tlre wasn’t re-
placed until May 19 at 12 noon.
With this in mind, I called
Chief Burt Clark at the shops,
He has always received my in-
quirles with understanding and
courtesy. In discussing this and
other matters, he made the un-
Summer
Treat
(10% discount to
Civil Service employees)
+ ENTERTAINMENT + LOW RATES
* COCKTAIL PARTIES + MUSIC
+ EVERYTHING IN FULL SWING
CHARLES & LILLIAN norte
BROWN'S
y LOCH SHELORAKE, N.Y
RECT WIRE: 524-9040 Tel. (914) 434-5151
Resorts - Greene County
New York State
derstatement of the year. Yes,
said he, the tire thing was a
great problem. Under the present
conditions he said that 30 Truck
was very lucky to get its dual
Mat fixed on the same day.
‘The problem is manpower and
equipment. It seems that only two
tire trucks are on the road and
front flats take top priority, The
men naturally are not enchanted
about their assignment and the
record of production isn't ex-
actly what one would call magni-
ficent. This all seems to have
come about when the practice
of haying members in quarters
changing tires was discontinued.
The Chief mentioned that the
Department has even tried to
make arrangements with private
stations to handle this thing in
selected areas, but most heavy
duty outfits do not stay open
all night and aren't too eager to
talk business anyway.
In my capacity as a dispatch-
er for the Transit Authority, if
I was told of bus with a rear
flat on a dual wheel, I would, as
I have many times, order the
passengers into the next bus, and
drive the bus slowly off the
road for the safety of the riders.
Admittedly, the firefighter
doesn’t have to pay 35 cents
every time he rolls to a fire, but
from a safety factor, a flat is
® flat is @ flat. Inasmuch as all
possible speed is the order of
the moment when responding,
and reduced speed is a neces~
sity for the safety of the broth-
ers, the tire replacement prob-
lem seems to be one which needs
BLIC
AUCTION
(OF SURPLUS CITY-OWNED PROPERTIES
191 PARCELS
es $95
PU
PRICES
FROM
ira
PROPERTIES.
LOCATIONS IN ALL FIVE BOROUGHS
Teseday, Jin A81078
9:20 AM. SESSION
BooPML SESSION PARCELS taste
MOTEL Ri OSEVELT
Jooking into,
Now please remember that this
is not by any means intended to
be a matter of making waves or
an attempt to hurt anybody.
Chief Clark has problems and
they are vast. His operations
over at the shops boil down to
a polloy of “patch and pray.”
‘There are certain circumstances
and conditions involved here
which do not
I'm not going to quote him, but
the problem could be solved with
a little snooping and the asking
of a few questions. Questions
should indeed be asked after re-
viewing a few reports which he
has received and which add up
to poor performance somewhere
along the line. When the safety
of the firefighter’s life is at stake,
I truly believe that something
must be done. I'm sure something
will be done,
‘This ts a tremendously large
operation, It is indeed the larg-
est Fire Department in the world.
The problems are vast and ad-
mittedly the people who man it
from top to bottom are only hu-
man, faced with one seemingly
insurmountable problem after
another, I'm sure that all hands,
if aware of how great the prob-
lems really are, would agree that
while there is always room for
improvement, as a whole, we
manage to get along pretty well.
When the firefighter’s safety
is involved, however, I draw the
FOR SALE
Simplicity Riding Tractor,
Model 700, Wonder Boy,
Good Condition, Battery
Start, Mower,
er, Snowplow, Wheel
Weights, Tire Chains &
extra parts. Cost new
$1,300. Asking $300, Write
to: Civil Service Leader,
Box 200, 11 Warren St.,
New York 10007 for more
Snow Blow-
EARLY RETIREES
POSITION | availrble. aa messengers
guar atrendents,
Positions Paid,
Tal E44 (Lex)
682-8250
Attention Men
OVERWEIGHT? ‘Tried dieting,
etc? Try a new approach
gph pie) Call
to 10 people,
SMeph
fads,
Small
diet workshop. Limit
joan Weinstock,
cs.
