i P
EADER
America’s Largest Newspaper for Public Employees
Tuesday, June 12, 1973
Price 15 Cents
meets
— See Page 15
County Executive Committee chairman Joseph Lazarony,
center, is flanked by CSEA president Theodore C, Wenzl,
left, and Committee vice-chairman Arthur Bolton during
meeting of county representatives at Friar Tuck Inn last
week
County Delegates
Demand Strong
Pension Stand
CAIRO
The Friar Tuck Inn was no place last week
for anyone who wanted to lead a monastic life; hundreds
of county delegates and officials of the Civil Service Em-
ployees Assn
three days of
poured
rapid-fire meet-
ings.
One of the main topics of
concern was the status of local
government provisions concern-
ing pension benefits, now that
on?”
—_—
Repeat This!
Mayoralty Paradox
Four Who Sought
Dem Nomination
Still In The Race
HE curious thing about
T the primary in New
York City for the designation
of & Democratic candidate
for Mayor is that all four con-
tendors in that primary remain
in contention. Congressman Mario
Binggi, who came in third, re-
mains @ candidate for Mayor on
the Conservative party line and
possibly also on an independent
ticket he is now trying to or-
ganize. Assembly Deputy Minorl~
ty Leader Albert H, Blumenthal,
who ran fourth, is the Liberal
party candidates for Mayor
(Continued on Page 6)
into the Catskill
resort hotel for
Governor Rockefeller has signed
the pension bill for state em-
ployees.
CSEA president Theodore C
Wenzl explained that the con-
troversial Kinzel Commission
plan is dead, due to the skills
of the CSEA negotiating team
In the meantime, Wenzl pointed
out, temporary benefits have been
extended another year (until July
1, 1974) to cover local govern-
ment employees. In addition, a
special session of the Legisla-
ture this summer is expected
to deal further with pensions, It
is anticipated that this will clear
up the fog that now obscures
the pension future — not only
for local government employees,
but for members of other pub-
lic employee unions such as New
York City transit workers and
Veachers.
County delegates insisted, at
various meetings, on a strong
stand by CSEA, to protect their
pension rights. Among other state
leaders expressing concern for
the local government employees
was Samuel Grossfield, president
of the Western Conference.
Grossfield, a state employee,
said "No one will be satisfied un-
til this serious problem that puts
us at the meroy of the Legislature
year after year 1s corrected.
"The county pension benefits must
be permanentized. We'll be look-
tng to the July session of the
Legislature, and will do every-
thing in our power to bring this
(Continued on Page 3)
Wenzl Says Top Mental Hygiene
Officials Have Share Of Blame
In Death Of Hospital Attendant
Theodore C. Wenzl, president of the 210,000-member Civil Service Employees Assn.
has issued a highly critical statement aimed directly at top officials in the department
of Mental Hygiene, after learning of the death of a Central Islip State Hospital attendant
following an attack by one of the institution’s mental patients.
According to witnesses, the at-
tendant, Peter Cavaluzzi, while
exercising routine supervision in
a dining room, attempted to in-
tervene in a dispute between two
patients and was injured when
one of the two hurled a chair
at him,
Wenz said, “This tragic death
is a sorrowful example of what
understaffing and mis-manage-
ment of labor resources can do.
Mental Hygiene has jong been
operating at drastically under-
staffed levels because of a lack
of necessary funds to properly
maintain a work force, This has
created labor problems of the
worst order.
“Our people realize that there
are simply not enough therapy
aides to go around. They realize
that they cannot spend enough
time with each and every pa-
tient, and they become frustrat-
ed when the administration con-
dones what has become a strictly
custodial care situation.
“Recent recodificatton of the
State's Mental Hygiene law puts
an even greater burden on our
employees and the administra-
tion refuses to set guidelines as
to how ward personnel are to
control agitated and potentially
dangerous patients. We have an
obvious conflict between what
the law says and what the de-
partment expects. Somewhere
along the chain of departmental
command someone has to make
a decision and inform our em-
ployees or we'll have mayhem,”
Wenzl declared.
According to reports Wenz)
says he received, there were only
three attendants rather than the
usual four or five in the dining
Nominating Comm.
To Meet June 14
The nominating committee of
the Civil Service Employees
Assn, will meet June 14 at 5:30
pm, in the Round Towner,
James Welch, committee chair-
man hasa announced.
The group will select two can-
didates for the Statewide offices
of president, executive vice presi-
dent, secretary and treasurer,
room at the time that Cavaluzzi
was killed. The incident is being
investigated by the civil author-
(Contined on Page 14)
Higher Nassa
Pay Is Coming
MINEOLA—Higher pay nego-
tiated in the contract for the
Nassau chapter, Civil Service
Employees Assn., will be includ-
ed in the pay checks of July 12
and a retroactive payment will
be made by the end of August,
chapter president Irving Plaum-
enbaum announced Friday.
The additional payments re-
sult from a 5.5 percent across
the board increase included in
the settlement approved by a
five-to-one vote of the county
membership.
Flaumenbaum sald the county
treasurer had made arrange-
ments to adjust all pay checks
July 12. A lump sum payment
for the increase due retroactively
from Jan. 1 is being processed
for issuance in August.
Monroe CSEA Victorious
On Parking Fee Battle
(From Leader Correspondent)
ROCHESTER The Civil
Service Employees Assn.'s
Monroe County chapter has
won the first arbitration
case it ever required
For 2,200 Monroe County em-
ployees at the hospital and
health-social services complex on
Westfall Road, it means they
will continue to enjoy free park-
ing because of the CSEA victory.
Martin R. Koenig, chapter
president, said the decision by
arbitrator Irving Markowitz on
June 4 prevents Monroe County
from charging employees for
parking at the complex,
He called it a “landmark” de-
cision because if the county had
won the case, “it probably would
have meant the end of free
parking for all employees and
other persons at all county fa-
cilities.”
In April the County Legisla-
ture passed legislation imposing
@ 50-cent daily parking fee and
@ $10 monthly fee for employees
who work at the complex. It was
to have gone into effect June 15
(Contined on Page 14)
Martin R. Koenig, right, president of the CSEA Monroe
chapter, joyfully waves copy of the decision forbiddirig im-
position of parking fees on CSEA employees in the county.
He is being congratulated by James Powers, CSEA area field
director,
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, June 12, 1973
On April 29, 1973, the re-
tirement of Captain Ray-
mond W, Gimmler, F.D.N.Y.
became effective, As one old
timer used to tell his pro-
bies: “When you come into
the job, you are entitled to
have your name on the or-
der, When you leave, you
can have your name on the
order. Outside of that, if you
want to stay out of trouble,
stay OFF the order.”
Well, perhaps in the old days
that was good advice, in a sense,
but it is strange indeed to find
that an extraordinary number of
members manage to do just that.
‘They come in, do their twenty
and go. One never hears of them
from one year to the next.
With Captain Raymond Gim-
miler it was quite different.
Before joining the Police De-
™ eer my
RAYMOND GIMMLER
partment in September of 1946,
he, as so many of us, went to
war, joined the Marines, made
staff sergeant, got himself three
battle stars and two Presidential
citations to boot.
On April 1, 1947, he came over
to the Fire Department (smart
move) and lost no time in get-
ting himself fully involved (pun)
in things which mattered greatly
to him and his brother fire-
fighters.
He is another person who
came from a long line of fire-
fighters within the family, His
father was battalion chief Wil-
Ham A. Gimmler (now de-
ceased), and his brother John
retired out of ladder 107 as a
result of injuries received in the
rescue of a three-week-old baby.
Captain Ray has been on the
meritorious act report twice for
separate rescues (one Class 3
and one "B"). Once in the De-
partment, he “hit the books” and
his promotions up the ladder
RE Oi FLI
ES-
ae ie er)
, Pa pea Y
made lieutenant in May 1958,
and captain in January, 1963.
After being a delegate to the
Central Labor Council and to the
N.Y. State AFL-CIO, he was
elected to the executive board
of the UFOA as captain's repre~
sentative. He was elected Presi-
dent in 1971.
Ray Gimmler seemed to always
be in the thick of things—especi-
ally if those things represented
the rights of others.
It had been said that when
Ray, as head of the UFOA, had
an axe to grind with the Admin-
istration, OCB or otherwise, his
arrival at the field of battle
caused the top echelon to go into
something resembling sun stroke
or appoplexy.
Th 1967, he organized the big-
gest paarde New York has seen
to date with "Support Our Men
in Viet Nam" as it’s theme.
‘The list of affiliations, both in-
side and outside the Fire Depart-
ment, plus the awards which
have been showered upon him,
number 26 and would require this
entire column to print, However,
to give you an idea of the gamut
which they run, let's say that
they range from director, Nation-
al Information Bureau for Jewish
Life, on through receipt of a
citation from the National Com-
mittee of the American Legion
through the village of East Rock-
away.
With all those matters calling
for his attention, he was never
too busy to talk to persons such
as I, when calling him was neces-
sary. That, to a writer, makes
him tops as a subject, even if he
had nothing else going for him.
About a year and a half ago,
on what I still remember as the
most thrilling night in my forty-
eight “around the job," Ray sat
on the dais at a dinner given to
me by 300 of my firefighter
friends. After having been sworn
in as an HLD.C., and about to
pass out from the shock, Ray
stood up and came forward to
make presentations on behalf of
the members of the UFOA, First,
there was that beautiful statue of
firefighters in action, then the
citation, and finally that beauti-
ful white helmet which I tip so
often in this column to so many
of you! I find it very easy to re-
member Ray Gimmler, because
that helmet and statue grace my
desk from whence this column
originates each week. As do so
many of us nowadays, I, too,
sometimes get @ little mind
weary and wonder if it’s really
worth the effort, Then I look at
the helmet, remember the night
it was presented, then glance at
the statue, and that weariness
seems suddenly to disappear,
were well ordered and steady. He There are many, many people in
Become a Stenotype Stenographer
The career is exciting... the pay is good,
Exclusively at 259 Broadway
LOpposiie Caty Hai!)
and out of town who nave similar
memories of Ray Gimmler. Most
of them will be on hand at the
Astorian Manor on Thursday
evening, June 24th to honor Ray
ff A manner which he so richly
deserves. The joint will have
wall-to-wall biggies from labor,
politics, F.D.N.Y., and a lot of
“little” guys who admired and
appreciated his efforts on their
behalf, It should be a great night,
For further information on tic-
kets ete, call B.C, Edwin F. Jen-
nings in Group 4, 31st Battalion
or at home (984-6343). You'll be
glad you did.
Meanwhile captain Ray Gim-
miler, good fireman, good father,
patriot and friend . . . the best of
everything good and fine to you
in your retirement!
The following 12 members of
the Fire Dept., having complet-
ed the course of motors and
pumps at the Division of Train-
ing, have been designated engine
company chauffeurs:
Louis J. Ruggirello, Engine
Paul J, Considine, Engine
Roger T. Eckert, Engine 53; Her-
bert C. Welsh, Engine 218; Char-
les Hoffman, Jr., Engine 221;
Harold J. Pilutik, Engine 23:
James BE. Kennedy, Engine 23
Frank 9 Pandullo, Engine 269:
Bruno F. Bracchy, Engine 283;
Thomas C. Plynn, Engine 299;
Leroy Johnson, Jr, and Ralph
Visco, Mod, Cities CRB.
Fireman Bruno F, Bracchy,
Engine Co. 283, achieved the
highest rating in his class,
Fireman second grade James
Dooley, Ladder Co, 28, received
the "Hero of the Month” award
from the New York Daily News
for the month of April.
The following 51 probationary
firemen have been appointed fire-
men fourth grade, effective June
2 and June 9:
Erling R. Salvesen, Jr., Joseph
V. Mulryan, Howard J, Hill,
Thomas P. Rapatski, Theodore
H. Bushmann II, Stephen H.
Chimento, Frank P. Perini,
‘Theodore E, Frett, Jr, Francis
J. Fitspatrick, Jr., John H.
Hughes, Frank A, Sochacki, Ralph
J, Caramanica, James T. Noon,
William P. Jordan, Robert P.
Macher, George Barr, Raymond
Chrampanis, Salvatore J, Sal-
vato, Lawrence M, Bagnasco,
William A. Rohe.
Harry J. Wehr, George T.
Daley, Everett J. Wabst, Frank
V. LaGrassa, Ronald J. Salig,
John M. Kostynick, Robert C.
Penta, James A. Gancl, David T.
Gilassgold, Raymond P, Longo-
bardi, Arthur R. DePew, Frank
J. Pellino, Stephen P. Szambel,
Kevin D. O'Keefe, Peter Rey-
nolds, Vincent G, Dillon, Robert
W. Cunningham, Robert T. Kil-
kenny, John J, Sammon (2),
John J, DeRosa, George J, Shee-
han, Martin E. Olsen, William H,
MeVey, Paul F, Wolman, Har-
old P. Tyler, George EB. Petricek,
Richard G, Farrell, Steven M.
Nagle, John J. Acerno, Robert R.
Ericksen, George T. Hennigan,
‘The folowing 25 FDNY leuten-
ants have completed attendance
at the Officers Induction Train-
ing School, Division of Training:
Lieutenants James A. Healy,
Barry N. Brown, Edward A.
‘Till, Ajiebo N. Ventrudo, James
P. Durkin, Thomas M, Johnson,
Edward R, Torresen, Anthony J.
Palaxsola (1), William H. Collis-
John J. Sullivan (10), Lycurgus
1L, Lanier, John J. Donegan, Gae-
ation of the awarding of a Cer-
tificate of Merit for achieving
the highest rating in this group.
Promotional
‘The following seven members
of the Fire Department have re-
ceived the following promotion
points for meritorious acts per-
formed on duty:
Merit rating class I: three
points toward promotion: Pire-
man first grade Gilbert J. Mur-
tha;
Merit rating class III: one
point toward promotion: Lt. An-
thony J. Alva, Fr. ist Gr, Pred
E. Arnold, Pr, 1st Gr, Thomas
A. Cleary, Pr. 1st Gr. Robert C.
Hansen, Pr. ist Gr. James G.
Spink, Fr. Ist Gr. Donald H.
Mischke.
The Fire Dept. has announced
the promotion of the following
24 of its members, effective
June 8:
To Deputy Chief: Battalion
Chiefs Wiliam J, Hefferman, Jr.
Nicholas F, Leibrock, Jr.
To Battalion Chief; Captains
Carlo A. Andersen, Curt A. Land-
grebe, Raymond A, Gamble, Vic-
tor A. Bianca, Frank J. Nastro,
Jr,, Prank J. D'Amico,
‘To Captain: Lieutenants Fred-
erick Lowry, Philip N. Maida,
Donald FP. Devine, Nicholas K.
Bowden, Patrick J. Cawley,
Charles H. Gee. *
To Lieutenant: Firemen First
Grade Paul F. Chance, George
M. Cole, Frederick Kopetz, James
R. Ryan, Robert A. Siddons, Kev-
in P. Larkin, Frederick C. Olsen,
Patrick J. Fallon, John Bon-
dulich, Ralph Racioppo, Martin
T. Kendrick, William C. Bassler.
Senior Steno
The city Dept. of Personnel
has summoned 722 candidates for
promotion to senior stenographer
to take exam 2644 June 16,
Early Retirements
The 6.1 percent June pension
bonus may coax thousands of
eligible federal workers into re-
tirement and could have the
effect of blunting the impact of
Dept. of Defense layoffs, Last
year, when @ much smaller pen-
ston increase was pending, &
record 80,000 employees. retired
to Eisenhower.
Premium Reductions
‘Take-home pay for about one
of every three federal workers
Plus some 8,000 retirees will go
up slightly this summer when
the Government reduces prem-
jumg for its optional $10,000 life
Package. The new rates will be~
gin in July for half a million
employees and take effect in
August for retirees who get
monthly annuity checks, New
rates were published in this col-
umn in the May 29 Leader.
Watergate Vacancies
About 50 of 425 high-level jobs
in the federa} government re-
main unfilled as a result, accord-
ing to inside sources, of the
Watergate scandals. Many po-
tential employees in industry
and academia have refused ap-
ointment.
Hike Minimum Wage
On June 6 the House voted,
287 to 130, to increase the pres-
ent minimum wage to $1.60 an
hour now and $2.20 an hour ina
year, This bill will also extend
coverage for the first time to a
million household servants, ex-
cept those residing in the houses
where they work.
‘Those against the bill were pro-
ponents of a three step wage in-
crease, backed by the Adminis-
tration, which would increase
wages to $1.90 this year, $2.10
next year and $2.20 after two
years and would not extend to
additional workers.
‘The bill will now go to the Sen-
ate where chance of passage
looks very promising.
Creedmoor Slates
June 15 Installation
An installation dinner-dance
has been scheduled by Creedmoor
chapter of the Civil Service Em~-
ployees Assn. for June 15, ac-
cording to chapter president
Terry Dawson,
The affairs will be at Piat-
deutsche Restaurant, 1132 Hemp-
stead Turnpike, Franklin Square,
LI, with dinner slated for 8
p.m., followed by dancing from
9 pm. tol am
On The Beach
MINEOLA — The high point
of summer social activity — the
annual beach picnic — will be
held by the Nassau chapter, Civil
Service Employees Assn. on July
*
‘Tickets are availadle from pic-
nic chairman Tony Glanetti or
at the chapter office, Room 202,
Old Country Courthouse, Mineola.
Tickets are $1.25 for adults, and
cover free beer, soda and ice
¢ream. Children under 12 enter
free. Tickets should be secured
fn advance to assure entry to the
CBEA picnic area, which will be
set aside at “The Mushrooms”
area of the Hempstead Town
Park at Lido Beach. The fun
Tung from 11 a.m. to 6 pm.
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
2's Leading W:
For Public Employees
Published Each Tuesday
11 Warren St, N.Y, NX, 10007
1 Wines Se NA tooo
Sate
Ritadl, Nex, tape enor of
Secret dal copin Se Yt
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TREASURERS SEMINAR — Civil Service Employees Asin. treasurer Jack Gallagher, center,
presides at seminar last week for treasurers attending CSEA County Workshop at
Friar Tuck Inn.
Gallagher is shown here with Joseph Simon as CSEA assistant supervisor of general accounts Joseph
Salvino, standing, lays out some of the fiscal forms that were discussed at seminar, F
owing the
County meeting, an information session was slated for the Central Conference last weekend at Alex-
andria Bay and for the Capital District Conference, June 16, at Hidden Valley
of the Civ
bargaining specialists Harmon
DISCUSS FIELD SERVICES _
Sitting,
clockwise
Regional field supervisors and collective bargaining specialists
Service Employees Assn. discuss plans to increase field services for local go
with CSEA director of local government affairs Joseph Dolan, right. Standing, from left
Swits and Manuel Vitale,
mmment groups
are collective
o'clock, are
from seven
Long Island supervisor Edwin Cleary, Central supervisor Francis Martello, Western supervisor James
Powers,
‘SEA director of field services Patrick G.
