LEADER
America’s Largest Weekly for Public Employees
MS
vol. XXIX,
Tuesday, July 16, 1968
Price
Ten Cents
Staff Promotions
See Page 3
Higher Pensions Now Set For) Plan Spreading Statewide
Syracuse & Onondaga Aides
(From Leader Correspondent)
SYRACUSE — Syracuse city and Onondaga County em-
ployees retiring from now on
will receive higher pensions
under the retroactive 1/60th Plan, which was requested for
poth groups by Onondaga chapter, Civil Service Employees
Assn. Mrs. Hilda Young is presi-
fient of the Onondaga chapter.
Both the Syracuse Common |
council and th Onondaga County |
Legislature adopted the plan, with
final action coming.
The plan became effective July
9 for the City’s 1,600 workers and
the county's 2,000-plus employees.
Onondaga chapter includes both
groups of workers—and has been,
chosen by both City and county |
‘as the bargaining agent under the |
new Taylor Law for almost all)
groups of workers of both. — - |
Workers retiring after the effec-
tive date will receive pensions
otaling up to two-thirds higher
than they would have received |
under the former retirement plans
(1-120th) of the City and county. |
The new plan guarantees a|
worker at least one-half his final |
average salary upon retirement. |
He—or she—can retire as early
years of service.
Under the plan a retiring em-
Repeat This!
Write Your Delegates
Full List Of N.Y.
Delegates To GOP
National Convention
EPUBLICANS as well as
Democrats are them-|
selves engage among in an un-
usual amount of speculation
and comment on whom they wish |
to see recetve the GOP nomina-
tlon for the Presidency and on
the planks they would like to see
in the Repubiican Party platform
for the 1968 national election
campaign.
Last week, this column offered
& special service to its readers
by printing the complete list of
delegates to the Democratic Na-
tional Convention to be held next
month in Chicago. We urge our
readers to take advantage of a
Second chance to let these dele-
®ates—who will select the major
fandidate and create party poll-
Cles—know their feelings on their
Presidential choice and on any
Other subject that might come up
&t the GOP convention in Miami
Beach next mh.
(Continued ow Page 14)
ployee receives 1-60th of his final
average salary—the average of his
five highest consecutive years’ pay
—for each year of service since
1938. In addition he will receive
1-120th of his average salary for
each year of his service before
1968 and a separate annuity
based on his previous contribu-
tions to the retirement plan.
The new plan is non-contribu-
(Continued on Page 3)
Rockland State CSEA —
High School Program
Adopted By MH Dept.
ALBANY—The Civil Service Employees Assn. has joined with the Department
of Mental Hygiene’s Bureau of Training andEducation in sponsoring high school equival-
ency courses at the various mental hygiene institutions throughout the State
The course is an outgrowth of © ti. errorts of the CSEA chapter ,
pilot program at Rockland State
| Hospital which was begun through
Nassau Chap. Demands
Immediate Negotiction
With County Officials
(From Leader
Correspondent)
| there, and
State School
“This type of course is both
needed nad wanted,” a CSEA
| spokesman said. He cited as an
example a recent meeting be-
tween CSEA representaives from
| five New York City area mental
| hygiene hospitals and CSEA’s
director of Training and Educa-
tion, E. Norbert Zahm, in which
the mental hygiene workers called
for the start of just such a pro-
gram at their respective institu-
another at Wassaic
$ MINEOLA — Warning against the consequences of any) tions.
ne tere ee | Parte delay, the Nassau chapter of the Civil Service Assn.) George Celentano, president of
negotiations by July 20.
“We don’t want to wait any
longer,” declared chapter presi-
dent Irving Flaumenbaum. “Any
further delays will raise doubts of
the good faith of county offi-
cials.”
Flaumenbaum noted that the
county Public Employment Rela-
tions Board, after lengthy hear-
ings, had upheld its original de-
termination to establish a single
bargaining unit throughout the
county service. The action is tan-
tamount to recognition of CSEA
as sole bargaining agent, since
more than 8,000 of the 11,000
county employees have already
submitted pledge cards requesting
representation by CSEA.