BAVARIAN MANOR
“Famous for German
American Food”
Get Awoy—Relox & Play
Decoration Day Specials
Ideal For Club Outings
& Small Conventions
DELUXE HOTEL & MOTEL
ACCOM,
Overlooking Our Own Lake
Rooms with private baths—
Olympic Style Pool — All
Athletics and Planned Ac-
tivities—-Dancing & profes-
sional entertainment every
nite in our Fabulous
Bavarian “Alpine Gardens
Cabaret.” Romp, play in
our 100 acre playland. Near
1 Golf Courses. Send for
Colorful Brochure, Rate &
Sample Menu. Entertain~
ment on June weekends.
LOW MAY & JUNE RATES
Dial 518-622-326)
Bill & Johanas Bauer—Hows
rr 4, N.Y, Zip 12470
saniey Saeert fomear tah
abs Pah avesue Oapertment of Meal Esta
Yad
SECLUDED —
20 COTTAGES
Housekt beautiful
dear Lake Thompson. ate, say
beaches. Excellent fishing, ‘Sal
out, bass, Comfortable 14 ed:
rooms amid acres of pine. All fur
ished but linen, Shopping, church,
if, entertainment within 10 miles.
ite: Frank E. Bean, Oxford, Maine,
Tel, (207) 539-4404
—— THE CAPE —,
3 Meals Daily $10 3
ROSENBERG’S
Hotel * Bullville, N.Y.
LOWER SUMMER RATES AVAILABLE
914-FO 1-1650
INTERESTED IN A FORD?
New & Used
Special Discount For Civil Service
Employees & Ret.
— Personally Handled By —
AL CRISCUOLO, Ret. P.D.
BOND FORD MOTOR'S
160-10 Crossbay Blvd.
Howard Bch, N.Y. 11414
(212) 845-9000
‘OVERSEAS WORK
Migh Pay, Bonuses, Ne Taxes
Married Single Status
(212) 682-1043
INTERNATIONAL
LIAISON, LTD,
501 Filth Ave, Suite 604
Wow York City
involve money. ,
Tine. If this fs brought to the
attention of the Commissioner
and Chief of Department, they
too will take necessary action.
‘The problem is serious and should
be solved without delay.
At a fire at 887 Faille St. on
May 20, 48 Truck found a two-
story frame going wild. Among
the problems were elght people
trapped in a second floor room
in the rear, Also six dogs were
trapped in the front. The troops
swarmed all over the place, res-
cued the people and the dogs
with a hell of # lot of sweat,
and everything turned out Jake.
In for a Unit citation, the tigers
were: Lt, Frank Donahue, Pr.
Andy Goetechres, Fr. Eugene
Hessler, Fr. Lawrence McGenva,
Fr. Sam DeCesare, Fr. Rod
Downle, and Pr. Martin Probst.
Pr, Hessler, who got the six
dogs, is in for the Paddy Reilly
Medal from the ASPCA,
Congratulations, you tigers . . .
good show ..., routine for 48
‘Truck, T have # motto for ‘em
based on performance. “You send
‘em out... we'll take ‘em in.”
Hows’
REAL ESTATE VALUES
For Sale - New York State
RETIREMENT HOMES coustry village:
Tavestment acreage
U.S. Government Foreclosures
VACANT HOMES
ALL QUEENS AREAS
Priced From $17,000
To $30,000
No, extra cont, No extra fees. Cait
ria ave the
Bimston (212) 523-4594
170-24 HILLSIDE AVE
JAMAICA
For Sale - Queens
FLUSHING CO-OP, 2 bedrooms with
terrace. Convenient to transportation.
= ee aS. per mo.
SPRINGFIELD GDNS
$29,500
BRICK RANCH
On 60x100 beautifully landscaped
frqueds you will fad this cunos-
ails home, All rooms oa 1 floor.
jonally larKe
ft. living room, finished basement,
macgar, oll heat. moders kitchen —
with all essential extras, Near huge
Center and only 15 minutes
FHA & VA low down
a
payment terms ‘can be sctaaged. Ask
for Mr. Fredericks.
QUEENS VILL. PROPER
$27,990
CALIFORNIA ARCHITECTURE
Resrifel: lnndscoped grounile, — 8
4 bedrooms — Hollywood
colored tile bath — garage — wuro-
matic heac — loads of extras
included. Low down payment. V,
LAURELTON — $31,990
BRICK € CAPs ANCH
Exceptional value! Beautiful
somiaion of 3 buem,
modern
appliances, dryer, and a
‘other extras. FHA and
yment terms cam be
for Mr Rogers,
CAMBRIA HTS $35,990
BRICK, FINLDSTONE
TIMBER
arranged. Asi
and TIMBE
Cape Cod myle ranch house. All
co, hoge liviog rm, full diniog toom,
Barage, Wall to. wall carpeting, ait
plus
will really’ enjoy ‘his home! “Hus
Desusiful protessionally | landscaped
garden, Ask Ir.