Rogers, Southern
Capital District supervisor John Corcoran.
pana
chairman
Victor Pesel,
Albany County
tive
represeni
BUDGET COMMITTEE — Members of the Civil Service
budget committee discuss allocation of funds during meeting last week at Friar Tuck Inn.
banking representative
supervisor
Thomas Luposello and
ployees Assn.’s Board of Directors
Committee
rold Ryan, second from left, Audit and Control representative, presides at meeting with
Edward Dudek, universities representative
and Howard Cropsey
County Workshop Report
(Continued from Page 1)
to the attention of individual lee
tslators
Delegates engaged in many
specialized meetings throughout
the three-day workshop, sharing
problems and solutions with lead~
ers from other areas.
The Sunday evening meeting
was devoted to a panel discus-
sion on CSEA insurance plans
with CSEA executive director Jo-
seph Lochner acting as moderat-
or, Partictpants included Walter
Novak on group life insurai
Frank Forbes on accident and
health and Jack Manter on home-
owners and auto
er also explained the
new membership drive, pointing
it that additional members will
spread out the cost of running
the organization, and postpone
the need for a dues increase to
provide the expanding services
being mandated by delegates.
‘The meeting Monday morning
included the special non-teaching
Loc
schoo! district committee, with
Edward Perrott as chairman and
Danny Jinks as coordinator, the
special socia) services commit-
tee with Frank Lawson as chair-
man and Patrick Monachino as
coordinator and the ad hoc pro-
bation committee with James
Brady as chairman and Nels
Carlson as coordinator
The Workshop was also the oc-
easion for several other state
meetings, such as the budget
committee, a chapter treasurers
“Elmira Correctional Aides
Being Blacklisted” — Weisz
Jack Weisz, president o:
f the Civil Service Employees
Assn. Metropolitan Conference and departmental represen-
tative on the CSEA Board
of Directors for correctional
services, recently attacked the actions of Elmira Correc-
tional Facility Superintendent
Chester D. Owens, calling his
tactics “worse than Watergate”
and claimed that Owens “has in-
timidated employees by sending
a list of names along with pic-
tures to departmental headquar-
ters in Albany of all those who
engaged in picket-line duty in
the CSEA strike last April.”
CSEA first learned of the list
last January and officially re-
quested through the department
that they supply the union with
a copy of Owens’ “blacklisted”
employees. Weisz said that con-
firmation of the existence of the
list came when one Elmira em-
ployee filed a routine grievance
and received an answer from
Owens that cited him as being
on the picket line in the Easter
weekend action taken by CSEA
and indicated that this
‘breach of discipline.”
Owens’ letter said, “I must
emphasize that I like to main-
tain discipline here, and as a
result, I have submitted to Al-
bany a list of the people who
were on the picket line during
the CSEA strike last April, This
material also included a picture
was a
of you distributing picket signs
to the strikers
Weisz said that CSEA has
written a letter to John Burns
director of the department's
bureau of labor relations, de-
manding that the list currently
used by Owens and submitted to
the department, be turned over
to the union with an explana-
Decision Awaited
tion as to how it is used. Thom-
as Linden, CSEA negotiator for
correctional services, said, “The
use of this so-called list amounts
to intimidation and is a thinly
veiled threat that will constitute
solid grounds for an improper
practice charge, which will be
filed against the department un-
less we receive a copy of it along
with an explanation.”
There are indications that
CSEA will refuse to deal further
with Owens in any labor-man-
agement situation unless they
are able to resolve this situation.
Weisz said, “The whole problem
stems not from this one issue,
but from many small examples
of irresponsibility which, when
Pieced tom indicate that
Superintendent Owens has a
rather immature and outdated
outlook on the whole scope of
labor relations
The memo from Owens to the
employee further cited as being
“ridiculous,” CSEA action which
“went so far as to discuss the
safety of the secretarial chairs
with the superintendent,”
CSEA negotiator Linden said,
particularly tnter-
in Nght of the
our state negotiating
ams in each of our four state
gaining units spend hours
discussing safety, and have al-
located hundreds of thousands of
his was a
dollars to establish committers
to study areas of this very naz,
ture
Nurse Career Ladder
ALBANY
Final resolut:
jon of the Nurses Career Lad-
der, in negotiations for more than three years, now Hes in
the hands of the Civil Service Department's Classification
and Compensation section
ployees Assn. negotiator Bernard
Ryan
Office of Employee Relations
negotiator John McKenna had
issued w final proposal to CSEA
in late March, CSEA’s nurses re-
fused the offer and sent a letter
which was to be forwarded to
the Civil Service Department
sting th Objections to the
OER offer
While funding for
ladder has been
Rockefeller's supplemental bud-
get, Classification and Compen-
sation representatives must now
review OER's proposal and
CSEA's objections to determine
how the career ladder will be im-
plemented.
Rockefeller's supplemental
budget funds the © ladder
implementation for more than
two million dollars. The Civil
Service Department is expected
to reach a decision on the nurses
career ladder within the next few
the career
approved in
The
Department will be re-
workshop, the state executive
committee and the Board of Di-
rectors,
At the Monday evening ban-
quet, CSEA assistant program
specialist Mary Blair was honor-
ed with a testimonial and praised
for her efforts on behalf of the
Association and for County em-
according to Civil Service Em-
viewing CSEA's formal objec-
tions to the OER package, which
include the Mmitation of the
practical nurse to a single title,
with no career ladder movement
at all, In addition, the CSEA
nurses voiced objection to the
OER requirement of a certificate
in a nursing specialty for move-
ment to the Nurse Specialist, G-
17 position. The CSEA nurse ne-
gotintors say the certificate is
unattainable, since there are
very few schools that offer such
programs
Ryan's nursing committee also
objected to the thumbnail sketch
of proposed jobs that the state
had supplied, go along with
thelr proposal, He said, “During
the course of the discussions, the
committee drew up detailed job
specifications for every proposed
title, These were Jost in transia-
tion and our program should not
be implemented without each
person being aware of what
duties his or her particular job
requires
ployees in particular. She was
presented
bicycle
Choking back tears, Ms. Blair
thanked the delegates, and re-
peated how much she would miss
them. She is moving out of the
state and will soon be leaving
the employ of CSEA
with a 10-speed
d
61 ZL eunf ‘Aepsony “WAGVAT FDIAWAS “HAL
£
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, June 12, 1973
Transit Patrolman Eligible List
EXAM 2225
PATROLMAN, NEW YORK
CITY TRANSIT POLICE
DEPARTMENT
‘This list of 6,222 eligibles was
made public May 23. Of the
22,845 candidates who filed dur-
ing Jan. for the Feb. 24 written
exam, all were called but only
10,931 appeared. Salary is $11,-
200.
(Continued From Previous Issue)
No, 1541 — 85.0%
1541 Thomas D Romano, Mich-
ael F Helmstadt, Peter C Pad,
Anthony A Pecone, Joseph E
Harvey, Calvatore Cardile, Kenny
J MocCaughey, John F Verardi,
Herbert Lee, Arthur E Whalen,
Nicholas Agostinacchio, Mark J
Kearney, David H Kopycinski,
Ronald L Sheldon, Mark J De-
Marco, Thomas P Maloney, Reg-
inald G Toney, Charles T Weis-
ser Jr, Philip A Roselli, Orest
Lewinsky.
No. 1561 — 85.0%
1561 Michael P Logan, Peter
Pticar, Thomas H Dowd, James
J Docherty, Thomas R Delehan-
ty, Luis A Ilanas Jr, Robert J
Cousins, Richard Whitaker, Al-
fonso T Vassall, Charles A Dun-
can, Jesse J Acoff, Louls R Ro-
man, Carlos A Nunez, Vance E
Johnson, Robert L Delaney, Ed-
win Morales, Fred C Horenburg,
Arthur H Schulkin, Vincent P
Serapiglia, Robert L Meyers.
No. 1581 — 85.0%
1581 Bill Bascom, Raleigh L
Budeh Jr, Roland C Hughes, Wil-
liam Barnwell, Robert Gregg, Ed-
ward Drew, Allen J Kuhn, James
Warwick, John H Ward, Kenneth
Rogers, Joseph A Aponte, John
R Flemister, Robert H Jenks, Carl
A Calarco, John 8 Sokolik, Thom-
as Becker, Philip A Mastridge,
Anthony V Walters Jr, Michaele
A Calendrillo, Hector Cuevas,
No, 1601 — 85.0%
1601 Robert Volpe, Stephen R
Sierra, Clifford E Donadio, Sal-
vatore Decaro, Lawrence J Mas-
sa Jr, Robert J Giordano, An-
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thony Tagliaferro,
Grant, Thomas P Ponta Piast
Mack, Cardinal L Campbell, Al-
fonso A Cooper, Robert Nieves,
Daniel C Georgia Jr, Luis M
Gonzalez, Clarence A Nathan Jr,
Joseph Carpenter Jr, Allen Jones,
Howard Vigder, William PF La-
faicio.
No, 1621 — 85.0%
1621 Kenneth P Dugan, Bro-
thel Dean, Homer Green, Prank
A Moltnari, James F Lods, Mich-
ael R Lampkin, Lenko Kaica,
Maurice P Aspinall, Michael T
Collins, Wiliam M Broughton,
Donald F O'Connor, Joseph V
Coyle, Arnold C Lewis, Michael
J Bell, William B Gans, Michael
J Popolizio, Thomas J Aiello,
Joseph B Ehrenhardt, Andre P
Servat, Salvatore Tamburrino,
No, 1641 — 85.0%
1641 Kenneth W Beigay, Mic-
hael C Edwards, Dwight R Lemel-
Je, Carl P Panza, Jeffrey Mehrh-
off, John P McKenna, John
Dorry, Dennis E Brown, Dennis J
McKeefery, George E Jordan,
Donald Shanley, Robert P Keeg-
an, Thomas 8 Berti, Stephen E
Meiman, Kenneth Kay, George
H Kaiser, Gregory A Fonseca,
Thomas H Kunstmann, Danie)
Piannelly, Thomas P MoClean.
No. 1661 — 85.0%
1661 Richard Kearns, Michael
B Carroll, George J Giuliano,
Gerard A Hoey Jr, Winston A
LaLande Jr, Alfonso Ullio, Ray-
mond Orlang, Bernard J Mon-
teleone, Enoch E Meningall, An-
thony A Radano, Edwin Calero
Jr, Richard W Bondy, Richard
D Hawkins, James P Bardy, Ken-
neth Hill, Fredie Borrero, Mal-
colm A Stewart, Edward F Bre-
heny, Robert W Clancy, Charles
E Marino.
No, 1681 — 85.0%
1681 Bernard J Sloan, Joseph
J Alvy, Joseph P Berkery Jr,
Theodore Young, Wiliam F Mul-
lin, Joseph A Abbinanti, Dominic
A DiGregorio, Kevin N Murphy,
Richard C Artis, Peter J Pagan,
Charles W Gomez Jr, Guillermo
Velez, Ronald D Varecka, Ralph
P Annunziata, Edwin G Sanders,
William J Dietrich Jr, Timothy
E Grauer, Stephen P Radacinski,
Michael A Fortunato, Bruce M
Brenner.
No. 1701 — 85.0%
1701 Augie J Janmace, Joseph
G Sawchuk, Robert G Rist, Stev-
en Hollis, Bradford D Owens,
Arthur J Cordiano,
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No. 1721 — 85.0%
1721 Wayne H Barlow, Eddie
ard K Heathwood, Freda Concep~
clon, Anthony Rufat, Jeremiah F
Fennel, Peter A Ronda, William
J Mullin, Frank J Lupi, David
Schulman, Thomas A Molaza.
No. 1741 — 83.8%
1741 Wiliam M Kelly, Alan 8
Clarke, Ruben Wexler, Ernesto
A Castillo Jr, Thomas F Pitzger-
ald, John M Rosa, Francis J
Hand, Lawrence R Santella, Ro-
bert A Alosco, Dennis J Carroll,
Thomas Byrne, John R Molloy,
Peter P Tavolacci, Miguel Apon-
te, Jerome J Brennan, James E
Allen, Louis J Saltaformageto,
George E Holzmann, Joseph
O'Connell,
No, 1761 — 83.8%
1761 Michael B Happaney, Ric-
hard F Mullins, James M Hall,
Robert P Iannitto, Brian F Gim-
lett, James T Giery, William J
Ciorciarl, Samuel R Goldstein,
Prank A Walton, Edward G
Bushman, Paul Stewart, Joseph
F Tufano, Bruce Verbitsky, Frank
C Winbury, William P Ellis, Ro-
bert J Cahoon, Raymond Tome-
zak, James E Cox, John Sapien-
za, William J McCutchan,
No, 1781 — 83.8%
1781 Stephen P Nawrocki, Kev-
in J Carberry, David L Johnson,
William F Duggan, Norman Vent-
sky, Anthony J Alfano, Joseph
S Tusil, Richard J Casertano,
Michael D Nagin, Robert G Phel-
an, Gregory C Ward, Lloyd Rob-
inson Jr, Robert Riddick, John
Cirigliano, Dennis C Barvels,
Donald D Aguino, Michael Fer-
rante, Gerard T Gerke, James
G Nelson, William P Morrissey,
No, 1801 — 83.8%
1801 Edward C Terry, Charles
F Hewson Jr, Kenneth E Mar-
quino, Lawrence A Hoyt, Paul
J Murphy, Graham B Weather-
spoon, Dennis G Lynch, Wiliam
G@ Garland, George Thompson
Jr, Richrad A Hopkins, Joseph
J Ostapluk, Charles F Parran-
to, Kevin D Hassett, Robert G
McCauley, Robert L Wheelin,
Wayne R Weldon, Philip M Meh-
Ung, Martin J Liptak, Alan J
Murphy, Floyd J Simmons,
No, 1821 — 83.8%
1621 Kenneth J Murphy, Gary
S Kaufman, Gene L Sullivan,
Thomas O. Jones, Lawrence J
Sheehan, Victora A Lambert, Pet~
er B Kearns, Thomas J Pyatt
Jr, Wiliam J Clinton, Stephen J
Gtuntini, James C Borbee, Ed-
ward J Caden, Joseph M O'Cal-
Jaghan, Glenn W Foulkes, James
M Donato Jr, Robert D Honey-
man, Edward J McDermott, Mic
heel A Mercatante, Louls Lolo-
dice, Claude D Tims,
No, 1841 — 83.8%
1841 Brian J McGuire, Joseph
L Traynor, John A Schiavone,
Peter 8 Crescenti, Robert B Con.
neely, Paul P Moran, Gerard T
Holler, Robert Martini, Kevin P
Begley, Thomas E Bendernagel,
Alfred P Reno, David J Gaskin,
Louls 8 Ciavarella, Anthony D
Tums, Glenn K Albrecht, Scott J
Calabrese, Wiliam J Ashworth,
Edward R Ramos, Wiliam Polber,
Anthony P Abarno,
No, 1861 — 83.8%
1861 Kevin W Perno, Henry A
Rohrer, William Y Harrigan,
Stephen P Burchyns, Walter R
Schultz, Daniel R Kelleher, John
P Cervone, Marcel E Dume, John
J Ford, Robert J Nicholson, Mic.
hhael V Boland, Manuel Morales,
Joséph M Dempsey, Andrew C
Cote, John J Dolan, Hu Mo, Jo-
seph R Arroyo, Harry C Zapiti,
Paul G Palumbo Jr, Stanley P
Liebman, Art Johnson, George
D Larubio, Thomas B Schiavo,
Prank G Cush, Thomas A Davis,
George 8 Barney Jr, Nicholas J
Luciano, Robert R Gallucel,
Daniel R Pinnisi.
No, 1901 — 83.8%
1901 James P King, John D Cu-
sumano, Paul R Sudul, Louls
J Palmieri, Chris C Tortora,
‘Thomas W O'Rourke, Stephen J
Wawryk, Anthony M Dangelis,
Benjamin Colon, Ralph V Mar-
chetta, Joseph R Iandolo, Don-
ovan J Hunt, James M Dow, Lou-
is P Celestino, Jude T Albano,
Joel C Levine, James F Hanni-
gan, Martin H Hoffman, Carlton
L Ashley, Robert D Sheehy,
No, 1921 — 83.8%
1921 Richard A Karagrozia,
‘Thomas M Ritter, Dale J Mill-
er, Ralph K Pandacone, Ronald
B Goetz, George H Pearson, Jef-
frey J Lewis, Brian 5 Mayer,
Michael H Forster, Donald H
Church, Frank T Tiscione, Paul
R VonBernewitz, Robert A Ben-
son, Daniel F Deugenio Jr, Mic-
hael C Suppies, Joseph J Sortano,
Edward W Lacuzynski Jr, Thom-
as L Biggs, John J Evola, Ro-
bert C Miller.
No, 1941 — 83.8%
1941 Joseph J Scamardella,
Charles G Thiemer, Wayne A
Bardsley, Richard F Fernandez,
Robert A Molten, Leonard J
Episcopio, Francis M O'Rourke
Jr, James D Melia, Michael G
Brown, David L Isaac, Thomas
W Porter, Amos N Newman,
Duvoille Argrett, Robert 8 Pin-
cus, Michael D Taddeo, Pierce
§S McLoughlin, Ferdinand Ortiz,
Thurman L Henry, Edwin A
Quinones, Reginald L Davis.
No. 1961 — 83.8%
1961 Ronald C Solomon, Philip
H Armstrong, Joseph A Jones,
Steven L Mayers, Gdanville Bab-
satt, Richard Shea, Angel M
Garcia, Celestino Martinez, Car-
los M Zambrana, John L Mor-
gan, Eugene H Leahy, Peter J
Hernandez, Edward J Pennell,
Juan V Garcia, Richard J Prank,
Gerald H Porteus Jr, Jerry Ortiz,
Ronald Pliegelman, Michael P
Marino, Lawrence E Davia.
No. 1981 — 83.8%
1981 Joe K Gaither, Warren
C Woodall Jr, Ange! Feliciano,
Vito Brancato, Edward Deluca,
Nicholas T Falsetta, Joseph B
Wilson, Saverio F Madeo, Ro-
bert J Beresford, Ernest Canizio,
Floyd A Johnson, Joseph Sacco,
Michael Durett, Ross A Rogers,
Emilio Lugo Jr, Victor A Ruiz,
Julius H Sills, Robert C Shaw,
Armando Calderon, Robert J
Johnson Jr.