However, the PERB has” not
taken the formal step by recog-
nizing CSEA, and county officials
have failed to begin negotiations.
Flaumenbaum said the CSEA
Thanksgiving W'end
In London—Only $198
Members of the Civil Service
Employees Assn. are offered a
Thanksgiving trip to London
which will leave New York on
Wednesday, Noy. 27 and return
on Sunday, Dec, 1.
This unusual package Includes
round trip jet afr fare, rooms at
the luxury class hotel Royal Lan-| guarantee a retirement allowance |
cester, two sightseeing tours and|of at least half pay at age 55/
other activities, all for only $198.
‘Those wishing to purchase air fare
only may do so for only $159.
Immediate application should
be made to Irving Flaumenbaum,
P.O. Box 91,
telephone 516 PI 2-7144.
Hempstead, N. y..|
| chapter is anxious to present its
program, calling for a 20 percent
across-the-board salary adjust~
ment with a minimum boost of
$750, time and one-half pay for
overtime, pay for unused sick
leave, non-contributory health and
dental plans and other items
Meanwhile, a meeting of repre-
sentatives of all county depart-
ments has been called for July
(Continued on Page 3)
CSEA Urges Erie
Co. On 1-60th Plan
BUFFALO — Neil V. Cum-
mings, president of the Erie
County chapter of the Civil
Service Emplcyees Assn., has
requested that the County adopt
the 1/60th pension plan retroac-
tive to 1938 that was negotiated
|by CSEA for State employees.
| In a letter to County Execu-
\tive Edward Rath, Cummings em-
phasized that adoption of such
a plan would erase a long stand~
ling inequity in computing the
pensions for many senior county
employees.
The plan negotiated by CSEA
|and made permissive for adoption
by political subdivision would
after 30 years service.
Mbnroe and Nassau counties as
well as the city of Newburgh al-
jready have approved the retro-
active plan for their employees
at the request of the local CSEA
|chapters .
|last week served a demand on county officials to begin |the Rockland CSEA chapter, got
| the moving by appointing a com-
mittee whose members canvassed
employees interested in the pro-
‘Overtime Pay Delay
‘Problem Is Solved
‘At State University
(Special To The Leader)
ALBANY—Dr. T, Norman
Hurd, State Budget Director,
has issued a prompt reply to
a letter from Civil Service
Employees Assn. concerning the
payment of overtime to classified
employees of the State University
In the response to the letter
at
\fro CSEA president,-Dr, Theodore |
Wenzl, Hurd noted that the
situation was isolated at the Al-
|bany campus of the University
and that the delay was caused
solely by the failure of campus
authorities to submit a request for
scheduled overtime.
Dr. Hurd went on to say that
lhe had asked the University’s Cen-
tral Administration to process
the overtime schedule so that the
proper amounts retroactive to
April
employees’ July 18-31 checks. He
noted that payment for over-
time after that date would hence-
forth be paid on a current basis.
Resigns
1 can be included in the|
ram. More than 300 persons ri
sponded and the program, sus-
pended because of summer vaca-
tions, will conclude in the Fall
with the administering of a high
school equivalency to the particl-
(Continued on Page 16)
Narcotic Aides
Await Decision
On Reallocation
ALBANY — The Civil Ser-
vice Employees Assn, is await=
ing a decision on the reallo-
cation of narcotic assistant
from grade 8 to grade 12 after
presenting oral arguments at a
recent Civil Service Commission
hearing
Making the opening statementa
last week's hearing was An-
thony A. Campione, research as-
for CSEA. Bronislaus P.
Kosiorowski, narcotic security as-
sistant at Pilgrim State Hospital,
then followed with his presenta
tion as chief spokesman for hls
group.
Those testifying emphasized the
sistant
(Continued on Page 3)
CSEA Wins
Mileage Raise
For Two Aides
ALBANY—In response to a
request from the Civil Service
Empolyees As: the State
Thruway Authority has in-
creased the mileage reimburse-
ment rate from nine to ten
cents a mile for employees us-
ing their personal cars on of-
ficial Thruway business.