BUTTERLY
& GREEN
168-25 Hillside Ave,
JA 6-6300
JAMAICA HILLS $28,500
Walk co subway, Beautiful 7 rm
Colonial. Completely det. | Reauisise
ition, 7 bedrms,
pumpruong
way,
Immed. occup.
LONG ISLAND HOMES
168-12 Hillside Ave., Jamaica
RE 9.7300
“For S¢ Sale - Camden, NY.
BEAUSITUL soewry Sewe or, hentin
All modere utilis. 3/
tere’ lon, Phone “Camden 215.2514.
Farms & Country Homes,
New York State
Catalog and Hundreds of
jimess Bargains. All
‘Types Sizes & Prices. DAHL REALTY
Cobleskill, N.Y,
SPRING
Farms & Country Homes,
Orange County
Bulk Acreage — Ketirement Homes
Bunnies i the TriStale Area,
GOLDMAN AGENCY TORS
as‘Pike Por Jeevis, NY (S14¢ 856-5228
LAURELTON $27,990
SUPER SPECIAL HOUSE
All Bek ultra mod home with 3
maser size bdraws, 2 baths, carpeting,
y dec, Gar.
wash mach. Newly
QUEENS VILLG $27,990
ONE OF A KIND RANCH
h Stucco ranch wit hall rooms
flr, Finishable bot, gar.
shrubs,
VAN WYCK GRDNS
$41,990
YOUNG 2 FAM 6&6
6 ye old Bek & shog! legal 2-fam
two mod 6 rm 3 bedrms each)
finishable bame, wrod,
Queens Homes OL 8-7510
170-13 Hillside Ave, Jamaica
Bee ess Sin." Florida eae
JOBS
‘R Miami, Fla, 33161,
VENICE, FLA. — INTERESTED?
SEK H. N. WIMMERS, REALTOR
ZaP CODE 33595
FLORIDA LIVING
Live the good life at prices you can
afford in Highland Village Mobile
Home Community, Choose from over
20 models with prices starting at
$7,950. Complete recreation program,
Write:
WIGHLAND VILLAGE, 275 MH. E, 48th St.
POMPANO BEACH, FLORIDA 33064
Property For Sale - Florida
* enPRe a
Ren". res ‘New 2 NY
SAVE ON
YQUR MOVE
TO FLORIDA
Com) per 4,000 Ibe se
Se" Puenborg from” New’ York Chr,
$472; Philadelphin, $448; Albany, $506.
an extimate © soy destination im
Florida
Write
SOUTHERN TRANSFER
and STORAGE CO. INC,
DEFT, C, BOX 10217
ST PETERSBURG, FLORIDA, 53733
FIRE FIGHTERS FIGHT FIRES
. NOT PEOPLE
ZL6I “9 ung ‘dupsony, “YGACVAT ADIAWAS TLAID
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, June 6, 1972
Capital District Conference
faers Rice Review Status
Of Pact Court Proceedings
(From Leader Correspondent)
WEST ALBANY—Final plans for its upcoming joint meeting with the Central Con-
ference at the Otesaga Hotel in Cooperstown June 9, 10 and 11 were discussed at last
week's meeting of the Capital District Conference,
Conference president Ernest Wagner presided, and noted in his report that the re-
cent job action had seen “the
Capital District Conference turn
the corner” in becoming a work-
ing labor organization.
CSEA counsel Jack Rice re-
viewed the recent contract ne-
gotiations and the status of the
on-going administrative and
court proceedings stemming from
the job action He noted a
number of ambiguities in the
Taylor Law and in the admin-
istrative rules of the Public Em-
ployment Relations Board—both
of which are involved in the
immediate case.
Rice fielded delegate ques-
tions regarding specific actions
in a lengthy question-and-an-
swer period,
‘The Conference adopted a
number of amendments to its
Constitution and Bylaws, based
on a report from chairman Max
Benko.