No, 2001 — 83.8%
2001 Benito R Morales, David
D Pete Jr, Michae} E Johnson,
Willie K Smith, John A Joyner,
Stephen A Gentry, Clarence L
Haynes, Eugene J Somerman,
Michael A Annibell, Robert 8
Patrizio, Dennis C Walker, Stey-
en A Careaterra, George W Bec-
ker, Jose M Cancel, Michael Pac-
clone, Earl
No, 2021 — 83.8%
2021 Raymond L Jacobs, Wil-
Nam H Durney, Wililam P Kier-
nan, Steven M Seeberger, Ro-
bert 8 Bett, Horace J Jacobs, Jos
seph J Mirro, Roland J Thibo~
(Continued on Page 5)
Transit Patrolman
(Continued from Page 4)
deau, Daniel P Donovan, Wil-
ford P Shillingford, Thomas
Carney, Michael P Streath, Mic-
hael C Rice, Raymond P Mazza-
rella, Juan Pagan Jr, Gregory J
Innes, Dudolf Benini, Philip M
Marco, Joseph M Feola, John J
Loguercio.
No. 2041 — 83.8%
2041 James F Metz, Stuart B
Rosenkrantz, James M Turow-
ski, Anthony V Scotti, Timo-
thy W O'Brien, Michael L Bag-
ley, Charlés Ruemmeley, Joseph
Witkowski Jr, James D Theis,
Philip A Mort, Bryan J O'Neill
Jr, Vietor A Quail, Kenneth D
Paris, William Norcott, willl-
am J Bouchard, Michael Bel-
kin, Joseph Golden, Bruce C
Dinuzzo, Martin E Burke, Al-
vin C Crowley 3rd.
No, 2061 — 83.8%
2061 Bryan J O'Brien, John J
Bruni, Wiliam M Montiel, Ro-
berto Alicea Jr, Joseph T Flow-
ers Jr, Ronald M Mondie, Ar-
thur L Whitehurst, Marshall E
Jensen, John G Gallagher, Pat-
rick T Barry, Louis E Figueroa,
Thomas P Hunt, Herbert L Ed-
wards, Eugene W Kelly, Arthur L
Howard, Terrence R Kelly, John
J Horvath, Robert Kahan, Mil-
ton Barnes, Frank P Henry,
No. 2081 — 83.8%
2081 Arnold Terravecchia,
George M Amold, Jean M Car-
ter Jr, James Brown Haven A
Burroughs Jr, Walten M Wilezar,
Daniel J Boylan, Joseph Brown
Jr, Willie Hill, Michael P Mahon,
John J Velazquez, Dennis M
Hefferon, Thomas W Denneny,
Wayne T Healey, Raymond T
Robinson, William J Montano,
Michael T Ridge, Darrell Penn,
Anthony A Vanpetten, Didimo
Martinez.
No, 2101 — 83.8%
2101 Rosas C Perrone, Erskine E
Rivers, Herbert A Gaines Jr,
Thomas H Wassolock, Timothy
Carmody, Thomas F Deluca, Al-
an R Ryan, Nicholas A Juliano,
Stanley FP Tatar, Charles Frank-
Mn, Gary Graham, John J Mal-
jon, Herbert Brown 3rd, Michael
A Lavoro, Joseph P Hill, Richard
Devito, Bernard Rubino, James
F Walker, James M Feasel Jr,
Joseph A Buffolino.
No, 2121 — 83.8%
2121 Alvin Palmer, Clarence
Gaines Jr, Michael P Lavelle,
John R McKenns, Robert P Kan-
tor, John T Long, Edward T
Rasmussen, Edward J Murphy,
Daniel J Johnston, John J Mc-
ternan, Hector M Felix, Roy D
Harrison, Lawrence C Merritt,
Victor M Oquendo, Reardo F
Cases, John P Gustin, James A
Kachura, James W Callinan, Ric-
ardo R Hackney, Antonio Rom-
an
No, 2141 — 82.5%
2141 Michael V Finer, Dennis
M Gilhooly, Clifford C Thomas,
Levon P Wolfe, William Alicea,
Joseph L Arthold, Ross A Die-
trich, Juan R Ruiz, Hipolito Cir-
tno Jr, Victor P Bernard Jr,
Roy A Rolon, Thomas E Fal-
lon, Robert C Ieupp, Henri R
Nolin Jr, Michael J McDermott,
William E Longdon, John Di-
meglio, Robert J Sully, Robert P
Brilla, Fobert S Ryan.
No, 2161 — 82.5%
2161 Frank J Occhiogrosso,
Henry Byrd, Earl P Eibach Jr,
Ellas Conde, Charles E Pannell,
Curtis A Bernard, Richard G
Lee, Alvin E Riech, Louls Cast-
agno, Christophe Koehler, Allan
E Gorehoff, Raymond Gilligan,
Kevin P Twyford, Frank Heid-
inger, Robert E McKenna, John
J Ferrandino, Pred V Santitfrod,
Stephen A Savas, Robert E Arps,
John Benintendo.
No, 2201 — 82.5%
2201 Joseph A Lacorazza, An-
thony R Canning, Stanley M
Audrzejewski, Ernest R Graham,
Joseph M Corto Jr, Stanley Lib-
erstein, Timothy T Haggerty,
Joseph V Phillipaitis, Thomas W
Kiernan, Patrick T Carolan,
Charles M Ruddy, Joseph Fiatm,
Ronald M Eason, Frank T Ar-
curl Jr, oRbert R Donawa, Har-
old D Gill, Charles 6 Barr, Den-
nis R Pain, Stephen M Donofrio,
David Jackson.
No, 2221 — 82.5%
2221 Kenneth F Hall, George
Santiago, Michael H Slack, Luis
Padin, Dante V Calise, Isidore A
Lupo, Richard J Love, John T
Anisis, Dennis M Davide, Curtis
Baker, Robert J Depalma, Barry
R Rosen, Gabriel M Ferbraio,
Robert H Rahn, Albert B Evans,
Clinton Long, Mare O Zwicker,
Dougias B Goerke Sr, Edward P
Zapotocki, Richard Whittle
No, 2241 — 82.5%
2241 Everett L Wilkinson,
Adam J Caroma, Robert J
Holmes, Patrick Valicenti,
George V Bonhag, Sheldon Levi,
Edward G Gilhooley, Albert E
Dockweller Jr, Gary T Vandina,
Cynthia Brown, Bruce E Saper,
Broderick Ferreira, Lawrence R
Engel, Robert L Capen, Richard
A Mattes, Harry J Kenning Jr,
Stuart L Kresin, Demitrius Fot-
tadis, Mark A Silver, Arthur H
Kahlau,
No, 2261 — 82.5%
2261 Michael R Harlow, Wil-
liam T Quinn, Henry M Nieburh,
Anton H Shipman, Thomas A
Selferling Jr, Roy E Williams Jr,
Lioyd S Ingraham, Leroy J
Phillips Jr, Peter A Jennings,
Joseph P Dauria, Michael Nas-
tasuk, Michael E Sharkey, Greg-
ory H Salter, Leonard E Burger,
Jr, Craig R Nazzaro, John Ba-
kos Jr, Robert Leavy, Kevin C
Aldrich, James-D Jordan, Ray-
mond F Cody.
No, 2281 — 82.5%
2281 Robert J Jordan, Rich-
ard K Spiliman, Alan S Hohen-
shelt, Francis G Morris, Joseph
hern, Allen Johnson, Rudolph V
Arthurton, Dominic J Morelli,
Jose R Viera, Stephen R Power,
Eugene P Reilly, Edward J Cuc-
chiarelli, William C Cooper,
Claude Martinez, Richard H
Blau, Patrick S O'Keefe, Ken-
heth J Devoe, George M Parrish,
Keith R Schwend, Richard J
Cerny,
No, 2321 — 82.5%
2321 Terrence L Bowden, Jos-
eph M Piccirilll, Gordon Raines,
Craig L Wright, John Carras-
quillo, James F Young, Michael
T Keaveney, Alexander Auble,
Robert P Kane, Thomas 8 Mar-
inak, Joseph Tegano, Kenneth
M Silverman, Andrew J Greene,
Jonathan A Lucas, Eloy N Perez,
Gregory J Gill, Patrick J Donog-
hue, Norman J Botwin, Carl K
Scott, Lawrence J Gruber.
No, 2341 — 82.5%
2341 Daniel J Clancy, Alan A
Ecke, Vincent M Keaveny,
George H Dittmeier, George C
Daley, William P Romano, Char-
les F Williams, Gerard W Som-
erville Jr, Theodore Hurse, Wal-
ter F Jehle, Jerry Barnwell,
Richard T Baggs, Michael J Bal-
lesty, John B Reidy, Vincent N
Baresse, Ronald G Scalzo, Roger
Vegiie, Michael Hankins, Tho-
mas A Dunican, James A Mur-
phy,
No, 2361 — 82.5%
2361 Timothy C Nodell, Walter
J Thone, John Mosca, Robert J
Knott, John E Lowery, Steven O
Sheehan, John M Franco, Joel
M Block, Mark G Greenberg,
Gerard C Feist, Robert W
Haynes, Joseph R Lucchese,
James P Minogue, John M Duf-
fy, Peter Romano, Rocco A Fus-
co, John C Bonica, Gregory J
Cummings, Joseph Zangla, Laur-
ence E Hession.
No, 2381 — 82.5%
2381 Natale P Abruzzo, Leon-
ard J Munda, James A Gambar-
della, Charles A Caselli, Melvin
8 Holmes, John Lamiquiz, Mick-
ey W Dolinger, James A Corfy,
Danie} P Defalco, John Tarrago,
POLIGE SERGEANT & LIEUTENANT
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€26L ‘ZL ung ‘Aupsony, ‘YAGVAT FOIAUAS IAID
IVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, June 12, 1973
€
ee
EADER
America’s Largest Week
for Public Employees
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations
Published every Tuesday by
LEADER PUBLICATIONS, INC.
Publishing Office: 11 Warren Street, New York, N.Y, 10007
& Editorial Offic
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= Bronx Office: 406
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Price: $3.70 to members of the Civil
Service Employees Association, $7.00 te nom-mem
SDAY, ui E 12, 1973
Merit System Victory
a request from New York City to round off scores in
if ees State Civil Service Commission wisely has rejected
civil service examinations and drop the fractional rating
system that has always been in use, This is an extremely
important victory for
the maintenance of
the Merit
System in both the City and the State.
It comes as no surprise, of course, that Deputy Mayor
Edward K. Hamilton should react bitterly to the decision,
but his statement on the issue is faulty beyond belief.
He claims that “No objective observer would maintain
that the officers of General Motors or of Xerox or of The
New York Times
men of great experience asked to per-
form judgmental functions for which effective examin-
ations are
tests.”
impossible
should be chosen by
classroom
This is a typical simplistic approach to changing the
promotion methods in public employment,
because what the
Deputy Mayor did not include in his statement is the fact
that top officials in the private employment sector are not
subject to pressures from politics.
No promotional system is perfect but,
to date, no one
has come up with a better method of insuring that top-
graded civil servants will be free from the spoils system
other than
merit
by ear
@ those jobs through fitness
and
Questions |;
and
Answers
Q. 1 mistakenly sent a Re-
quest for Medicare Payment form
to the wrong insurance carrier.
Should I send a duplicate re-
quest to the right carrier for
this area?
A. No, the office that receives
your request for payment form
will forward it to the correct
carrier. You'll save time in the
future, however, by sending your
request for payment to the prop-
er address, You'll find the address
Usted in "Your Medicare Hand~
book,” or you can call any social
security office.
Q. I'm 35 and divorced. I had
to stop work recently because I
have multiple sclerosis, Even
though my ex-husband pays
some support for our three small
children, can 1 still apply for
monthly social security disability
A. Yes. If you are found eligi-
ble for disability benefits, your
children can also get benefits
even though their father contri-
butes to their support.
@. I'm 23 and I've been sup-
died 4 years ago, Since I recent~
ly became disabled, I plan to
apply for monthly disability ben-
efits. If I am eligible for checks,
will my sister and brother be
able to get monthly checks on
my earnings record?
A. Social security doesn't pro-
vide payments to a worker's bro-
thers and sisters, But your bro-
ther and sister might be able to
get monthly checks on your par-
ents’ social security records. You
should get in touch with any so-
cial security offlee as soon as
possible to find out If they are
eligible.
Q. I know that social security
contributions went up this past
January, but can you tell me
what the increase was?
A. The contribution rate in-
creased from §.2 percent to 5.65
percent for employees and from
71.5 percent to 8 percent for self-
employed people, In addition, this
rate applies to the first $10,800
in earnings in 1973, instead of
thie first $9,000.
Most of the increase was neces-
sary to keep the hospital insur-
ance part of Medicare on a sound
financial basis and to pay for
Medicare protection for disabled
people under 65,
—
(Continued from Page 1)
Comptroller Abraham D, Beame
and Congressman Herman Badil-
lo, who came in first and sec-
ond, will clash head to head in
& run-off primary on Tuesday,
June 26. Political experts are
leary of making any predictions
as to the result of that race.
‘The liberal forces, which had
been badly split between Badil-
fo and Blumenthal, are clearly
regrouping behind Badillo. Since
conservatives and middle-of-the-
roaders are jess prone to the
mimeograph machine and press
releases than the liberals, it re-
mains uncertain as to how many
Binggi Democrats will shift to
Beame for the run-off.
Beame supporters are confi-
dent that he will win the race
by the votes of New York's silent
majority. The Badillo supporters
see the City as a liberal town
and predict a victory because of
a re-united liberal grouping. So
the City residents will be exposed
to an additional two weeks of
campaigning before the Demo-
cratic candidate for Mayor is
finaly selected.
Legistators’ Paradox
Those who like to keep score
on these things have no doubt
come to the conclusion that the
Legislature is not a particularly
spectacular launching pad for a
campaign for other public office.
State legisiators who dipped
their feet in the chaos of City
Democratic politics did not fare
too well, with the exception of
Bronx Senator Harrison J, Gold-
in who won the nomination for
City Comptroller, with more than
40 percent of the vote cast, That
means he will not be faced with
@ run-off In addition, Goldin
also won the Liberal party nom-
ination for that office, a clreum-
stance that makes him the fay-
orite for election in November.
In winning the Democratic nod,
Goldin defeated his colleague,
Senator Joseph Gabber, also from
the Bronx
In the race for President of the
City Council, Paul O'Dwyer de-
feated Assemblyman Anthony G.
DiFaleo of Manhattan. In the
race for President of the Bor-
ough of Brooklyn, Assemblyman
Stephen Solarz lost to Incumbent
Sebastian Leone, Similarly, in
the Bronx, Assemblyman Alan
Hochberg was defeated by in-
cumbent Robert Abrams. Abrams
was an Assemblyman four years
ago, when he launched a suc-
cessful campaign for the Bronx
Borough Presidency
‘Two Assemblymen who wanted
to exchange Assembly seats for
those of a counollman-at-large
were both defeated. Assemblyman
Vito Batista lost his bid for the
Republican nomination for coun-
cil-man-at-large in Brooklyn, and
Assemblyman Seymour Posner
Jost in his campaign for the
Democratic nomination as coun-
cilman-at-large in the Bronx.
Posner was defeated by Coun-
cliwoman Aileen Ryan, who had
previously been a member of the
State Assembly
Senator John J. Marchi of Sta-
ten Island, the Republican can-
didate for Mayor, will have to
wait until the ballots are count-
ed on June 26 to find out who
his Democratic opponent will be.
To Craig State Board
ALBANY—Ms. William Derby,
of Geneseo, has been appointed
by the Governor to the Board of
Visitors of Craig State School
for an unsalaried term ending
Deo. 31, 1976,
Civil Service
Law & You
" RICHARD GABA
Me: Gadi lo ahah 6t the them ot Wille, Wally and Gabe,
F.C, and chairman of the Nassau County Bar Association Labor
Law Committee.
Statute Of Limitations
The case of Foran v. Murphy recently decided by the
New York County Supreme Court provides insight and an
excellent discussion of the meaning and application of the
“Statute of Limitations” contained in Section 75 of the
Civil Service Law. Section 75(4) of the Civil Service Law
provides: “Notwithstanding any other provision of law, no
removal or disciplinary proceeding shall be commenced more
than three years after the occurrence of the alleged incom-
petency or misconduct complained of and described in the
charges provided, however, that such Hmitation shall not
apply where the incompetency or misconduct complained
of and described In the charges would, if proved in a court
of appropriate jurisdiction, constitute a crime.”
In this case, a police captain brought an Article 78 pro-
ceeding to annul a finding of guilt and to vacate a forfeiture
of 30 days’ pay directed by the Commissioner of Police in
New York City, He had been found guilty after a depart-
mental hearing of lying during an official Police Department
investigation,
THE EVIDENCE at the departmental hearing concern-
ed incidents which allegedly took place in 1966, Subsequent-
ly, in 1971, after Foran had testified before the Knapp Com-
mission to the same effect as he had testified at the de-
partmental hearings and before the Grand Jury, the Police
Department conducted an additional investigation which re-
sulted in a charge dated May 29, 1972, in which it was speci-
fied that Foran had committed perjury
In the Article 78 proceeding, Foran did not challenge
the sufficiency of the evidence produced at the department-
al trial. He claims, however, that the matters with which
he was charged are barred by Section 75(4) of the Civil
Service Law. He also argued that the penalty imposed was
excessive, In its decision, the court pointed out that it was
the false testimony given in 1971 rather than the 1966 In-
cident which formed the basis for the charges and speci-
fications against the petitioner. The respondents, however,
did not raise or rely upon that argument. They argued in-
stead, and according to the court correctly so, that the act
complained of would if proved constitute the crime of per-
jury, and therefore, the three-year statute of limitations
contained in Section 75(4) is inapplicable to this case
THE PETITIONER'S argument that the charge against
him could not be criminal in nature because the Grand
Jury had failed to return an indictment is without merit
“The issue with respect to Section 75 Is not whether a crime
has in fact been proved, but whether the acts alleged, if
proved in a court of appropriate jurisdiction, would consti-
tute a crime.” The argument by Foran that the Grand Jury's
refusal to return an indictment disposes of the case, shows
a misconception on his part of the nature of the function
of the Grand Jury.