CSEA first vice-president Tom
McDonough discussed the politi-
eal action drive about to get
under way, along with proposals
for financing.
Other speakers included Con-
ference second vice-president
Jean Gray, who reported on the
new journal handbook; activities
chairman Dorothy Honeywell;
education committee co-chatr-
man Marla Barone, and finance
committee chairman Harold
Ryan
At the meeting in the Itall-
an Benevolent Society Hall,
Conference president Wagner
introduced newly elected chap-
ter presidents who were pres-
Bridge Auth. Chap.
Elects New Slate
POUGHKEEPSIE — The
State Bridge Authority chap-
ter No. 390 of the Civil Ser-
vice Employees Assn. has
elected new officers for terms
of one year,
incoming officers
field assignments are;
Sackett, Mid-Hudson
Bridge—president; Haaken Han-
sen. Mid-Hudson Bridge — first
vice-president; Leonard J. Low-
ery, administrative offices—sec-
ond vice-president; arry
Shields, Kingston Rhinecliff
Bridge—second vice-president;
Clarence Peterson, Mid-Hudson
Bridge—second vice-president;
Preston Bennett, Bear Mountain
Bridge—second vice-president;
William Kutner, Newburgh
Bridge—second vice-president,
and Harold Niekamp, Catskill
Bridge—second _ vice-president,
Other officers elected were
Irwin Brandt of Newburgh Bea~-
eon Bridge as secretary-treas-
urer, and Stephen P, Doonan, of
Kingston-Rhinecliff Bridge, as
delegate.
Robert Calendar of the Tray
ellers Insurance Co, was the
guest speaker at the recent in-
stallation meeting, Swearing in
the new executive board was
John Deyo, CSEA field represen-
(ative for the Mid-Hudson area.
and
their
Charles
ent: Prank Gilder of SUNY at
Albany, Alex Walsh of Correc-
tional Services, Norbert Kahn of
Praiee <
law, Pat Miller of Narcotics
Addiction Control and Michael
Steese of Executive.
Rasvesntaa the Albany office of the Commerce Depart-
ment at the Capital District Conference were, from left,
Emil Spiak, Gloria Fleming and David Caplan.
Shown at head table at last week's meeting of Capital District Conference are from left, Conference first vice-presi-
dent Jack Dougherty, CSEA director of education Ed Diamond, Conference treasurer Edgar E. Troidle, Conference
second vice-president Jean C. Gray, Conference president Ernest Wagner, recording secretary Marian Farrelly, act-
ing social chairman Santa Orsino, and CSEA field representatives Jim Cooney and Rex Trobridge.
A full turnout of f Labs and Research Cheats members was led by chapter president Ernie
Strobel, at left, and included Dorris Rabinowitz, Alice Bailey, Jose Samson, Bob Scherer
and Ed LeGere,
Super Sign-Up
Membership Drive
Extended To
July 14
Capital, Central
(Continued from Page 1)
the Central Conference. Floyd
Peashey and Clarence Laufer
are the two nominees, Other
Conference offices will also be
decided.
Agenda for the joint meeting
begins with a number of Central
Conference committee meetings
for 1:30 Friday evening.
Next morning, the two con-
ferences will offer a workshop
program on education, at which
CSEA director of education Dr.
Edward Diamond will be princi-
pal speaker,
Following luncheon, each Con-
ference has scheduled separate
business meetings.
The evening plans include a
7:30 banquet, at which Central
Conference officers will be in-
stalled.
Western Conf
(Continued from Page 1)
Assn., has been elected pres-
ident of the CSEA’s Western
Conference and will take the
oath of office here on June 10
at the Sheraton Hotel, oppo-
site the Rochester airport on
Brooks Rd.
Also to be installed are Ed-
ward Dudek, first vice-president;
Genevieve Clark, second vice-
president; Neil Gruppo, third
vice-president; Judith Burgess,
secretary, and Genevieve Luce,
treasurer,
The Conference session will
begin on June 9 with a work-
shop on the Taylor Law, start-
ing at 7:30 pm. On June 10,
Tom Pomidoro, CSEA collective
bargaining specialist, will head
@ county workshop and the reg~-
ular Conference business meeting
will be at 1 pam, that day.
Southern Conf
(Continued from Page 1)
preceded by @ luncheon in the
Boathouse at 12:30 p.m.
Officers will be installed the
same evening in the Confer-
ence'’s annual dinner-dance at
the Oddo House on Route 44 in
Clintondale,
Maria Barone checks over
notes prior to giving her edu-
cation committee report.
© CSEA calendar ©
Information for the Calendar may be submitted directly to
THE LEADER. It should include the date, time, place, address
and city for the function.
June
6—Nassau chapter, steering: and program committee meeting, 7:30
.m., Salisbury Club, Mineola,
9-11—Capital District and Central Conferences joint workshop,
Otesaga Hotel, Cooperstown,
9-11|—Western Conference meeting, Sheraton Inn,
port,
13-Division of Employment—Metropolitan installation of officers,
6 p.m,, Luigi’s Restaurant, Murray St., Manhattan,
17—Southern Conference Luncheon, 12:30 p.m., business meeting,
2 p.m., boathouse Hudson River State Hospital, Poughkeepsie;
dinner-dance and installation of officers to follow meeting,
Oddo House, Route 44, Clintondale,
17—Mental Hygiene departmental meeting.
19—Statewide Board of Directors meeting
CSEA Headquarters, Albany.
19-Special statewide Delegdtes meeting
CSEA Headquarters, Albany.
24—Metropolitan Conference pfitcar installation, time and place to
be announced,
26—Binghamion Area Retirees meeting, 2
Post No. 80, 76 Main St., Binghamton.
30—Long \sland Conference installation of officers and dinner-dance,
8:30 p.m,, Bethpage State Park Clubhouse.
————SSSSaqE =
Rochester Air-
10 a.m., Chancellor Hall,
| pam., Chancellor Hall,
p.m., American Legion
City Eligible Lists
(Continued from Page 12)
Frank R Fioramontl, Mary E
Durant, Olympia M Spano, Arn-
old MoiKnney, Robert V Eley,
Irene M Ringawa, Dolores M
Jones, Inamae Williams, Thom-
as J English, James P Mo-
Gutre, Alice C Butler.
821 Winifred E Bradley, Paul
R Webb, Sophie D Steele, Cass 8
Weil, Franklin J Mercer, Ellyn R
Ventura, Yvonne Chase, Lawr-
ence Kieves, Barbara C McGreg-
or, Shelley B Kovar, Fred L
Noriega Jr, Delinda E Todman,
Fran L Glicksman, William M
Steveruon, Andrew I Wolf, Pran-
cine A Martin, Lewulyton Prin-
gle, Lazette McCants, Joanne M
Ranzer, Vernell Treadwell, Ira
E Weinstock, Mamie Townsend,
Hertha Smagala, Victor Payne,
Queente Speight, James C David-
son, Marcelina Lopez, Audrey L
Marrus, Richard M Litman, Hel-
ene Kaplan, Philomena Amalfi-
tano, Luis M Ramos, Amiya K
Salvati, Robert E Arrindell,
Thelma D McFarland, Harriet
Fox, Alice L Drayton, Helen
Cook, Djafar A Ahmed.
861 Petra Allende, Richard M
Stephans, Samuel Emmanuelli,
Gayle A Korotkin, Karen Lew-
inn, Richard A Kuch, Doris M
Foy, William B Ashley, Elinor
J Marks, Minnie R Goodwine,
Cella Fuhrer, Chaim Neiman,
Robert M Raymond, David W
Mei, Leon B Denmark, Louise P
Reich, Annie Gholston, Earl Ves-
sup, Jearl Jackson, Edward J
Federman.
Rudman, Roberto Verdejo, David
5 Mercado, Jacqueline Coleman,
Juan Colon, Jeffrey § Klayman,
Stephen L Brown, Sherry! Bush,
Carlos Roman, Mildred Colbert,
Smithle J Inman, Merry E Nels-
ner, Rebecca Dykes, Henrietta
Mitchell,
901 George J Boxer, Delores E
Brock, Mary R Morse, Samuel
Jackson, Diane H McKoy, Ele-
anor James, Vernon C Mapp,
Betty I Garvey, Clara Vereen,
Charlotte Lawrence, Richard
Landsman, Floyd Collier, Cary
B Kaplen, Veverly S Bond, El-
pidio Lugo, Saundra PF Lay, Re-
gina C Starita, Betty J Brown,
Mary O Glynn, Armida Smith,
921 Antonio M Green, Ruth
Motola, Eliece S Wise, Mariana
Blume, Betty Lindsey, George
Bryant, Alba L Arevalo, Carrie
Oliver, Richard Halperin, Glen-
na F Holcombe, Carmen M
Hicks, Rebecca Torres, Ivy C
Lowery, Lydia Camacho, Zach-
ary Berman, Lorraine Brown, Po
8 Yuen, Joan M Thompson,
Bertram C Douglas, Lewis M
Kwit.