“The failure to indict... means at most that the Grand
Jury did not find the evidence before it sufficient to warrant
a finding of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, in that they
affirmatively found that the petitioner had not committed
the acts he was accused of, In a disciplinary proceeding it is
not necesssary for respondent to find the accused's guilt be-
yond a reasonable doubt; it is sufficient if respondent finds
the specifications established by a fair preponderance of
the evidence, Thus, the failure to indict does not preclude
@ subsequent determination of guilt in a departmental pro-
ceeding..." Foran v, Murphy, 342 NYS 2d p.4
Nassau And Suffolk
Ed. Chapters Plan
For Joint Meeting
The executive boards of the
Nassau and Suffolk County Edu~
cational chapters of the Civil
Service Employees Assn. expect
to hold a joint meeting shortly
to coordinate their efforts, it
Was announced by Ed Perrott,
acting president of the Nassau
unit, Perrott'’s announcement
sald the leaders would also dis-
cuss the selection of candidates
for regional offices,
Grievance Upheld
CATSKILL—A grievance filed
against the Catskill Memorial
Hospital instituted by the Civil
Service Employees Assn. in re-
gards to vacation policy was
sustained by the hospital admin-
istration, it was recently an-
nounced,
‘The ruling will permit hospital
employees to have their vaca-
tions computed on the same
basis as other Greene County
employees and allow for full
utilization of the improved va-
cation policy recently negotiat-
ed by CSEA.
Letters To The Editor
‘To The Editor:
T took the police administrative
xam in April, 1971, but at that
time I was unprepared to resign
from my job, so I declined. I was
then called in a year Inter; No-
vember, 1972.
Is there any way in which I
could get back on the list with-
out taking the exam over since I
am now ready to leave my pres-
ent position?
Constance Batts
Jamaica
Editor's note: No. Your particular
list was exhausted at the end of
May, 1973, and police admin-
istrative aides are currently be-
ing selected from the 2,026-name
eligible list resulting from exam
2026, established March 21, 1973.
You will have to take the next
administrative aide exam to be
eligible for appointment since you
cannot be restored to a list re-
sulting from an exam you didn’t
take, (At present, there is no new
exam scheduled.) If, however,
your list were still operative, you
would be able to contact the cer-
tification division of the Dept. of
Personnel in room 230, 28 Thom-
as St, Manhattan, and they
would restore you to the end of
the list from which you original-
ly declined appointment. In that
ease, you would have to state the
exam number and your position
on the list,
Korean Pen Pals
A high school English teacher
in Seoul, Korea, has written to
The Leader suggesting that our
civie-minded readers might be
interested in communicating with
their counterparts and students
in Korea.
Purther information may be
obtained from Mrs, Jeongcha Jo,
Oriental Penpal Service Club, P.O,
Box 96, Sodaemun, Seoul, Korea
120.
Salary, Pay Plan Orders
For Certain City Titles
The city Dept. of Personnel,
with the approval of the Mayor,
has announced the establishment
of the following salaries with re-
spect to the alternative career
and salary pay plan regulations;
Inclusion under the alternative
career and salary pay plan reg-
ulations of the following classes
of positions: pediatric nurse as-
sociate ($12,200-14,625); labor
relations specialist trainee (§9,-
200); assistant labor relations
specialist ($12,600-16,615); a5-
sociate labor relations specialist
($17,145-22,100); assistant park
maintainer ($7,400-10,665); park
maintainer (§9,500-13,350)
Exelusion from the career and
salary plan of the following
classes of positions: administra-
tive labor relations specialist
$13,100 to an unlimited maxi-
mum); administrative nutrition.
ist. ($13,100 to unlimited max.);
administrative comprehensive
health coordinator ($13,100 to un~
limited max.); executive secre-
tary (comprehensive health plan-
ning) ($11,500); executive assis-
tant (comprehensive health plan-
ning) ($11,500)
Exclusion from the career and
salary plan and Inclusion in the
managerial pay plan and/or in
the executive pay plan: salary of
$13,100 for: assistant director for
community planning system
(comp. health planning); assis-
tant director for health inform-
ation systems (comp. health plan-
ning); comprehensive health pro-
Ject specialist (medical); com-
prehensive health project spect-
alist,
Eligibles
EXAM 1686
PROM TO FOREMAN PLUMBER
NEW YORK CITY HEALTH &
HOSPITALS CORPORATION
‘This list of 14 eligibles was es-
tablished May 29.
No. 1 — 91.47%
1 Joseph Campisi, Frank P
Vala, Anthony J Amodel, Nathan
Moskowitz, Joseph Letizia, An-
thony A Sorrentino, Joseph Amo-
dei, Charles Ferraro, George J
Vyskocil, Samuel A Natiello,
Frank Parisi, Harvey N Avidon,
Fred J Cicero, Anthony Laone.
PROM TO SENIOR CLERK
MABSTOA
This Hst of 14 eligibles is a
result of the senior clerk promo-
tonal exam taken on May 12,
1973. The list was established
June 4, for the Manhattan and
Bronx Surface Transit Oper-
ating Authority. Any person ap-
pointed as a senior clerk as a
result of this examination pro-
cedure shall hold the position for
& probationary period of six
months, during which he may be
returned to his former position
at the option of the Authority.
Salary ranges between $6,742 and
$9,663, Eligibles are
Linda Pamiglietti, Pelix Torres,
Florence Sonnessie, Betty Hall,
Veanna Wilmer, Jacqueline Mc-
Donald, Clara Nolasco, Osteen
Hill, Philomena Valentin, Antonio
Colon, Nan¢y James, Audrey Glo-
ver, William Aguilar, Sonia H
Ortiz
Named To MH Post
ALBANY — John J. Lagatt,
who has been heading the bureau
of employee relations in the
Department of Mental Hygiene,
has been appointed assistant
commissioner for manpower and
employee relations by Dr, Alan
D. Miller, State Commissioner
of Mental Hygiene, The post will
pay $32,169,
A career state employee, La-
gatt entered state service in 1950
as personnel administrator with
the State Division of Employ-
ment, He became director of
personnel for the Thruway Au-
thority in 1954 and in 1967 join-
ed the Department of Mental
Hyglene as director of personnel,
Gov. Names Deputy
ALBANY — Governor Rocke-
feller has appointed Roger W.
Hooker, Jr., who has been sery-
ing as a Deputy Secretary to the
Governor, as director of the
Washington Office of the State
of New York. He succeeds Ste-
phen A. Hopkins in the $36,500
Post
Appt. Housing Caretakers
The Housing Authority will be
appointing 2,000 housing care-
takers within the next year and
& half, according to an HA
spokesman, The appointments
will be made from the 2,079-
name eligible list resulting from
exam no. 1179, Certified for ap-
pointment were 250 eligibles, be-
tween nos. 1 and 250.
lt has a top that goes down, doors t.
a windshield that flips down.
And it can be anything
at come off,
It's good for the country and good for the city
because even though it's tough,
you don't have to be tough to drive it.
+The Thing! VW 18t »
And you don't have to be rich.
lt only costs $2,750.00— the
least Volkswagen could do.
To help make a good
thing even better.
Volkswagen dealers
are official ticket outlets for all 1973 Watkins Glen racing events,
avinonte
Creer)
SL6L “ZL UNL ‘Aepeony “YACVAT AIIANAS TAL)
73
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, June 12, 19
Signing in and collecting literature at County Workshop at Friar Tuck Inn in Cairo are,
from left, Grace Jones, Oneida County Educational chapter treasurer Grace Jones, On-
eida County Educational chapter president Jake Banek and Erie County’s Griff Pritchard
COUNTY DELEGATES EXCHANGE VIEWS AT ANNUAL WORKSHOP
Edith Styles and Al Jeune look over prizes. Winners were Al Varaccht, first vice-prest- Suffolk chapter president From Niagara County, chap-
Western Confreence third vice-president Neil Gruppo. CSEA dent of the Long Island Ben Porter was strong pro- ter president William Doyle
assistant public relations director Kirby Hannan and Leader @ @ Conference, offers his views ponent of employee pension demands firm stand on pen-
erecutive editor Marvin Barley rights. sions.
Jack Carey, left, CSEA coordinator of state negotiations, erplains current CSEA assistant program specialist Mary Blair was given testimonial at
status of state contract and its relationship to benefits for workers in local Tuesday banquet and presented bicycle. Shown with her are, from left,
government. Identifiable in front row of audience are, from left, Oswego County Executive Committee chairman Joseph Lazarony, CSEA third vice-
chapter president Fran Miller, Broome chapter president Angelo Vallone president Richard Tarmey & CSEA first vice-president Thomas McDonough
and Oswego chapter first vice-president Thomas Elhage.
Kenneth Cadieur, left, president of Town of Leader of largest chapter in CSEA, Nassau Alfred Jeune, left, president of host Greene
Hempstead unit, largest unit in Nassau chapter, County chapter president Irving Flaumenbaum County chapter, shares some thoughts @ith @
confers with John Haack, president of Westches ponders fact-sheet distributed during one of Thomas Kennedy, Suffolk County chapter ex-
ter chapter workshop sessions ecutive representative.
Exchanging views are, from left, $, Samuel Borelly, immediate past chairman of County
Executive Committee, Wiliam McGowan, CSEA fourth vice-president; Dorothy Goetz,
Town of Huntington & 't president; David Silverman, Long Island Conference president,
and Francis Miller, ( @@ al Counties Workshop president
Among partcipants in meeting of special non-teaching
school district committee were, from left, Jake Banek, com-
mittee chairman Ed Perrott, CSEA collective bargaining
spectalist Emanuel Vitale and consultant Harry Langworth.
fey
: sili
Rensselaer
oe
County, welcomes
County Executive Committee chairman Joseph Lazarony of
executive representatives,
from left, Eleanor Percy of Jefferson, Marlene Sullivan of
St. Lawrence and Jean Livermore of Madison
Central Conference first vice-president Louis Sunderhajt, left, and Nassau chapter first CSEA fifth vice-president Hazel Abrams looks up to greet
vice-president Ralph Natale air their views with CSEA third vice-president Richard Tar- Jefferson County city unit president Richard Grieco, left,
mey, right, and CSEA first vice-president Thomas McDonough, who is accompanied by his and CSEA second vice-president A, Victor Costa
wife, Pauline.
(Leader photos by ‘Tod Kaplan)
Members of ad hoc probation committee meet to discuss problems, From Among participants were Anne Maywalt, president of Broome Educational
left are Monroe County chapter president Martin Koenig, collective bar- chapter; Jennie Possemato, treasurer of Broome chapter; Thomas Elhage,
gaining specialist Nels Carison, committee chairman James Brady, Jeffer- rpesident of Mexico school unit, and his wife, Rosemary, and Mary Pom-
son county unit president Peter Grieco and St. Lawrence chapter's James peti, Broome chapter representative.
Frisina. Man with back to camera is unidentifiable.
Pat Spicct goes over some notes with John Interested observers from Erie are, from left,
Mauro, Rockland County chapter executive rep- Educational chapter second vice-president Joseph
resentative, as they prepare to attend one of the DePimo, Educational representative Harold Dob-
meetings. staff and County chapter first vice-president
Robert Dobsta//, representing towns and villages,
of municipal services, and William Blom,
director of research
Service Workshop.
lead discussion
Joseph Watkins, left, New York State director
CSEA
Civil
SL6I ‘ST oune “Kapaa “HaGVaT JOIANS TAD
4
10
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, June 12, 1973
Transit Patrolman
(Continued from Page 5)
othy 8 Moriarty, Gennie Foster,
Allen T Mathieu, John H Lewin
Jr, James C Kelly, John E Vid-
tella, Raymond L Steptoe, Law-
rence W Fulton, Wayne E Smith,
Fernando Heredia, William F
Donnelian, Leo F Geraghty Jr,
Kenneth Lacy Jr, Frederic D Ro-
zek, Randolph E Watkins, Wil-
Ham T Kilcommons, Peter Tor-
chiano,
No, 2421 — 82.5%
2421 Paul G Kunar, Lawrence
8 Revitz, Joseph G Viola, Rus-
sell S Bjune, Philip L Dobrovich,
Arthur R Schmid, Gerard L
Henningsen, William P Abiuso,
Joseph W Bradley, Vincent R
Browne, Ira A Finkelstein, Rich-
ard L Biele, Anthony Laface,
John M Calandrillo, Jose A Ri-
vera, Nelson Reyes, Constantin
Sigelakis, Melvin F Siddons,
Charlie H Martin,
No, 2441 — 82.5%
2441 John E Hill Jr, Charles
M Realbuto, Anthony N Napoli-
tano, Peter J Lindner, Steven A
Guagent!, Thomas Leonardi,
Kevin G McKenna, Joseph J
Vaccaro, Jerry S Tenenzapf,
Joseph D Walsh, Thomas Vogt,
Robert T Smith, Jose A Gonza-
lez, Timothy J Walker, David
Plournoy, Miguel A Nieves, Her-
cules Miller, Stuart B Cohen,
Daniel Rosa, Lawrence Pusco.
No, 2461 — 82.5%
2461 Charles R Brennan Jr,
Luis A Carter, Nicholas A Im-
briale, Hector Acevedo, Jeffrey
Friedman, Patrick D Ragonese,
Michael Hailey, Joseph Massi-
milo, George L Becker, Arthur
G Sekunda, Neftali Pacheco Jr,
Anthony Donofrio, Joseph M
No, 2481 — 82.5%
B McCormack Jr, James C Rich-
ards, Carl J Nappi, James J
Daly, William D Johnson, Pat-
tick J Fortunato, Robert W
Greene.
No, 2501 — 82.5%
2501 Robert A Ledee Jr, Kevin
V Dunphy, Howard E Harris,
Joseph P Scanlon, Thomas J
Smith, Raymond J Kaiser, Pat-
rick A Coffey, James C Prit-
chard, Michael J Vignola Jr,
Ronald Wilkinson, Robert R
Tafflock, Anfred J Santangelo,
John J Gibbs, William J Cathor,
Lawrence J Lane, James Rod-
riguez, Anthony P Gallo, Rich-
ard R Mitchell, Robert M Craw-
ford, Roger F Brown.
No, 2521 — 82.5%
2521 Edmund A Zielinski, Ear]
R Christian, Frederick Shepard,
Raymond J Fernandez, James T
Funchess, Stanley D Rhem, Her-
man D Lawson, Pred Rosenberg,
Joseph T Tucci, Joseph Feliciano
Jr, Ronald Varner, Joaquin
Ayala, Miguel Colon Jr, Sheldon
L Kardinsky, Richard A Gomez,
William ‘Bostick, Norman D
Crooke, Kenneth A Boatswain,
Robert A Schankweiler, Robert
Glover Jr.
No, 2541 — 82.5%
2541 Eugene P Hill, Jack A
Algaze, George A Wilder, Lester
A Harris, Brenard Reel, James R
McCormack Jr, Harold E Porter,
Hector L Lozada, Joseph A Cen-
tineo, Theodore D Singleton, Ed-
ward J Ward Jr, George Augus-
tin, Kenneth R Hogan, Carolyn
FP Fitzhugh, Mare J Lang, Marc
D Wolf, Albert E Bowen, Rich-
ard J Harker, Louis V Brogna,
No. 2561 — 82.5%
2561 Robert Mercado, Frank R
HALLE
WI
Hae
ase
it
No, 2581 — 81.3%
2581 James J Stavola, Vincent
F Nelville, Nicholas M Raio, Car-
los A Rosario, Roland G Hospie
Jr, Wilfred E Trotman Jr, Tho-
mas D Murray, Bernard J Sul-
livan, James P Kavanagh, Wil-
fredo Perez, Joseph Provenzano,
Michael FP Healy, Richard C
‘Rogers.
No, 2601 — 81.3%
2601 Demostenes Santiago,
Douglas PF Sladky, Robert E
Rinkle, Timothy E Houston,
Michae} F Dunn, Clyde T Wil-
liams, Preston J Pucci, Richard
P Anderson, John D Gale, Mic-
hae] T Anton, Sherman L An-
derson, Duane Belfield, Donald
Amantea, Thomas F Angtullo,
Louls A Reda, Dennis T Rollins,
Ronald T Brooks, William J
Tenny, Peter J Scrobe, Frank M
Prigge,
No. 2621 — 81.3%
2621 Conrad Oliver, Kevin A
Nulty, Robert D Torrieri, Char-
les E Smith Jr, Thomas M Car-
roll, Victor M Rosenthal, Robert
V Roman Jr, Alvis N Fowler,
Glenn P Dayis, Andrew Pigna-
tell, John J Rondone Jr, Mal-
achi Gibson, Tex A Francis, An-
drew T Doran, Gary W James,
Arthur J Pitre, William M Sul-
livan, Joseph L Volpe, Joseph C
Wilder, Kenneth R Patton.
No, 2641 — 81.3%
2641 Ronald B White, James
B Kane, Ted M Shapses, Paul
M Zipay, Gerald I Kasmere,
PERSONALIZED SERVICE FROM A SPECIALIZED STAFF
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At BBS,
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at excellent savings)
Major Appliances — air conditioners, washers, dryers, refrigerators, freezers,
dishwashers, ranges and ovens, humidifiers, dehumidifiers
Photo Equipment — cameras and photographic equipment
Home
Furnishings
drapes and slip covers (home service) — Office
Gifts — furs, jewelry, watches, diamonds,
Equipment — lawn mowers, type
Home Entertainment — televisions, radios, recorders, stereo:
cabinets, pianos, organs
Home
— complete furniture line and rugs, carpeting, custom
Furniture
iverware, china, luggage
's, calculators
Automobile Insurance — BBS can help you save on your insurance premiums through
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if you don't see what you want,
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BETTER BUYING SERVICE OF AMERICA en
‘Suite 1209, 400 Madison Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10017
No, 2681 — 81.3%
2681 Gary A McIntyre, Wil-
liam J Morin, Ronald FP Sexton,
James R Volpe, James J Tobin,
Thomas FP Neary, William PF
Durr, John P Tanzillo, Alan P
Varan, Anthony M_ Grinbiat,
Thomas Holley, Anthony Gag-
Mone, Jerry Green Jr, John J
Crowley 4th, Michael O Grafton,
Robert L Pergola, Frank Cas-
sano, James J Bacon, Thomas F
Boshell, Albert R Cottone.
No, 2701 — 81,3%
2701 Eugene Napolitano, Keith
J Coco, Thomas F McGonigal,
Robert W Schember, Frank Mon-
della, Robert A Maltempo, Rich-
ard A Garal, Ronald G Roch-
ford, Eugene Sellars, Carl R Bo-
Merritt C Simpson, Paul J Dau-
ria, Paul W Jurgens, John F
Matula, Joanne ¥Y Martinkovic,
Francis X Hogan, Robert M
Hicks,
No, 2721 — 81.3%
2721 Rosario M Dallura, Rich-
ard J Zuvich, John C Beal, Mer-
tick Millman, Richard J Errico,
Robert M Suschinsky, Bertram
W Delmage, Leonard Sarter,
James J Beasley, Ricardo E
Gibbs, William J McCaffrey, Ir-
vin L Rubinstein, John T Jones,
Dennis T Chylewski, Michael
Patalano, Peter W Clabby,
James F Healy, Patrick M Mur-
phy, Rudolph A Lettierl, James
Demato.