941 Edna J Ryder, Sallie
Heath, oJe M Mangual, David
M Saunders, Carol A Mims, John
J Mann, John L Jackson, Mar-
tha D Yates, Prederic Strauss,
Alfred H Hooper, Daisy L White,
Marsha L Weber, Soame R Kid-
orf, Juanita Morales, Bunice Wil-
Dispensing Nationally Famous Nestle’s Hot Food Products:
WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTOR WANTED
NO SELLING .. . KEEP
YOUR PRESENT JOB!
Simply service company established al! cash accounts in this area. This is not
2 coin operated vending route,
as offices, employee lounges in retail sto
facturing plants, warehouses and small
ine Nestie’s products sold in locations such
wes, financial institutions, small manu
institutional accounts, The distributor
we select will be responsible for maintaining these locations and restocking
inventory, All locations are established by our
distributor, male or female, in this area with
aor We need a dependable
$900.00 minimum to invest in
equipment and inventory which can turn over up to two times monthly
Earnings can prow to $25,000 annually
applicants, Write for complete information, including p!
. All inquiries strictly confidential.
and up. We it consider part-time
number and Area
CONSOLIDATED CHEMICAL CORPORATION
Freeze Dried Products Divisi:
3815 Montrose Bivd., Suite 120
Have a
Anniversary
You, your wife and al
in all, it can be worth
would pay as little as
possibilities. Call me
obligation... except
New York, N.Y,
ANTHONY LA MARMORA
2330-32 GRAND CONCOURSE, BRONX, N. Y.
TEL.'367-6429
‘STATE —
(Mail te address abevel
Cel
including those yet to come—can
be insured with one low-cost policy—
your family in total payments over
20 years. And a man 25 years old
$16.65 a month for this new pl:
You owe it to yourself to know all the
complete information. And there's no
$2 Metropolitan Life
We sell life insurance.
But our business is life,
POORER OHOOHROOROEEEOOEOEERO REE EOO EOE EEEOES
Happy
Family Plan
| your children—
initially $34,000 to
today for
to those you love,
Ey
es
i
E
g
z
:
7
HE
Faky
i
:
F
3
, Michael Canosa,
fe
3
i
:
3
z
.
(To Be Continued)
EXAM NO. 1077
SPECIAL OFFICER
‘This list of 2,351 eligibles was
established March 23, resulting
from open-competitive written
exam No. 1077, held Oct. 1, 1971.
Applicants numbered 5,967; 3,342
841 Michael Henry, Rocco J
Russo, Joseph L Miller, Gilles D
Stephens, Roberto S Alonso,
Thelma Francis, Jose R Rodri-
guez, Susie Puller, Joseph P
Patanella, Emanuel Richards Jr,
Warner B Baskerville, Robert J
Sparling, John M Pinnavata,
Aline Richardson, Hedda I Gen-
tile, Alda’ Adams, Raoul J EBu-
gene, Anthony Sodano, John
Gartner, Muriel R Carter.
861 Yvone Shaw, Sherman
Rappaport, Rose Edwards, Pat-
rick A Bombino, Jacqueline Pin-
ckney, Rudolph T Dunlop Jr,
Joseph A Petersen, Arnell Prid-
gen, Shirley L Tucker, Hugo A
Cintron, William F McClain,
Grace N Johnson, Catherine
lynch, Charles A Schramm,
Ralf M Casewell, Jeanette H
Jackson, Leroy S Hayes. Ella L
Reed, Lilian E Lewis, William
J Purta.
881 Michael A Defrancis, Mark
Kravitz, Michael P Benintende,
Mildred Howard, Judith A Spig-
ner, Annie R Porter, Barbara
Evans, Thomesena Jackson, Dor-
sthy A Hollomond, Glenwell
Watson, John LP acheo, William
Shedrick Jr, Franklin D Robson,
David L Otto, Abraham Reed,
Philip Lawson, Arthur George,
Albert Lundy , Archie V
Jackson, Roger B Lewis.
901 Charles E Steck, Herbert L
Patterson, Joseph McMichael,
Richard J Tierney, Stanley A
Johnson, Christophe George,
Richard Dash, Marcellino Giola,
David Teres, Howard 8 Long-
more, Robert Lee, Harry Vas-
quez, Victor M Sitiriche, Samuel
E Wormiley, Hilliard Washington,
George Fitzpatrick Jr, Ronald
J Jensen, Peter Smolka, Hosea J
Bankston, Gerardo Diaz,
921 Henry L Pollard, Mark A
Gatling, Jose J Rios, Nathan
James, Ellis Smith, Donald Bey-
er, Alpheaus I Marcus Jr, Pran-
cis V Roth, Brad L Purrington,
Ceci) N Bowle, Ollie A Darden,
Joseph E Mclver, Harold Hunt-
ley, Willie R Bulger, Hubert T
Williams, Carl C Casdia, Frank
D Boddie Jr, Victor P Bottino,
Leroy Thomas, Joseph A Iacov-
ino.
Pulaski Assn.
‘The Pulaski Assn. of the City
Dept. of Sanitation will meet at
8 pm, on June 8 at Maspeth
Hall, 61-60 56 Rd., Maspeth,
WHERE TO APPLY
FOR PUBLIC JOBS
NEW YORK CITY—Persons
seeking jobs with the Clty
should file at the Department of
Personnel, 49 Thomas St., New
York 10013, open weekdays be-
tweer 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Special
hours for Thursdays are 8:30
a.m, to 5:30 p.m,
‘Those requesting applications
by mail must include a stamped,
self-addressed envelope, to be
received by the Department at
least five days before the dead- ©
line,
By subway, applicants can
Teach the filing office via the
IND (Chambers St.); BMT (City
Hall); Lexington IRT (Brooklyn
Bridge). For advance {nforma-
tion on titles, call 566.8700.
Several City agencies do their
own recruiting and hiring. They
include: Board of Education
(teachers only), 65 Court St.
Brooklyn 11201, phone: 596-
8060; Board of Higher Edu-
cation, 535 E. 80th St, New
York 10021, phone: 360-2141;
Health & Hospitals Corp., 125
Worth St.. New York 10007.
phone: 566-7002, NYC Transit
Authority, 370 Jay St, Brook-
lyn 11201, phone; 852-5000.
STATE—Regional offices of
the Department of Civil Serv-
fee are located at: 1350 Ave of
Americas, New York 10019;
State Office Campus, Albany,
12226; Suite 750, 1 W. Genessce
St., Buffalo 14202. Applicants
may obtain announcements
either in person or by mail.
Various State Employment
Service offices can provide ap.
plications in person, but not by
mail.
Judicial Conference Jobs are
filled at 270 Broadway, New
York, 10007, phone: 488-4141
Port Authority jobseekers should
contact thel offices at 111
Eighth Ave, New York, phone:
620-7000.
FEDERAL—The US. Civil
Service Commission, New York
Region, runs a Job Information
Center at 26 Federal Plaza, New
York 10007 Its hours are #:30
a.m, to 6 p.m., weekdays only,
Telephone 264-0422,
Pederal entrants living upstate
(north of Dutchess County)
should contact the Syracuse Area
Office, 301 Erie Bivd. West,
Syracuse 13202. Hours are sim-
Mar to the New York area office,
Federal titles have no deadline
unless otherwise indicated,
MAYFLOWER-ROYAL COURT APARTMENTS—
Furnished, Unfurnished, and Rooms
Phone HE 4-1994 (Albany).
20% OFF TO STATE WORKERS
OM ALL MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
HILTON MUSIC CENTER |
Opp, State Ban
346 CENTRAL AVE
ALBANY HO 2.0945
J
SUMM!