No, 2741 — 81.3%
2741 Patrick J Bentivegna,
Richard J Boemermann, Ernest
Verdeschi, Charles Seltzer, Ron-
ald L Rosen, Allen R Seiders,
Michael Deegan, William F Vil-
lauerde, Salvatore Pennisi, Fred-
No, 2761 — 81.3%
2761 Ardine Peavy, Robert J
Cross, John G Sultana, Timothy
derone, John W Connors, Philip
E Chesaniuk, Patrick M Lee,
Robert M Schiffer, Stephen J
McCarthy, Andre M Ruffin,
Louis Torrisi, Michael S Pietran-
ton!, Frank P Tricarico, James
No. 2781 — 81.3%
2781 Harry J Single Jr, Rob-
ert F Hughes, Terrence J Symes,
Edwina A Tucker, Michael F De-
laney, Willlam M Burgess, Ciar-
an Timoney, Peter F Murray,
Victor F Gainza, Richard L
Wolff, Elio A Mormando, Mat-
thew Owens, Kenneth M Grimes,
Joseph King, Gregory L Martin,
Lamont H Littlejohn, Michael A
‘Tinsley, William I Cohen, Robert
Kerekes, Raymond J Gaston Sr.
No, 2801 — 81.3%
2801 James Ortiz Jr, Douglas
H Doran, George F Sinnott, Al-
bert Dawson, Nicholas Pricch-
fone, Stephan R Tomlinson,
David D Wright, John C Eldert,
Christopher Spoto, Gary §
Burke, George J Dorner, Gregory
P Brathwaite, Anselmo Pieters,
Charles S Lauricello, Bruce V
Marsanico, William F Corsello,
Raymond Kowaluk, Dominick A
Martino, John J O'Toole, Tho-
mas J Kavanagh,
No, 2821 — 81.3%
2821 John K Vinting, David A
Nelson, Anthony J Cassano, Wil-
liam Czwil, Richard C Cuddihy,
Steven A Pinkel, John P Quinn
Jr, Angelo Wong, David F Dep-
ka, Edward P Ryan, Richard H
Samolewiez, Anthony K Prusik,
Anthony Coleman, Prank V Ba-"
sile, Phil T Pulaski, Kenneth C
Diehm, Dennis W Coleman,
Louis A Hurtado, Victor J Emori,
Clift E Zano.
No, 2841 — 81.3%
2841 Larry E Gelman, Robert
A Rothang Jr, Robert J Ondrus,
Daniel J Mazzeo, Randolph B
Reynolds, Douglas S Oliva, Rich-
ard G Kraus, Thomas V White,
Michael R Amich, Ward E Fog-
gin, Vincent Defelice, Thomas J
Coco, Bruce R Cook, Joseph R
(Continued on Page 11)
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Transit Patrolman
(Continued from Page 10)
Montall, Ronald J Statile, John
P Smith, Robert J McCarthy,
Frank Meade, Donato PF Santo,
Patrick O'Brien,
No, 2861 — 81.3%
2861 Luther T Welch, Miguel
A Estrella, Johnny R Watterson,
Harry R Ferguson, Raymond
Liamas, Jose M Pinero, Hector
Lopez, James J Golden, Alex 8
Pedrenko, Theodore L Davidson,
Alonzo T Battle, John C Taaffe,
Kirjath A Spence, Manuel Neg-
reira, Willlam T Palmer, Albert
F Penick, William E Harper,
Philip J Estrella, Ronald Weaver.
Dennis L Angtono.
No. 2881 — 81.3%
2881 Frederick Weiner, James
J Thompson, Ronald V Nedd,
Roy R Tschudy, Patrick M Mag-
giore, Richard Iannozzi, Michael
Martino, Peter T McAnuff, Lion-
el Scales, Ronald E Wallace,
Kevin T McFeeley, Richard
Sprague, Robert J Sadowski, An-
gel G Rivera, Francisco Clarke,
Gerard Esposito, Harry P Sim-
mons, Kevin C Duffy, Stephen
J Casazza, John J Curley Jr
No, 2901 — 81.3%
2901 William M_ Pattison,
Walter W Smith, Francis W
Carroll, Wilfredo R Caraballo,
Franklin D Garrett, Wayne C
Ambrose, Kolan M Wiltshire,
Anthony Mantovani, Angelo G
Volpe, Jose M Farta, Robert M
Ryan, Richard Dwyer, Carl E
Ericson, Samue] H Hampton 3rd,
Samuel M Weaver, Luis V Lo-
pez, Dennis L Stoehrer, Joseph
A Tortora, Edward T Georgens,
Jeffrey B Friedfel
No, 2921 — 81.3%
2921 Bobby J Green, Edison
Ramirez, Kenneth J Doyle,
Brian R Ford, Robert J Imper-
ati, Dennis 8 Zack, Raymond C
Bell, Joseph A Murphy, Pietro J
Paolella, James O Hill, Thomas
E Walker, Steven J Vitale, Ed-
ward C Sullivan, James T Day-
neiro Jr, Robert J Guercio, Don-
ajd J Smith, Norris G Smith,
Ronald J Smith, Thomas J Burt,
Joseph A Allocea
No, 2941 — 81.3%
2941 Paul Acer, Sylvester Mar-
tin Thomas Harris Jr, Richard A
Volano, Joseph G_ Fletcher,
James J O'Donnell, James A
Haywood, Charles T Pagan,
Robert Ervolina, Dennis L Mal-
lon, Alexander Zawalich, Edward
J Hoffman, Charles A Walker,
John M Ryan, Beesham Dyal,
John J Fleming, Robert Carey,
Linwood M Byars, Andrew L
Mitchell, Thomas J Masino.
Famous Name Furniture
at low “unmentionable” prices
Dre:
Thayer
Karastan —
NAME
Heritage, Henredon, Selig,
Coggin, Sealy, Simmons,
MORE THAN 125
BRAND TO CHOOSE
FROM,
JAMES ROY FURNITURE CO.
15 East 32nd St. Off Fifth Ave.
Open 10-5 Mon. thru Sat. OR 9-2565
the traveler's choice in New York
400 Room
te" nadia
rant and Cocktail Lo
sith Partion
‘uovraataanicevneenronnyevtanitcenaateencaeante
48th ST.
Just West
of Bway.
J
Telephone
246-8800
400 Baths » Free TY
ASAE NN SAE UOUOLAE ALOU UASTOL ULMER CHARGER
GOURMET'S GUIDE
MANHATTAN
ITALIAN
FELIX’S 154 WEST 13TH ST. CH 3-9767, Super Luncheons — Dinners —
Music, Musical memoir... Congenial atmoosphere , . . Felix, son
of the late famed opera star Felix Felice De Gregorio, host Sing along with
Felix, Lobster Dinner
tion. John Scarcella, Managing Director
TEHERAN
45 WEST 44TH ST. MU 26588. No. | Cocktail place for free
hors d'oeuvres. Howard Hillman, a top authority in New Guide
Book Inside N.Y. Famed for Seafood — Steaks
Closed Sunday,
221 EAST SOTH ST. PL 2-1696, Unexcelied Italian food
Handsome decor
ITALIAN
Gracious service. A place of distinc:
Persian and Italian specialties.
Curtain time dinner, After theatre cocktails. Parties af 400. — Luncheon —
Cocktails — Dinner
BROOKLYN
SEAFOOD
BAY RIDGE SEA FOOD CENTER $1292 st | Mt
$2070. “Out of the
Deep Bive to you.” Famous for Sea Foood Luncheons and Dinners, Also take-home
dinner, Open all yea. This two-ingne sea food establishment features all varieties
of sea food from stuamed finnan haddie to lobster, Also features a sea food store.
Luncheons from $2,75 to $3, Dinners rom 3 PM. to 9 P.M. Daily. be dinners
Served to 11 PM. Sunday dinners from ¥2 Noon to 9 PM. — $3.90 to $7
Also A la Carte
AMERICAN
GEORGE'S SEAFOOD STEAKHOUSE Wii? oi "\ixss
HIGHWAY, B°KLYN, 377-7674, George and Joho Panagahos of “The Famed Jimmy's.”
Open 7 days. Luncheon — Dinner — Supper. Free parking,
No, 2961 — 81.3%
2961 Irving H Roach, John E
O'Donnell Jr, Nicholas L Nicko-
ch, Patrick M Price, Jose A
Dominguez, Louis J Vaccaro,
George T Boks, Robert J Dilor-
enzo, Robert L Smith, Roman A
Jamronyk, Vincent J Digilio,
Gerard F Jacob, Willlam G
Grillman, Ronald J Jensen, Rob-
ert S Mitchell, John Palumbo,
Wayne J Panelli, Reginald Lo-
pez, Levern Baker, William T
Conroy.
No, 2981 — 81.3%
2981 Anthony C Carrubba,
Donald P Ryan, John J Ragone,
John K Walsh, Patrick J Hen-
drick, Frank Esposito, Gary T
Amatrudo, Gerard P Jenkins,
John H Ballard, Joseph W Foley,
Lincoln $ Dadd. Louis A San-
toro, Glen” R Maute, John J
Lotz, Michael H_ Buickerood,
Donald A Ignozza, Vernon A Ar-
nold, Leonard Indeliicatt, Victor
L Jiggetts, Charles F Buonan-
tony Jr
No, 3001 — 81.3%
3001 Anthony Papa, Michael A
Czech, John C Kunkel, Warren
W Erwin, Jose R Garcia Jr,
Douglas P Williams, Louis M Os-
zart, Arthur Bowden, Valentino
Diaz, Dennis P Garabrant, Fred-
erick Horgan, Walter Centeno,
Albert T Goodwin, Thomas R
Clarkson, Frederick Smith, Fed-
erlco D Western, William E
Brooks, Gregory F Jentzen,
Gerard M Clarke, Wilfredo A
Perez.
No, 3021 — 80.0%
3021 Samuel Searcy Jr, Este-
ban Rosario, Francis R Shana-
gan, Clinton Charles, John R
Peters, Prank Baxter, John A
Rutledge, Frederick Maass, Ter-
rence F McGrath, Lawrence E
Johnson, Ronald S Cozart, Har-
vey Hill Jr, James G Hunt, Al-
fonso —- Williams, Christopher
Deielak, Robert W Martno,
Charles Cruz, Norberto J Diaz,
Eric H Deravin 3rd, James J
O'Rourke
No, 3041 — 80.0%
3041 Stephen R Austin, John
I Boyne, John P Engel, Dorian
A Peracchio, James W Wynne,
Domenick R Gerardi, Joseph
Sarona, John F Cuddy, Philip
S Smith, Carl McLean, Joseph
M Pardl, Robert P Menake, John
R Klosterman Jr. Bruce Rupp,
Lawrence J Monte, George Can-
ale, Dennis L Huffman, James
A Hayes, Howard S Messing,
James P Benson.
No, 3061 — 80.0%
Robert J Giallombardo,
Steven P Krifchin, Bruce W
Venable, Gregory C Smith, John
J Tartaglia, Andrew J Steinfeld,
John F Leechan, John Punk, An-
thony Giambruno, Peter G Ber-
era, Cyrus Galletta, Joseph Tre-
glia Jr, Stephen V Gallo, Philip
J Delgrosso, Joseph J Gilbert,
James J Kane Jr, Conrad E
Lake, Henry S Nowosad, Barry
Shurelds, Stephen M Rabinowits.
No, 3081 — 80.0%
$061 Richard L Dawson, John
P Bonanno, Saverio L Yannan-
tuono, Richard B Ashe, James
R Carpinelli, Jeremiah P Collins
Srd, Carlo Blanco, Michael R
Ripo, Joseph G O'Rourke Jr,
Kevin R Tinagero, Anthony J
Romano, Charles J App Jr, Wil-
lam L Portnoy, Victor J San-
tucel, Bart A Borricllo, Kenneth
J Agres, Michael G Delorenzo,
Peter J Daloia, Michael R Me-
dican, William F Desantis.
No, 3101 — 80.0%
3101 James Leone, Sheldon T
Peters, Lawrence Murrell, Wal-
ter J Tatum, Craig G Nilsen,
John J Hartnett, Robert I Sch-
warts, James R Henriksen, Jeff
D McAllister, Vincent J Bashen,
Simon J Johnson, Frank J Sessa,
James W Hulse, Michael A De-
candia, John J Gray, Wiltam
3061
J Cassino, James Uliano, An-
thony Minutoli, Joseph J Ram-
pello, Stephen T Russell.
No, 3121 — 80.0%
3121 Steven R Nowaski, Rob-
ert E Sweeten, Stephen G O'-
Brien, Vito J Rocco, Carmine T
Gentile, Gerald P Flynn, Stan-
ley K Wojis, Thomas J Brennan,
Clifford K Lewis Jr, Brian J
Gable, Stephen J Gurney, Alex-
ander Sparaco, John R Sch-
wartz, Harold R Olsen Jr, John
J Buckley Jr, Michael J Tetro,
Peter C Resch, Gregory B Chir-
ichigno, Jerry D Bartle, Gary G
Becker,
No, 3141 — 80.0%
3141 Robert D Aprile, Joseph
H Espopo, James P Wekerle,
Richard L Rowand, Gary K
Skelly, Charles W Schwartz,
Thomas J Carney, Alan J Sch-
abhuttl, Stephen N Watts, Vic-
tor Wilson, Matthew E Temkin,
James F Ferrara, Daniel Sap-
anara, Agostino Paratore, Brian
G Green, Brian J Goodman,
Neftali Villanueva, Marion L
Cunningham, William J Wagner,
Clifford O Bailous.
No. 3161 — 80.0%
3161 Robert E Arrington 3rd,
Kenneth E Haynes, Prederick
Lund 3rd, Micttael T Dunn, Peter
A Toscano, Stephen R Carberry,
Philip J Kern, Robert H John-
son, Joseph P Abarno Jr, Frank
L Aquilone, Kenneth L Anderson
Jr, James J Bonnar, Richard J
Anmnstrong, John P McCabe,
Matthew L Issman, Howard W
McGee Jr, Kenneth J Pawlow-
ski, Carl L Summerlin, Vincent
T Cummiskey, Anthony Smalls.
No. 3181 — 80.0%
3181 Peter P Barbieri, Paul J
Klisures, William L Milza Sr,
Robert F Land, Frank J Pipia,
Timothy H Gilronan, Robert J
Baltrunas, Charles L McKenzie,
Mariano Rivera Jr, Antonio Or-
tiz, Michael V Gumbs, George
E Hewitt, Frederick Booker. Jr,
James A Hazel, Luis A Rios,
Richard H James, Edgar D
Spence, Wilbert Hickman, James
P Gray, George L Santiago.
No. 3201 — 0%
3201 Timothy Bostick, Victor
M Santiago, Julio E Martin,
Walter O Whitehurst, Pete Laro-
cea, Joseph S Powell, Kevin M
MeNeil, Russell Brown, Marcel-
lus McPherson, Kevin J Keenan,
Dennis J Cesternino, Edward L
Thompson, Willie J Young, Rob-
ert Jacobsen, Frank Cammarata,
Alphonse M Giordano, Thomas
P Keller, James J Blasi, Anton
C Jaeger, Christ Priovolos.
No, 3221 — 80.0%
3221 James P McCurry, John
B Johnson, John D Hyman, Jos-
eph Patto, Michael R Norman,
Michael L Ragin, Pedro A Ri-
vera, Dennis L Blackman, Jerry
L Pulmore, Vincent L Wilds,
Hugh C Doherty, James L Al-
leyne, Sheila J Renaghan, John
W Darla, Dennis M Dingevan,
Leonard G Savino, Allan Zubo-
wiez, Louis R Carr, Anthony J
Deritta, Joseph G Gronas,
No. 3241 — 80.0%
3241 James R King, David A
Drew, John W Telepan, Wallace
R Zeins, Thomas J Wood, Kurt
Gols, Stanley M Hansen, John
B Martens, Michael C Hodgkiss,
Eugene E Frantino, Vincent W
Kostch, Leonard F Diana, Char-
les A Kranz, Daniel F Conway,
Joseph N Grauso, Edmund J Go-
lat Jr, Anthony P Mendez, Ger-
ald J Mallon, Anthony Smith,
John A Maguire.
No. 3261 — 80.0%
3261 Ronald M Gordon, Frank
P Maniscalco, Kevin J Mooney,
Robert M Ingulll, Charles M
Murphy Jr, Edward P Goodwin,
Clarence R Stevens, Robert L
Barringer, Kim A Benson, Doug-
las Deering, Michael Q Duffy,
Robrt Donofrio, James M Rein-
hold, Vincent M Guinta, Charles
J Scirbona, Henry M Heimsohn,
David A Martin, Roger S Zan-
ders, Michael J Clarke 3rd,
Brian F Barrett.
No, 3281 — 80.0%
3281 Emilio Velez, Prancisco
Osorio Jr, Ronnie L Williams,
Andrew W Egan Jr, Antonio
Colon, Errol) L Samuel, Edward
S Lewin, Michael J Sheehan,
Stephen J Giove, George M Guz-
man, Mario Rodriguez, Henry P
Kaufmann, Edward J Namias,
Joseph M Grant Jr, David Rol-
dan, Albert L Maldonado, Carlos
R Rodriguez, Michael T Lyons,
Samuel Badillo, Elmer Rodri-
guez,
No, 3301 — 80.0%
3301 Herbert A Beverly, Ben-
jamin A Vernon Dominic F
Bonomonte, Pedro J Velez, Alan
C Powell, James F Kiernan,
Robert Sepulveda, Ralph A Gon-
zalez, Brian P Wickes, Jeremiah
M Lyons Jr, Thomas G Minton,
Joseph Binenti, John J Butler
3rd, Eric M Laderwarg, Kevin F
Maloney, John D Curry, Charles
Trentacosta, Earl C Smith, Pat-
rick M Scire, Kenneth Alfred.
No, 3321 — Fe
3321 Lawrence L Small, Abra-
ham R Martinez, Marvin J Zeig-
Jer, Carl Gramieri, John G Kor-
atzanis, Joe E Praser, Joseph F
Sessa, Oscar E Soto, Elliott P
Glover, Nicholas J Gutterrez,
William J Nevarro, John A Per-
kins 2nd, George A Dipretoro,
Robert E Laskowski, John D
Clifford, Vincent L Dottin, Ken-
roy P Duncan, Agustin Quin-
ones, John R Tormey, Paul T
Kawas.
(Continued from Page 11)
HIGH SCHOOL
EQUIVALENCY
DIPLOMA
" 5 WEEK COURSE $75 §
[6 Prepare you to pass N.Y. Stare
HS EQUIVALENCY DIPLOMA
Feu In class of Home Study,
Master Charge accepted. FREE
BOOKLET " |
1 PL 7-0300 1
ROBERTS SCHOOLS
| S17 Went 57th Streer
New York, N.Y. 10019
ee
MIMEOS ADDRESSERS,
STENOTYPES
STENOGRAPH for sale
end rent, 1,000 others,
Low-Low Prices
ALL LANGUAGES
TYPEWRITER CO,,
119 W. 23 St, (W. of 6th Ave.)
WY, MY, CHelsea 3-6086
vumai-zeimv<a
vwazamooPr
SCHOOL DIRECTORY
MONROE INSTITUTE — IBM COURSES = “gmporvr ke xp
ink PREP, stent mae
TREO
ein aC Eg ANSE
eS) i
eee
119 EAST FORDHAM ROAD, DRONX - paar
Approved lar Vets and Poreign Students, Acered. NY, State Dept, of Pducation
E261 “ZL Punt ‘Aepsony, “YACVAT FOAMS TIAID
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, June 12, 1973
Transit Patrolman
(Continued on Page 12)
No. 3341 — 80.0%
3341 Stanley E Alston, Russell
Whitehurst, Stephen E Case,
Peter J Laveglia, Jewis H Taylor,
Willy A Sotomayor, Wesley J
Mullings, Frank Lovett Jr, Ben-
jamin Rios, Alan § Blake, Wel-
dor 8 Norflett, Michael R Difal-
co, Ronald T Ochal, Wayne L
Viviano, George S Forella, Tim-
othy F Ryan, Frank Purnart,
Martin P Greaney, Philip Gon-
valez, Kenneth J Kotsay.
No, 3361 — 80.0%
3361 Waverly Thompson Jr,
Joseph J Sgagliola, Vasos Sphi-
kas, Grantley A Hunte, William
E& Stewart, John Williams Jr,
Martin L Barthold, Herman
Evans, William A Keenan Jr,
Ronald M Alston, Bruce T Koot,
William J McCants, Jose M Na-
tal, Paul J Drysdale, Alfonso C
Farnell, Anthony R Johnson, Le-
varn Jones, Dennis A Downie,
John P Hoffman, Niger O Pena,
No, 3381 — 80.0%
3381 Peter A Guardino, Alfred
Carey George Jr, Raymond D
Burehette, Roy E Aceb, Melvin
L Stanley, John A Vonderlinn,
Wayne J Yezzo, James T Mur-
ray, Stanley P Gotlewski, Philip
R Rizzi, Ralph A Ascione, James
J Fitzmaurice, Robert T Smith,
Laurence © Brown, Stephen A
Minetelio.
No, 3421 — 80.0%
3421 Paul J Gambino, Richard
J Ghignone, Kevin Pendergast,
Justo Fernandez, Paul J Lewek,
Alvin S Kilpatrick, Paul F Casey,
John F Devlin Jr, Norman
REAL ESTATE VALUES
CAMBRIA HTS $29,990
OWNER RELOCATING
Sacrificing this Brk Tudor, all rms
on one fir, Cathedel ceils, fin bsmt,
war, patio, Many extras,
CAMBRIA HTS _ $34,
500
BEAUTIFUL BRICK CAPE
‘With all lge rms, gar, plus income
bso, apt. Nicest area. Close wo schls,
shops & subw bus,
QUEENS VILLG $39,990
LG 2-FAM COLONIAL
4,000 sq ft garden grounds with «
FS 2 se set he ta tee eal
beauty! Some see &
MANY OTHER | a 2 FAM HOMES
Queens Homes OL 8-7510
170-13 Hillside Ave, Jamaica
Property For Sale
Pocono Mts.
POCONO MT. LAKE ESTATES; beau:
tiful corner lot, $ min from Ige man:
faade lnhe, 2 beaches, mercies, bomiog,
fishing, buating area, ski
Shi lifts, $7.30000, Te, 9t4-949-5115,
STAPLETON (Staten Island)
Miautes co Ferry & Beidge
PARKHILL-FAIRVIEW APTS
Moderate Income Rental Elev Apa.
1 BEDROOM $155.54-$161.05,
2 BEDROOM $188.64-$190.96
180 Parkhill A:
Mon
Sod exit “icine das) £0
then t Sobel Court,” Proceed
blacks to ‘Parkhill Peags® Yu
from Ferry
+ AN miles vo. Vanderbils
i
afc 00.
Rirknill “Ave., “tight om
Parkhill w renting office.
Open Evenings
Farms, Country Homes
New York State
Soging Catalog, of Hundeeds of Real
ie Bargains.
sizes and prices, Dahl 3
shill NY,
For Sale - Hamilton County
INDIAN LAKE. Wooded, corer fot
Pye. tab ret, power, roads. S18-
793.2462. Or, write Ed 9
Woodlawn Ave,
12801,
Gleos Falls, N.Y.
CAMBRIA HEIGHTS
$41!
All brick ranch. 6 rooms, 2 baths,
finished basement apt. 40x100 land:
seaped grounds, ga heat, and many
extra, Take over mortgage, No
closing fees.
NR HILLSIDE AVENUE
30,!
WALK TO SUBWAY
Detached colonial with
in kitchen, living room, di
3 full sized bedrooms, 2
finished atcic with 2 extra bedrooms,
Oil heat. Low down payment can be
arranged for GI's and other buyers,
BUTTERLY & GREEN
168-25 Hillside Ave. JA 66300
Houses For Sale - Queens
LOW PRICED HOMES
We have many 2-3+& 4-Bedroom
Homes in all areas of Queens, They
are vacant and completely re-decor-
ated,
Very low cash ip weeded 60 own one
$19,000 to $35,000
Call for free information
without obi
Both olfices have the keys.
Bimston Realty Inc.
Jamaica Office Cambria Hes Office
NO AGENCY FEE 523-4594 723-8400
Your Golden H
Borie cele n° Florida
VENICE, FLA. —- INTERESTED?
FLORIDA LIVING
Live the life at prices you can
atford iad Mine Mob
ie Community. from
20 models with bong starting at
$7,950 Complete recreation program.
Write:
HIGHLAND VILLAGE, 275 WE. 48th St.
POMPANO BEACH, FLORIDA 33064
JOBS
FLORIDA = J08S? Federal, State,
County, City, FLORIDA CIVIL SERVICE
BULLETIN, ‘Suscription $3. year. 6
Iesues.
7.0, Box O46 |,
M. Miemi, Fle, 33161,
SEE H. N, WIMMERS, REALTOR
ZIP CODE 33595
SAVE ON
YOUR MOVE
TO FLORIDA
Compare our com per 4,00 Ibi to
Sc. Peterburg trom New York Ciry,
$504.40; Philadelphia, $477.20;
Albany, $542.80. For an estimate 10
any destination in Florida
Write
SOUTHERN TRANSFER
and STORAGE CO., INC.
Tel (813) 822-4241
N.C. BOX 10217
st perensivi 33733
Glover Jr, Ruben C Benites, les Moyles, Norman © Garrick.
Domenick Castiello, Raymond M No, 3501 — 18.8%
Carr, Israel Ponce, Michael A 3501 Edward V Wallace, John
John J Carmody, Ronald F
Vidal, Joseph Carella Jr, Thom-
as P Taylor, William J McNa-
mara, Johnnie H Worrell, Joseph
|, Daniel Salkey, Nicholas J
Pingitore, Tommylee T Mitchell,
Michael Shaughnessy, James C
Connell.
No, 3461 — 78.80%
3461 Andrew J O'Shaughnessy,
Calvin James, John T Tell, Ro-
bert Hunter, Rogelio Casuso,
Kenneth T Olsen, Mark N Willi-
ams, Joseph A Crusco, Christophe
Kelly, David J Addley, Luis A
Medina, John J Nagle, Mearl
Grant, Prancis E O'Brien, Milton
A Baulkman, Alfred J Viscardi
Jr, John N Hopson, Pasquale F
Pellegrino, Rocco § Lovorriere,
Paul A Clark.
No. 3481 — 78.8%
2481 Dennis M Ryan, Ro-
bert J Ryan, Thomas J Lagala,
Carl V Dimedio, Edson L Ford,
Robert V Dallesandro, William
J Larkin Jr, Charles Gantt, Lou-
is J Tassan, Joseph W Burke,
Glenn L Robinson, Joseph M
Giblin, Charles P Donaghey, Wil-
liam E Jutt, Jesse A Hopkins,
Richard A Mammano, Vincent
Simorelli, Wiliam Erdogan, Char-
"Help Wanted M/F
WANTED — REPRESENTATIVES
TO LEARN TRAVEL INDUSTRY —
no experinece necemary — Commis:
sion plus travel benefits — Full or
parttime ~~ Hous open — Call for
information between 2:00 P.M. and
9:00 P.M,
212 336 1000 or 516 872 3111
~ Help Wanted M/F
ATTENTION PARTY PLAN — Our
26th year. Highes. commissions,
Largest selection of toys & gifts! Over
350 bese-se) ems in a full-color
eaalog — No
collecting — No delivery! Deaters and
manager needed. Try us! Call collect
today! 1/673-3455, or write Santa's
Parties, ‘Avon, Conn, 06001. Also
Booking Parties
HELP WANTED M
SUPERVISORS, parctime, 4 to 8:30
Pm. Ability w haodte small group
im mail order fulfillment, Beneés,
Darby Drug Co. 420 Doughty Bivd.,
Inwood, N.Y. 11696,
HELP WANTED M/F
PART-TIME — DAYS — Service deor-
derizers on monthly route. gry
daytime hour, Permaneot good
Denelcs, Call $82-5749 or 382-5848,
RETIRED? ——~
Retiring within
year?
LIVE IN
Beverly Hille
ui
‘
/
VISIT OUR BEVERLY MODEL
(n Hicksville, Long Island
Cormer Old Country Rd
Jerusalem Av
Open 7 Days—10AM to 6PM
“Trips arranged for
‘walified buyers”
aarti
$14, 990
INCLUDES:
LANDSCAPED LOT
SEWERS and
CITY WATER
(212) 523-6160
(516) 938-4488
inic J Mussillo, Eddie L Davis,
Joseph H Huppert, Prederick
King.
No, 3641 — 78.8%
3541 Anthony P Sama, John
M Schaffer, Ricardo Victoria,
John J MoClellan, Albert L Hum-
phrey, Michael J Dombrowski,
John A Hoffmann, Robert Ecker,
Louis 8 Esposito, Barney L Con-
ner, Michael Defreitas, Peter J
Caso, Ricardo Chestnut, Der-
rick K Dottin, Abraham Portala-
City of
NEW YORK
— INTERESTING
OPPORTUNITIES —
Fer Men and Women
EXCELLENT BENEFITS: Vacation
lidays; Health insur; Pension, ete.
Ast, Air Polut Cootol Engr $12,700
Amt, Civil Engr, 12,700
Civil Enge & CE. (Hwy Trfc)
Hearing Reporier
Je. Civil Engr.
Psychologist
Shorthand Reporter
Sr. Shorthand Reporter
Steno (Grand Jury)
Therapists (Occ. & Phys.)
Vecerinarian
Ray Technician
APPLY NOW TO JUNE 26, 1
Admin Bus. Prom Coord. $19,
Asst. Microbioiogist
Asst. Musical Supve,
Asoc, Medical Examiner
Chem. Biol & Radiol. Offer
Oil, Bro}. frees. Spec. 19,585: 36620
$12,531 or 12383
Se. Planner
Sr. Pub, Hitch Physician
Supre. Computer Oper
All jobs req. ed. exp, or skill
Mail applic. requests must be
pommarked by June 19, 1973,
Civil Service Tests Required —
CONTACT;
Ms. Conlen
we bad of Personnel
mas St, NYC
aia’ see aned or 566.0389
An Equal Oppty Employer M/F
Charles J Meyer, Bruce W Cox,
Sheldon Morton, John M Olejar,
Peter P Defeo, Michael G Jor-
dan, Ruthven H Granger, Rich-
ard 8 Miracolo, Thomas J Walsh,
Robert C Dehaven, Kenneth K
O'Connor, Michael O'Brien, Larry
W Monteleone, Robert J Lyons,
Marezyk, John P Gleason.
No, 3601 — 78.8%
3601 Thomas E Kiapak, James
W Donohue, Kenneth J Miller,
Vincent J Kelly Jr, Lee N Gross,
Anthony Wright, Lloyd B Mill-
er 2nd, Kevin T Walsh, Walter
E Gels, James L Spollen, Henry A
Brucale, Timothy C Harness, Ric-
hard X Mickol, Kevin J Mc-
Enery, Charles G Manton Jr, Wil-
Ham K Thompson, John J De-~
laney Jr, Robert P O'Neill, Felix
A Vasquez, Wiliam P Baeder 3d.
No, 3621 — 718.8%
3621 Donald L Schwartz, John
R Bogart, Marion E Papka, Ed-
ward J Shann, Nick K Scalzo,
Brian C Mador, Daniel L Bar-
baro, Richard J Sackmannn, Wil-
Ham F Martin Jr, Richard J Mc-
Donough, Kenneth M Lynch,
Henry A Botta, Fern Cohen, John
K Mahony Jr, Steven C Ron-
zino, Quentillas Lee, Joseph C
Winter, Lawrence J Newman,
Michael E Noonan, Wiliam B
Bafta,
No 3641 — 78.8%
3641 Curtis E Moore Jr, Char-
les T Hagan, Ronald A Yates, Or-
lando Tosado, Johnnie A Jones,
Paul F Gibson, Robert L Pusk-
as, Raymond E Washington, Avon
'T Morgan Jr, Michael J Mikulus,
Prancis T Corbett, Clifford C Al-
len Delores J Caul, Joseph W
Guidice, Don McGough, Paul
F Johnson, Lawrence W Chirich-
igno, Louis P Torrellas, Edgar
Lozado, Steven J Dawkins,
No, 3662 — 718.8%
3661 Jeff V Shaw, Nicholas A
Sanguedolee, Charles R Brock-
stedt, James P Henry, Robert
F Bell, Jeffrey W Rogers, John
V Tona, Jorge L Roman, Joseph
Amadeo, Michael A Cottillo, Ro-
bert D Wannagot, Dennis R Gib-
son, Charles J Caruso, Richard J
Folkes, Richard M Timmes, Ro-
bert P Lubrano, Richard H Beier,
James T Cullen, Jacob Sexton,
Glenn I Gray.
(Continued on Page 13)
962 Third Avenue (Between 57th and 58th Streets)
Special Exhibit—June 10-Julv 8
The 35 Great Cultures of Africa
Open 10: 30-6; Thurs.10:30t09; Sun, 1-6,
Closed Fridays
Admission Free
Transit Patrolman
(Continued from Page 12)
No, 3681 — 78.8%
3681 Robert J Hansen, Robert
J Kennedy, Francis X Reilly, Wil-
liam J Kestler, Joseph Sweeney,
Robert G Carruthers, Gloria J
Sanders, Robert A McGlynn,
Brian P Cavanagh, Angelo V
Esposito, Gerard T Foley, Frank
L Savino Jr, Anthony P San-
sone, Henry P Doll, Kenneth E
Walters, Thomas J Wingrove,
George E Robinson, Thomas R
Shemanski, Edward J Ronan,
John C Czelusniak.
No, 3701 — 78.8%
3701 John P Lorenz, Ronald
J Thomas, Dennis M Walsh, Tim-
othy M Pusco, Anthony V Beal,
Harold E Donnelly, David J Hoff-
man, Dennis M Massa, Margaret
V Cordes, Frederick R Jensen,
James W Six, Michael J Mezza-
dri, Dennis M Tardio, James E
Strype, John V Caldararo, Peter
M Reimann, Dean R Holtermann,
John M Sonnick, Paul M Rot-
kowiltz, Peter R Benevento,
No, 3721 — 78.8%
3721 Robert M Gustus, Louis
N Garguilo, Anthony J Ragusa,
John R Gibson, Richard R Wil-
ams, Robert 8 Paccione, Wil-
Mams, Robert 8 Saccione, Wiliam
G Keating, Franklin Rivera, Sam-
uel H Weddington, Raymond A
Santiago, Richard P Evans, Jose
L Vicente Jr, Julio C Morales,
Lawrence K Greenberg, Michael
L Fusilli, Daniel M Purcell, Ped-
ro Morales, Gabriel Rivera, Zelig
Wexler, Joseph D Mouzon.
No. 3741 — 78.8%
3741 Paul V Healy, Ricard T
Washington, Paul D Courtien,
Anthony J Cangemi, Louis A
Caggiano, Nicholas C Palmer,
Prederick Massimino, Joseph T
Crat, George L Torres, Pred
Holmes Jr, John L Washburn,
Patrick L Donaghy, Carlo F Fan-
elli, Peter L Harris, Stephen J
Butler, Angelo Lopez, Carlos Pan-
eite Jr, William A Moore Jr, Har~
old R Pickel, Francis E Renaud.
No. 3761 — 78.8%
3761 Larry Ballou, Jose A
Melendez, Rene Olmeda Jr, Ed-
win E Colon, Cipriano Iiliano, Jo-
seph J Municel, Thomas A Fer-
rara Jr, Thomas W Walemk,
Herman Gary, Glen A Sylvester,
William J Murray, Harry Mal-
donado, Angel L Roldan, Stan-
ley A Swigonski, Emory R Blake,
Gary C Parsons, Michael F John-
son, James G Baker, Anthony R
Dicesare, Peter N Kontzamanis,
No. 3781 — 78.8%
3781 Stanley J Tyburski, John
H Robinson, Richard R Dilauro,
William F Tucker, Alexander Os-
tasvewski, Raul F Mangual, Ro-
bert B McRae Jr, Michael Car-
dillo, Johnny Moore, Peter W
Nickolich, Boyd L Grant, Bar-
tholome Meduri, Abraham Mar-
quez, Thomas A Barnes, Rondal
Little, Richard S Williams, An-
drew Cumming, Sabastion Batta~
glia, Carlos E Figueroa, Martin G
Oreilly Jr.
No. 3801 — 78.8%
3801 Richard K Elzentier, Har-
old E Boyd, Paul § O'Connor, Pet-
er Colletta, Luther G Goode,
James Obleanis Jr, Edward D
O'Connor, John J Neas, Joseph
A McIntyre, William M Spooner,
Jerry Bradley, Robert J Doane,
William 8 Bleck 3rd, Howard T
Hoffmann Jr, Warren C Smith,
John F Schaeffer, John W Zeeb,
Pablo R Ruiz, Joseph 5S Ferraro,
Joseph D Patrissi,
No, 3821 —~ 16.6%
3821 Theodore Rahancotis,
Mark C Dease, David G Dorval,
Leonard J Balistreri, Paul J Col-
berg, George A McMonigle, Dom.
enick Campisi, Joseph Apicella
dr, Victor A Troll, Virgilio Matoa
Arthur M Rivers, Kevin L Laf-
geas, Melvin, Padilla, Bert Kizer
Jr, Pedro Padilla Jr, Marcos C
Marquez, Donald R Braunstein,
Patrick A McAuley, Kenneth R
Rowsom, Frederick Schad, John
M Meehan, Thomas Kehoe, Al-
bert Santiago, Lothel Crawford
Jr, James E McConner, Thomas
J Roe, Robert J O'Donohue,
Thomas H Farina Jr.