621 RIVER STREET, TROY
OPEN TUES, THURS. PRL NITES
VACATION SPECIAL NOW
TROY'S FAMOUS
FACTORY STORE
|
Men's & Young Men's
Fine Clothes
Asst. D.A. Hearing
The City Civil Service Com-
mission has ordered a public
hearing on June 20 on a resolu-
tion to increase the number of
positions for assistant district
attorney from 123 to 141 In the
Exempt Class, Rule %, in the
Office of the Kings County Dis-
trict Attorney. The hearing will
be held at 10:30 a.m. in reom 401,
20 Chureh 8t., Manhattan.
SONVAUUUEA AOU EUNEUOETE HUD ENEGAOVENOCOTenaeOeeeen cage enananae
z MEET YOUR CSEA FRIENDS
2 Ambassador
27 ELK ST. ALBANY 5
SLUNCHES - DINNERS PARTIES
“Sanne vvuevuviunennnnnsrante
ALBANY
7H oe
A PINE NEW HOFEL IN
A NETWORK TRADITION
SINGLE
tn |
FOR RESERVATIONS — CALL
1230 WESTERN AVENUE
ALBANY 489-4423
site State Campuses
Op
GOVERNORS
MOTOR INN
STATE AND GOVERNMENT
EMPLOYEE RATES
RESTAURANT - COCKTAIL
LOUNGE OPEN DAILY FOR
LUNCHEON AND DINNER
LARGE BANQUET HALL
SEATS UP TO 175 DINNERS
AND BUFFETS SERVED.
$ FINEST FOOD ALWAYS
§ hoaes-2R
FRIDAY — SATURDAY NITES
9:30-1:30
FOR RESERVATIONS 4
CALL 430-6686 :
4 Milos West ef AKBANY Rr, 20 &
287, GUILDERLAND, N.Y. 120848
eee
SPECIAL RATES
for Civil Service Employees
*
=
~
s
-
HOTEL
Wellington
DRIVE-IN GAR:
AIR CONDITIONING + TY
parking
Ne
problems at
Albery's
betel... with
136 STATE STRE:
QPP CHUTE STATE CAPITOL
ae your trtendly trevel agent
SPECIAL WEEKLY RATES
FOR EXTENDED STAYS
ALBANY
BRANCH OFFICE
FOR INFORMATION toparding adver
tisement. Please write or call
JOSEPH T, BELLEW
303 SO, MANNING BLVD.
ALBANY, 8,.N.Y, Phone IV 2-5474
ARCO
CIVIL SERVICE BOOKS
and all tests
PLAZA BOOK SHOP
ZL6L “9 Punt “Kepsony “YaaVAT AAMAS TAD
18
June 6, 1972
Cash in quick! For every
new CSEA Member you
sign up, we'll send you a
check for $2.00 — instantly.
We'llalso enter your name,
and the new member's
name _in the drawing for
our $15,000 jackpot of
prizes. Thére will be three
drawings. The sooner you
get your names in—the
more chances you'll have
to win. The 1972 Monte
Carlo will be given away
at the final drawing.
Rules for CSEA Super Sign-Up/72
Membership Drive
(1) Only CSEA members in good standing as of April I are eligible
to sign up new members,
(2) For each new member signed up during the period of April 3,
1972 through July 14, 1972, the person recruiting receives a special
award check worth $2.00 in cash.
(3) For each new member signed up during the eligible period, the
recruiter also has his name entered in the prize jackpot. (Thus if a
person signs up 10 members—he has 10 chances to win a jackpot
prize.)
(4) The new member's name also goes into the jackpot drawing,
(5) There will be three drawings, One each month. 57 prites will
be given away during the first drawing. 74 prizes will be given
away during the second drawing. 109 prizes will be given away at the
final drawing, approximately July 28. The Monte Carlo will be given
away at the final drawing. All names received in time for the first
drawing will be carried over to the%second drawing . . . and so on.
All winners in the first and second drawings will also be eligible
for prizes in the third drawing.
(6) To be eligible for cash awards and jackpot prizes, the recruiter
must sign up new members on special Super Sign-Up/72 application
forms (PDA cards) supplied to each chapter and unit prior to this
drive, These cards must be filled in properly and transmitted to CSEA
| through the designated membership chairman in your unit or chapter.
(7) Members of the board of directors and the State membership
committee are eligible for cash awards for signing up new members
—but not for jackpot prizes.
Three exciting trips
for two abroad
(One each drawing)
45 GE Casette
Tape Recorders
95 GE Pocket
Transistor Radios
Travel arrangements by CSERA and ==
Knickerbocker Travel Service
16 GE 15”
Black and
70 GE
“Blue Max"
Radios
TMM nt
=
-
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.
sis