(To Be Continued)
Assignments
Are Made In
14 Disputes
ALBANY — The New York
State Public Employment
Relations Board has assign-
ed eight mediators and five
fact-finders to various disputes
involving the Civil Service Em-
ployees Assn.
The following were appoint-
ed mediators: William Duggan,
of PERB's New York City office,
to the dispute between Syosset
Schools and CSEA and to the dis-
pute between the Village of
Woodridge and CSEA; Eric W.
Lawson, Jr, of PERB's Albany
office, to the dispute between
Greenwich Central School District
and CSEA; Professor Herbert
Van Schaack, of Oswego, to the
dispute between Thousand Island
School District and CSEA; Theo-
dore Gerber, of PERB's Albany
office, to the disputes between
Beekmantown Central School
District and CSEA; Henry T.
Homery, Guilderland, to the dis-
pute between Averill Park School
District and CSEA; Benjamin
FP, Westervelt, of PERB's New
York City office, to the dispute
between Mount Vernon School
District and CSEA; Nathan Coh-
en, of PERB's New York City
office, to the dispute between
Buffalo office, to the dispute be-
tween Lewiston/Porter Board of
Education and CSEA,
The following were appointed
fact-finders: Paul G. Kell, Gut-
tenberg, N.J., to the dispute be-
tween Warwick Central School
District #1 and CSEA; Josef P.
Sirefman, New York City, to
the dispute between Patchogue-
Medford School District and CS-
EA; Dr. D. Kline Hable, Syra-
cuse, to the dispute between
Auburn City School District and
CSEA; William Roth, New York
City, to the dispute between Arl-
ington Central School and CSEA,
and Alice Grant, Cornell Univer-
sity, to the dispute between Cort-
lJand-Madison Board of Cooper-
ative Educational Services and
CSEA.
Suffolk To Hold
Lifeguard Exams
Another pool and still water
lifeguard examination will be
given by the Suffolk County Civil
Service Commission June 19 at
7 pm. at the Connetquot High
School pool, Sycamore Avenue,
Bohemia. In addition, the first
ocean lifeguard performance ex-
amination of the season will be
held on June 23 at 10:30 p.m. at
Smith Point Park, Shirley, Can-
didates for both exams must be
at least 16 years old. A birth
or baptismal certificate for proof
of age and a fully completed ap-
plication form must be present-
ed at the time of application.
The Ufeguard salary rate for
Suffolk County is $3.35 per hour
for ocean and $3.05 per hour for
still water, although each indivi-
dual town has the right to estab-
‘lish its own salary level
For further information, con-
tact the Suffolk County Civil Ser-
vice Dept., County Center, River-
head, New York.
Send for
Civil Service Activities Association
96 Page Book. Europe &
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BS Rome, London
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‘Vegas/San Francisco $278
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Pete none,
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San Francisco, Hawa, Gs veyan
Gah, Maui, Hawaii, Kona $574
Mexico, Taxco, Acapulco
THREE WEEKS:
Peas, Macoecs. Portugal
waar
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Wtay, Wnterdom Londen $728
London, Paris, Brussels, Amsterdam $559
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CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, June 12, 1973
Senator Pisani To Address
Southern Conf Workshop
State Sen. Joseph R, Pisani will be the guest speaker
at a Workshop being sponsored by ‘the Southern Region
CSEA, June 17-19, 1973. Senator Pisani’s informative talk
scheduled for 9:30 a.m. to 10;30 a.m. Tuesday, June 19, 1973
will be on, “Political action with
emphasis on how to influence
the Legislator.”
Other items on the Workshop's
Agenda include the following:
© 10 am.-11:30 am. “How to
run a successful Union Meet-
ing.” Sponsored by Cornell
University, with Katherine
Schrier and William A. Toom-
ey Jr., moderating.
© 10:45 a.m.-12:45 a.m—"Legal
action through CSEA." Re-
gional Attorney Stanley Mail-
man, speaker,
* 2:30 p.m.-3:30 pm.—"Re-
structuring Highlights." Vic
Costa, Second Vice President,
Joseph Aiello
Is Reelected
By Kings Park
KINGS PARK — Joseph
Alello has been re-elected to
a two-year term as president
of the Kings Park State Hos-
pital chapter of the Civil Ser-
vice Employees Assn.
Other victors in the recent
election were: Thomas White,
first vice-president; John Cor-
rigan, second vice-president, Op-
erational unit; Martin Benjes,
second vice-president, Adminis-
trative unit; Ruth Giugiianott!,
second vice-president, Profes-
sional unit; Herbert Haubeil,
second vice-president, Institu-
tional unit; Gwen Colquhoun,
treasurer; Linda Schwarz, re-
cording secretary.
Also elected in the recent elec-
ton were: sergeant-at-arms,
Vincent Pucci; delegates: Bar-
ney Pendola and Florence Mur-
phy; board of directors: Michael
Schinn, Gregory Ssurnicki, Rab-
bi Hyman Wachtfogel; James
Jewell; Walter Boaro, Margaret
P. Osmer and Jean Tyrell
Officials Blamed
(Continued from Page 1)
itles to determine why so few
attendants were with more than
80 patients. Wenal’s reports from
union officials in Central Islip
cited the situation as “one which
was common” and said that “the
periods when understaffing Is
most prevalent are when pa-
tlents are being fed."
‘The incident occurred when
Cavaluzzi tried to break up an
argument between two patients.
One patient knocked Cavaluzzi
down and threw a chair at him
He was taken to the hospital in
critical condition and died the
following day.
Joe Keppler, CSEA president
at the hospital has scheduled a
meeting to discuss with his
membership staffing problems
pointed up by the incident. He
was quoted as being concerned
about the reaction of Central Is-
lip personnel to the death of one
of thelr fellow employees,
Keppler said, “I'm particularly
worried about the occurrence of
incidents like this in the future.
Our people know that this situa-
Hon exists all the time. They are
afraid that the administration
will continue to overlook the
problem and allow it to continue
unchanged,”
CSEA, Speaker,
© 3:45 p.m.-5 p.m.—Edueation-
al Services Avatiable for Cor-
nell," Moderators: Katherine
Schrier, William A. Toomey,
Jr., and Girard DeMarchi,
In addition to Senator Pisani's
talk on Tuesday, June 19, there
is also scheduled a closed meet-
ing to discuss the Southern Re-
tion’s Nominating Committee's
Report, From 10:45 am. to 12
noon of the same day, Mary
Blair of the CSEA staff will lead
a discussion on, “Pensions.”
Nick Puzzferri, Southern Re-
gion CSEA President, and John
Haack, Westchester chapter
president, who have been plan-
ning the workshop’s program,
stated that a banquet will be
held on Monday evening pre-
ceded by a cocktail hour at 6:30
pm. Reservations may be ob-
tained by writing to Grossingers,
Liberty, New York 12734.
Chatham Impasse
CHATHAM—The Civil Service
Employees Assn., representing
non-teaching employees of the
Chatham Central School District
has declared an impasse in con-
tract negotiations with the
School District, and has formally
requested that the Public Em-
ployment Relations Board ap-
point a mediator to assist in re-
solving the dispute.
Negotiations were broken off
because of “an inability to reach
an agreement on major econo-
mic and non-economic issues."
A spokesman for CSEA said,
“It became clear early in nego-
tintions that the Chatham Cen-
tral School District Board of
Education intends to provoke a
repeat of last year’s unfortunate
outcome of their failure to bar-
gain in good faith with an em-
ployee group. CSEA has no in-
tention of allowing an irrespon-
sible, arrogant Schoo] Board,
which has demonstrated an anti-
union, anti-employee attitude,
to force a completely unsatisfac-
tory package down the employ-
ees’ throats,
“The Board has a unique and
patronizing concept of ‘volun-
tary servitude’ that CSEA will
not tolerate,” the CSEA spokes-
man said. “They have indicated
that they have established a
higher value of the concrete and
steel of thelr new building than
they place on their employees
and their students who are ex-
posed to these hypocritical
values.”
Theodore Cerber, a mediator
with the Public Employment Re-
lations Board has been assigned
to this dispute and will be meet~
ing with both sides shortly.
Nominating Comm.
Formed By Metro
At the May 31 meeting of the
nominating committee of the
Metropolitan New York Region
of the Civil Service Employees
Assn, Leonard Kapelman was
elected committee chairman.
Other members present were
Martin Geraghty, John Eversiey,
Charles Perry, Pelton King, John
LoMonaco, Alex Martines and
Arthur Lakrits,
During the meeting, ground
CSEA Needs Both
Employee Relations,
Personnel Officer
ALBANY — Applications are
now being accepted for the posi-
tion of employee relations and
personnel officer at the Civil
Service Employees Assn, head-
quarters in Albany, according to
Joseph D. Lochner, executive di-
rector of the Association. The
anticipated starting salary is
$16,520.
Minimum qualifications for
the position are
© Graduation from a recog-
nized four year college or uni-
versity with a bachelor's degree.
© Pive years of responsible ex-
perience in labor relations or
personne! supervision, Three
years of this experience must
have been in a position involving
responsibility for, and an active
participation in, the conduct of
negotiations between Iabor and
management.
The employee relations and
personne! officer will be in
charge of and directly respon-
sible for the employee relations
and personnel transactions of
the Association, in accordance
with policy set forth by manage-
ment and the Board of Directors
and in accordance with contrac-
tual agreements between the As-
sociation and authorized em-
ployee organizations.
Persons interested in applying
for this position should send a
standard form resume to Joseph
D. Lochner, executive director,
the Civil Service Employees
Assn., Inc., 33 Elk Street, Albany,
New York 12207, by June 22,
1973.
Probation Unit
Names Gillman
SYRACUSE — Dayid J. Gill-
man has been elected president
of the probation unit of the
Onondaga chapter, Civil Service
Employees Assn. He is a counselor
at Hillbrook Detention Home.
Also elected were James Glay-
in, vice-president; Plorence Car-
lone, secretary and Mary Ann
Carden, treasurer,
According to Andrew H, Placi-
to, president of the Onondaga
chapter, the probation unit rep-
resents all county probation de-
partments including the support
bureau, enforcement and Hill-
brook Detention Home.
Placito said, “It is gratifying
to note that last fall, after a de-
certification petition by AFSCME
New York Council 66 APL-CIO,
the Public Employment Relations
Board determined that the orl-
ginal unit of probation officers
should continue to be part of
the Onondaga chapter, CSEA —
that a community of Interest
does exist and there ts not suf-
ficient evidence to warrant frag-
mentation,
"The new officers are to be
congratulated for taking up the
challenge of ‘pulling the unit to-
wether,” Placito concluded,
rules were set up for officer
eligibility. Any member who has
been in CSEA for at least two
years, as of Jan. t, 1973, ts eligi-
ble to run.
Nominations are being accept-
ed for the following regional of-
ices: president, three vice-prest-
dents, secretary and treasurer,
All nominations must be sub-
mitted by June 13 to the New
York Region Nominating Com-
mittee, OBEA, Rm, 1106, 11 Park
Place, New York City 10007,
Rome's ‘Hammond’ Prize
Winners Get Scholarship
Award,”
given in memory of the late Dr.
Jack Hammond, former direc-
tor of Rome State School.
Sandra A, Rutkowski, 19, of
Whitesboro, and Frederick J.
Sandefer, 20, of Verona, were
presented with a $250 scholar-
ship on May 23 at Dibble’s Inn,
Verona, at the annual dinner
of the CSEA Fort Stanwix chap-
ter by Mrs. Jack Hammond,
widow of the former RSS direc-
tor, Both winners are the chil-
dren of RSS employees,
Eligibility was granted to any
female and male child of an em-
ployee member of the local chap-
ter. Applicants, either seniors or
graduates of high school, submit-
ted a 250-word essay stating
thelr intention of study and
career goals, The scholarship
covers training in recognized
trade and technical schools, as
well as college.
Roswell Park Chapter
Names Directors
BUFFALO — Nine of 15 can-
didates were recently elected to
the Board of Directors of the 1,-
200-member Roswell Park Mem-
orial Institute chapter of the
Civil Service Employees Assn.
Elected to two-year terms were;
Ann Pulvyino, Barbara Reese, So-
phie Doerr, Norman Durawa,
Dayid Graham, John Adamski.
Elizabeth Watts, Michael Palen-
ski and Charles Himmelsbach.
VESTAL — The non-teaching
employees unit of the Vestal Cen-
tral School District unit, Civil
Service Employees Assn. has
elected Peter Sejan as its new
president.
Sejan ts a member of the dis-
trict’s buildings and grounds
staff.
Other new unit officers in-
clude Carl Bogart, vice-presi-
dent; Angie Ford, secretary;
Clarice Baumlin, recording sec-
retary, and Claude Griffiths, trea-
surer,
‘The following promotional
exam is open to qualified em-
ployees of the Dept. of Trans-
portation:
Motor Equipment Manager,
Exam 35-289 (G-23)—one va-
cancy in Hornell, more are ex-
pected, Open to candidates who
have served one year of com-
Petitive service as motor equip-
ment maintenance supervisor
(G-19) in the Dept. of Transpor-
tation. Applications due June 4,
followed by oral testing to be
conducted during July or Aug-
ust.
Wins Grievance
CATSKILL — A grievance re-
lating to payment for out-of-
ttle work was recently sustained
by the Catskill Central School
District Board of Education in a
grievance filed by Theodore
Walsh, Civil Service Employees
Assn. unit president, on behalf
of Elaine Beck, a clerical em-
ployee of the District
‘The decision awards Ms, Beck
back pay for the time she was
working at the higher title and
establishes “an important prece-
dent in the administration of
the CSEA-Schoo! District agree-
ment,” according to a spokesman
for CSEA,
Fee Battle
Monroe Wins
(Continued from Page 1)
Koenig said the decision by
Markowitz, a Lemoyne College
arbitrator, upholds the CSEA’s
argument that in situations
where employees previously en-
joyed free parking, the county
cannot unilaterally impose any
fees without first negotiating the
matter with the CSEA.
He said that the Legislature's
resolution would have to be
amended to exempt CSEA-rep-
resented employees from paying
“any parking fees whatsoever.”
‘The decision, Koenig said, re-
quires the county to renegotiate
its contract with a private park-
ing corporation, to exclude em-
ployees represented by the CSEA
Precedent Setting
He said this ts the first deci-
sion ever rendered in Monroe
County in a final, binding ar-
bitration case
“Furthermore,” he said, “the
Monroe County chapter was the
only labor organization which
has effectively filed both an un-
{alr Iabor practice complaint and
submitted the facts to an inde-
pendent arbitrator in this mat-
ter.”
Koenig told employees to defy
{ng decisions on two other cases
which have gone to arbitration.
One involves the taking of
personal leave, County Manager
Lucien A. Morin ordered em-
ployees to submit a reason with
their request for leave and
claimed that if the reason were
not good enough, department
heads could deny the request,
Koenig told employees to defy
Morin's order and take the leave
whether the department head
approves or not, because the
contract mentions no such re-
quirement.
“Having to give a reason is an
invasion of privacy,” he said.
Also awaiting an arbitration
decision is the County's attempt
to change conditions under
which employees are to recelve
increments.
Koenig says Morin planned to
award a passing grade for pay-
ment of increments “only to
those who perform significantly
better than the other employees
in the department.”
Tnstead of a 50 percent rating,
the County Manager would
change the required rating to 75
percent.
Keppler Again Heads
Central Islip Chapter
CENTRAL ISLIP — Joseph
Keppler will be reinstalled June
9 as president of the Central
Islip State Hospital chapter of
the Civil Service Employees Assn,
Other officers re-elected last
month were Steve Crandall, first
vice-president; Douglas Dixon,
Jr., second vice-president; Eileen
Gorski, recording secretary, and
Shirley Dixon, corresponding see-
retary, In addition, Virginia Beye!
won election as treasurer,
‘The installation will take place
at a dinner-dance at 8 pm. in
the hospital's Robbins Hall.
Hanson Nominated
ALBANY — The Governor has
nominated William E, Hanson,
of Stafford, as an unsalaried
member of the Rochester-Gen-
esee Regional Tax Transporta-
ton Authority for a term ending
July 31, 1975,
' ‘
CORRECTION SERGEANT (MALE)
344
‘EXAM
i) ‘Test Held Oct. 14, 1972
‘List Es. Marctr 15, 1973
(Continued From Last Week)
495 AMER
WHERE TO APPLY
JOBS
FOR PUBLIC
NEW YORK CITY — Persons
seeking jobs with the City
should file at the Department of
Personnel, 49 Thomas St. New
York 10013, open weekdays be-
tween 9 a.m. and 5
hours for Thursdays
a.m, to 5:30 pm.
‘Those requesting applications
by mail must include a stamped,
self-addressed envelope, to be
received by the Department at
Jeast five days before the dead-
line. Announcements are avail-
able only during the filing period,
By subway, applicants can
reach the filing office via the
IND (Chambers St,); BMT (City
Hail); Lexington IRT (Brooklyn
Bridge). For advance informa-
Hon on titles, call 566-8700.
Several City agencies do their
own recruiting and hiring. They
include: Board of Education
(teachers only), 65 Court 8t,,
Brooklyn 11201, phone: §96-
8060; NYC Transit Authority,
370 Jay St, Brooklyn 11201
phone: 652-5000
The Board of Higher Educa-
tion advises teaching staff ap-
plicants to contact the individ-
ual schools: non-faculty jobs are
filled through the Personnel De-
partment directly.
STATE — Regional offices of
the Department of Civil Serv-
ice are located at: 1350 Ave. of
Americas, New York 10019;
‘phone: 765-9790 or 765-9791);
State Office Campus, Albany,
12226; Suite 750, 1 W, Genessee
St, Buffalo 14202, Applicants
may obtain announcements
either in person or by sending
a stamped, self-addressed envel-
ope with their request.
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 their offices at 111
Eighth Ave,, New York, phone;
620-7000,
FEDERAL—The U.S. Civil
Service Commission, New York
Region, runs a Job Information
Center at 26 Federal Plaza, New
York 10007, Its hours are 8:30
am. to 5 p.m, weekdays only,
Telephone 264-0422.
Federal entrants living upstate
(North of Dutchess County)
should contact the Syracuse Area
Office, 301 Erie Blvd, West,
Syracuse 13202, Toll-free calls
may be made to (800) 522-7407,
Federal titles have no deadline
“niless otherwise indicated
‘
Test Held Oct. 14, 1972
Lise Est. April 1
1973
34920
Test Held Oct. 14, 1972
ORS ee
2eezeaeesse
PUSCSPaG Sos sae aol cen ae.
SHIGE SBEE
38 DeFlumee $ Athens 765
39 Sohocki J Schenecuady |... ..76-4
40 Liberis J Amserdem 76.3
4 Schenectady
Srala C Albany ..
46 Lemon T Delmar .
47 Fageet F Scotia
48 Doherty T Cohoes --
49 Rockenswyre D Albany
T
34 Zero K Troy «..-.-
ae
iu Pte
oT Loe we ek
SR RETIREMENT BENEFITS EXMR
EXAM 34923
Test Held Oct. 14, 1972
List Est. March 30, 1973
NRIARE
Maven
paras eroent aid
e
34995
Nov, 12, 1972
March 30, 1973
RETIREMENT BENEFITS EXMR
EXAM 4922
‘Tex Held Oct. 14, 1972
Lise Ex. March 30,
1978
Tew Held Oct. 14, 1972
List Ex. March 30, 1973
Smith E Mckowaville
Anderson Albany
Clenaban M Albany
Semvaveen=
ow
g
%
=
Ea
Sweet S Al
Mosca DE Greenbush
Criseione A Albany
Gascik H Albany
PAROLE AREA DIRECTOR
EXAM 35-092
‘Tese Held March, 1973
List Est. April 11, 1973
1 Hagan M Bkiye 94.0
2 Cashel W_ Levittown 93.0
5 Hallinan Ro Scarsdale 91.0
4 Bord M Jackson Hes 92.3
5 Kaiser R’ Poughkeepsie 86.0
6 Woods N Schenectady 835
7 Dalshelon $ Hewlert 126
8 Feldman H Bayside 780
9 Yelich $ Detmar 76.0
10 Greenspan I Whitestone 740
Hi Rothman H Bkipn 732
Lise Est. April 5," 1
1 Piper J Buffalo 151
PRIN ENGR ASST
EXAM 5:
‘Tese Held Occ.
List Ex. April
1 Kane G Buffalo 96.7
2 Manly P Clarence 93.6
3 Pitirri J Buffalo 911
4 Knab G Boffalo 89.6
5 Ronas © Buffalo 87.6
6 Krauza F Buffalo 813
7 Ignatwwiki G Cheektowaga... 0.3
& Dalconro F Lancaster 77.6
9 Krause G Bulfalo 753
10 Wood D Buffalo 738
11 Koszuta D Depew 727
12 Veiders R Cheektowaga m3
SR ACCINT
EXAM 51143
Tex Held Nov. 11, 1972
Lise Ese. April 5," 1973
1 Redlo B Buffalo 85.0
2 Piduch © Lackawanas 841
5 Meyer B Buflalo 83.5
4 Gry E Buffalo 98
43. Gouchie G Kenmore 79.4
6 Potter M Buffalo 71
7 McGuire N Buffalo 39
8 Kraus G Baffalo 73.5
9 Maze V_ Buffalo 723
10 Bowser H_ Buffalo 716
11 Ramaden W Buffalo 703
PRIN ENGR ASST
EXAM $1137
‘Test Held Oc. 14, 1972
List Est. April $, 1973
| Smith G Williamsville 75.0
SUPVR OF DETENTN FACILITS
EXAM 31185
Tes Held Nov, 11, 1972
List Ket. April 3, 1973
1 Wilson J Amherst
2 Scott A Eggertsville
3 Horwood K Farnham
SUPVG FOOD INSPECTOR
EXAM 34985
‘Tess Held Dec. 9, 1972
List Ex, Mach 30, 1973
1 Hubbard EB Ballwom Lk #24
2 Waker W E Concord 2.1
3 Creedon A Castleton 80.6
4 Wagner G Has Berne 16.6
4 Albee J. Freeport 16.2
6 Verity W Bas m4
7 Wollman H Whitney Pos m0
SR SANITARY CHEMIST
EXAM 34998
‘Tew Held Nov, 11, 1972
Lise Hac, March 30, 1975
1 Leikhim E Albay .,
RESEARCH SERIES G-18
EXAM 34970
‘opr!
10N A
‘Ten Held Dec. 9, 1972
Lise Ex. March 30, 1973
1 Schaffer © Bktym a2
2 Weinbers fed is
3 Appel A
4 Naeger J Skiya 196
5 Heading K Caldwel NJ 72
hy a
& Anderson § Albany m1
2 Brewner m3
t
Hit
|
i
P Schenectad)
15 Schmit J Albany
Latest State And County Eligible Lists
Battwon Le ve TOS
Foglish Schencemdy 703
Lecheler 702
19 Baciewier B Watervlies 70.2
20 Wassel C Amtterdam 2
RESEARCH SERIES G-18
EXAM 34970
OPTION B
1 Kaide F Albany 84.2
2 Rose No Troy 82.0
3} Hyland E_ Renssetecr 78.2
4 Woodfin € Buffalo . 16.6
3 Herman A NYC 76.2
6 Bentley R Troy 76.0
GA Petersen K Schenectady 734
7 Boyce R Albeoy 154
8 Hilton J Guildertand 75.2
9 Collins D Schenectady 49
10 Hewitt W Guilderland 74.7
10A Donnelly W Albany 747
25 Nupotitano M Deer Pk
SR REAL ESTATE APPRAISER
Exam 34566
‘Tese Held Dec, 9, 1972
Lise Ex. May 10, 1973.
} Yandon T Lake Placid ....,.90.3
2 Fouer A Se James . B87
3 Young J Cherry Creek B84
4 Rieiell F Albany ..... 86.9
$ Ziokoviez R Carle Pi + 68.2
6 Fiyon T Black River red
7 Winters DN Bangor 5
8 J Albany... 83.5
9 Brennan $ W Carthage 34
10 Samuels $ Pittsford 3
11 Plact R_ Elbridge 82.0
12 Chwazik R New Hartford 8
13 Ringgard J Fairpore sL8
“ T Falls 80.9
15 Stewart J Fayetteville
33:
16 Childs G Albany .. 795
17 McGranaghan H Allegany 79.3
18 Boarwrighc J Binghamton 79.3
19 J Albany 783
Martin R Albany 78.9
Eckert A 770
Leonard C Newburgh 77.0
‘Tasker RK Manlius 169
Lynne J Liverpoo! 769
Brown A Syracuse 169
‘Wright L Franktinvil 16.7
Hilbert R_Hileon 16.6
Reddick G Marcellus 165
Haber G Spring Vat
Kleinman G Castleton
Ticknor R Lisle
MacDonald G Ptessaatvil
Harris A Sherburne
Chrisman G Guil
Civil Servant Conducts
Jewish Holiday Service
Abraham Lieberman, senior
administrative assistant with the
Workmen's Compensation Board,
presided over the Yiskor services
held last week in the World
‘Trade Center.
Celebrating the Shevuoth holi-
day in remembrance of the dead,
Lieberman conducts the services
every year for civil service em-
ployees only.
“It was very moving,” said one
woman who attended, “and I
think everyone should know
about it,”
Fingerprint Technician
The city Dept, of Personnel
reports that 65 of the 75. candi-
dates who applied for fingerprint
technician, open competitive
exam 2248, were found not
qualified.
BAVARIAN MANOR
“Famous for German
American Food & Fun”
Home of the
German Alps Festival
AUG 17 to AUG 26
DELUXE RESORT HOTEL
110 ACRES of RECREATION
COLORFUL BROCHURE
WITH RATES & SAMPLE MENU
Dial 518-622-3261
‘anna Bever—Hosts
NY. Zip 12470
Newhouse J Gitbertsvil
Hess R Highland Fis
Bisnetr R_Voorheervil
Hannon J Fishkill
Seutlert R Averill Pk
Ward R Manlius
Robers C Theresa
Warner A Port Crane
Duadey D Greene
Heller B Swan Lake
faresdale 10
McGuickian D Edison NJ 10.
Conelyou J
SEBESERS
Ro Waterv!
Howe B Latham
Riot
Paddick D Endwell
12 White RK Utica
13 McCann J Syracuse
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A FAVORITE FOR OVER 30
YEARS WITH STATE TRA’
SPECIAL RATES FOR
N.Y.S. EMPLOYEES
BANQUET FACILITIES AVARLABLE
Call Albany HE 4-6111
THOMAS H, GORMAN, Gea. Mgr.
HOTEL
Wellington
DRIVE-IN GARAGE
AIR CONDITIONING + TY
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problems at
Albany's
136 STATE STR
OPPOSITE STATE CAPITOL
$00 pour Irivadly travel agent.
SPECIAL WEEKLY RATES
FOR EXTENDED STAYS
ALBANY
BRANCH OFFICE
FOR INFORMATION regarding adver-
Heement. Please write or cally
JOSEPH T. BELLEW
303 SO, MAMNING BLYD.
ALBANY 8.1.7, Phone IV 25474
ARCO
CIVIL SERIVE BOOKS
and all tests
PLAZA BOOK SHOP
380 Broadway
Albany, N.Y.
Mail & Phone Orders Filled
st
SL6L ‘SE Unf “Aepsony “YAGVAT JOAYNAS TALD
1
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, June 12, 1973
y
MOTOR
VEHICLE INSTALLATION —
At installation of officers for Motor Vehicles chapter of
Civil Service Employees Assn. earlier this month, install-
ing officer CSEA president Theodore C, Wenzl, center,
15 Named To Resolve
Various CSEA Disputes
ALBANY—The State Public Employment Relations
Board has appointed five mediators and 10 fact-finders to
various disputes involving the Civil Service Employees Assn,
The following have been appointed mediators:
Curry, of PERB’s Albany office,
to the dispute between Canastota
and CSEA; Wendell Hellman, of
Poughkeepsie, to the dispute be-
tween Peekskill Central School
District and CSEA; Prank Mc-
Gowan, of PERB's New York
City office, to the dispute be-
tween Baldwin Board of Educa-
tion and CSEA and to the dis-
pute between Amityville School
District UPSD No, 6 and CSEA;
Theodore Gerber, of PERB’s Al-
bany office, to the dispute be-
tween Frankfort-Schuyler Cen-
tral School District No, 2 and
CSEA; and Peter Prosper, Jr.,
professor at Union College,
Schenectady, to the dispute be-
tween Utica City Schools and
CSEA.
Fact Finders
‘The following have been ap-
pointed fact-finders: Lewis J.
Solomon, of Garden City, to the
dispute between Herricks School
District No. 9 and CSEA; Dr,
Eric W. Lawson, Sr., Syracuse
University, to the dispute be-
tween North Syracuse School
District and CSEA (mainten-
ance employees unit) and to the
dispute between North Syracuse
Central Schools and CSEA
Paul
(teacher alde employees unit);
Dr. D. Kline Hable, of Syracuse
University, to the dispute be-
tween Seneca Falls School Dis-
trict and CSEA; Earle W. Zai-
dins, Hastings-on-Hudson, to the
dispute between Kings Park
School District and CSEA and to
the dispute between Mamaro-
neck Union Free School District
No. 1 and CSEA; Dr, Felician
Foltman, Cornell University,
Tthaca, to the dispute between
Penn Yan Central School Dis-
trict and CSEA; John Logsdon,
of Huntington, to the dispute
between Farmingdale Public Lib-
rary and CSEA; Richard Brad-
ley, of Schenectady, to the dis-
pute between Brittonkill School
District and CSEA; Professor
Thomas Gutteridge, of State
University at Buffalo, to the
dispute between the City of
Olean and CSEA; Edwin Guth-
rie, of State University at Buf-
falo, to the dispute between
Clarence School District and
CSEA, and Mrs, Evelyn S. Brand,
an attorney, Brooklyn, to the
dispute between Seaford Union
Free School District No. 6 and
CSEA.
oa
® CSEA calendar
(0)
= TN
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
14—Dutchess County Ed
pm
14—Utica
15—Employees Retirement
Saratoga Stote Park
System chapter clambake:
nal Employees chapter meeting: 7:30
Arlingtan Junior High Schoo!
chapter installation: 7 p.m, Harts Hill Inn, Whitesboro.
12 noon,
15—Transportation Region 2 chapter annual dinner-dance in honor
of retirees: 6:30 p.m
Harts Hill Inn, Whitesboro.
15—Creedmoor State Hospital installation: 8 p.m., Plotdeutsche
Restaurant, 1132 Hempstead Turnpike, Franklin Square, LI.
15-17—Capital District Conference meeting: Hidden Valley, Lake
Lucerne
16—SUNY at Albany chapter: 1-9 p.m., Picard's Grove, New Salem
16—Testimonial for George Koch: Towne House, Huntington, Lil.
16—Broome Cx
Endicott
unty chapter
lambake: 1-7. p.m.,
Glendale Park,
1&—SUNY at Albany annual outing: 1-9 p.m., Picard’s Grove, New
Salem
17-19-—Southern Conference Workshop: Grossinger's, Liberty.
18—Westchester unit annual picnic: 5:30 p.m,, Ridge Rood Picnic
Area No, 2
19—Hudson River State Hospital chapter meeting: Otto House,
Poughkeepsie
22—Deadline for nominees for regional officers to be submitted to
CSEA Nominating Committee.
22—Buffalo chapter installation: 7:30 p.m
107 Delaware Ave.. Buffalo,
~~ *
Statler-Hilton Hotel,
8 5 EN a a aa
appears with, from left, toastmaster Ala:
chapter first vice-president Margaret Dittrich, secretary
Mildred Buckley, president Thomas McDonough and
second vice-president Jean Book. Chapter treasurer
Thomas Pritchard is missing from the photo, In the
Koch Testimonial
Set For June 16
HUNTINGTON — Leaders
of the 50,000-member Long
Island Conference area
chapters of the Civil Service
Employees Assn, will salute past
conference president George
Koch in a testimonial dinner-
dance here June 16
Koch, who recently resigned
the post upon his retirement to
Florida, had guided the confer-
ence for five years and helped
to make it one of the most in-
fluential in the state.
Koch, and his wife, Eleanor,
who also recently retired from
the Nassau District Court, will
be honored by 300 CSEA leaders
Tickets have been limited to 300,
and only a few are available.
‘They may be secured from con-
ference social committee chair-
man Willlam Kempey, c/o
Hempstead Armory, 216 Wash-
ington St., Hempstead, N.Y.
‘The affair will be at the Hunt-
ington Towne House, Jericho
Tpke. off Route 110, Huntington
Station,
Cocktails will be served at 8
Pm., followed by dinner and
dancing until 1 a.m
F. Smyth,
second picture, McDonough, right, who is CSEA first
vice-president, congratulates chapter delegates, from
right, Elleen Salisbury, Pat Rutledge, Kitty Manns and
Cathy Grande, The installation was held at Herbert's
Restaurant in Albany.
Syosset School Dist. Unit
Gains Raise, Other Benefits
SYOSSET — The Syosset
School District unit, Civil Ser-
vice Employees Assn., has gained
a 5.7 percent across-the-board
pay increase and other benefits
in a contract reopening extend-
ing to June 30, 1974, it was an-
nounced by unit president Ben
Gumin.
‘The package includes the pay
adjustment for all clerical, main-
tenance and custodial personnel,
plus:
© Protection against increased
health insurance premiums, with
the district to absorb up to $5,000
of any increases,
* An additional step, for a
total of eight, for clerical em-
Binghamton’s
MV Operation
In New Office
BINGHAMTON The
Motor Vehicle District Office
here completed its final day
of operation at 184 Court
8t. at 5 p.m. on Monday, April
30, and opened for regular busi-
ness at 8:45 a.m., Tuesday, May
1, in the new State Office Bulld-
ing at 44 Hawley St,
Commissioner Vincent L. Tof-
any said the relocation is part
of a policy to consolidate state
services within state office build-
ings.
The Binghamton office serves
an eight-county area of the
Southern Tier, including the
Counties of Broome, Chemung,
Chenango, Delaware, Schuyler,
Steuben, Tioga and Tompkins,
The 26-member staff is headed
ployees,
© $250 flat adjustment in the
scale for security guards in addi-
tién to the percentage boost, and
* Up to $2,000 pay for ac-
crued sick leave upon separation
after 10 years or more,
The district negotiators had
gone to impasse last month.
James Dugan had been named
by the Public Employment Rela-
tions Board to reach a settle-
ment, George Peak, CSEA field
representative, assisted the nego-
tinting team.
Gumin said the negotiating
team had been responsible for
30 percent additional in new
money over the last four years.
by Prank J. McHenka, District
Director, and Joseph E. Ryan,
Assistant District Director.
Primary telephone numbers for
the new office include; Admin-
istration, (607) 773-7805; Li-
cense and Registration Section,
‘773-7806; Testing and Investiga-
tion Section, 773-7807; and En-
forcement Section, 773-7808.
The new mailing addess is:
Binghamton District Office, De-
partment of Motor Vehicles,
State Office Bullding, 44 Hawley
St., Binghamton, New York
13901
Walsh Renominated
ALBANY—John M. Walsh, of
New York City, has been renom-
inated to the State Public Health
Council for a term ending July
1, 1979. Members receive $1,881
annually for their services.
Pass your copy of
The Leader
on to a non-member,
Special Group Life Insurance Available
To Local Government Employees In June
ALBANY — Enrollment tn a» special low-cost
group Mfe insurance plan, which does not require
medioal examination in most cases, is available to
local government employees who are members of
the Civil Service Employees Assn. during the month
of June 1973 only.
Applications should be sent to the Insurance
Department, CSEA Headquarters, 33 Elk St.,
Albany 12207 on or before June 30, 1973.
C8EA members who are under 50 years of age
or who have not completed five years in state
service are eligible for the plan without medical
examinations, Members who are over 50 years of
age or who have completed over five years of
examinations
state service must take
The plan offers 10 percent additional insurance,
dental death.
guaranteed until Nov.
charge, which provides that premiums are waived
Mf a member becomes permanently disabled before
age 60, and double indemnity in the oase of acci-
1, 1973, without additional
‘The cost of the insurance ts 10 cents biweekly
per $1,000 worth of coverage for members 29 years
old or younger. Older members may obtain this
insurance at lower than normal rates,
Members can elect to pay their insurance prem-
jums through the automatic payroll deduction
plan,
Literature explaining the group life insurance
plan and necessary application forms can be ob-
tained from local CSEA chapters or chapter rep-
resentatives or from CSEA headquarters.