The Thruway's action was
promtped by a letter from Dr,
Theodore C. Wenzl
the
in which
letter requested the in-
which was won recently
for State employees.
| crease became effective
ALBANY — Peter Okesson has
resigned his position with the —= —
Finance Unit of the State Civil ay =
Service Department to attend COMPUTING your retirement benchte?
'New Mexico Btate College. |; The, MAURICE: BLOUD AGERE Ke
Page Twa
i
GEA Offers $7,770
For Administrative Job
The Civil Service Employees Assn, ts accepting applica-
tions until July 26 for the position of supervisor of admin-
istrative support services at its executive headquarters office
in Albany. |
hTe maximum salary may be
reached after five annua] in-
crements, However, additional in-
crements will be forthcoming after
ten and fifteen years of service.
This position includes respon-
sibility, under general direction,
for planning, directing and co-
erdinating printing, mail and
supply distribution and supply
purchasing operations.
As such, it includes such speci-
fic duties as staff direction, work
scheduling, design of material for
insert machines, the estabilsh-
ment of work priorities, some
mutilith operation, printing lay-
out direction, purchasing of all
headquarters office supplies, in-
ventory control, and overall re-
sponsibility for the maintenance
©f business machines.
‘The holder of this position will
also be responsible for supervising
health and must possess a driver's
license, Since the appointment will
be made at the CSEA’s Albany
Headquarters residence in the Al-
babny area is required.
For applications and further
information contact the Civil
Service Employees Association, 33
Elk St., Albany, New York.
Tr SERVICE CEA
Some Space Left On
Last Bahamas Tour
Space is left on only one more
summer, week-long trip to the
Grand Bahamas. All others have
been sold out, it was announced
last week,
Members of the Civil Service
Employees Assn, may apply for
remaining space on a jet trip that
departs from New York on Aug.
10 and returns on Aug. 17. The
price of only $189 includes round
trip air fare, rooms at the Oceanus
Hotel and two deluxe meals a day.
Immediate application should be
made to Samuel Emmett, 1060
East 28th St., Brooklyn, 11210;
telephone (212) Cloverdale 3-4488.
Apply Until
July 20
For CSEA Field Rep.
The Civil Service Employees Assn. has openings for
three field representatives at a salary of $10,220 to $12,335
per year. The three appointees will serve the Binghamton
area, Nassau and Suffolk Counties and Westchester and
Putnam Counties.
Ahigh school or equivalency di-
ploma is required for the job,
Resident Actuary
DERN
Tuesday, Inly 16, 196q
Pekka kad
Your Public
Relations IQ
F3 By LEO J. MARGOLIN
HAMAR ARTA AA RAL LAAT IAI TAI
Mr. Margolin ts Professor of Business Administration a4
the Borough of Manhattan Community College and Adjunet
Professor of Public Administration in New York University’s
Graduate School of Public Administration,
oye ° = oye
Positive * Negative = Positive
WITHIN A 24-HOUR period earlier this month, two front.
page events occurred which strongly affected the public re.
lations of all civil service,
7 AS HAPPENS frequently in government, the two events—
both involving police officers and
law enforcement procedures —
sharply contradicted each other
in their impact on the various
publics,
IN THE FIRST event, the news
story on the air and in print stank
of police corruption. Indictments
against 37 men, 19 of them pres-
ent or former members of the New
York City Police Department,
were announced by New York
must be built slowly but car
fully over a long period of time—
step by step, good service follow.
ed by better service, good perfor.
mance followed by still better per-
formance.
THE REASON that public rela.
tions must be constructed with
great care and diligence over a
long period of time is simply this;
the target of all public relations
the flow of outgoing mail and re-|plus three years of business or
lated duties, linvestigative experfence which in-
Applicants for this position | volved public contact. Graduation
must have a high school or from a college or university with
equivalency diploma and at Jeast|a bachelors’ degree, or a satis-
five years of progressively respon- |factory equivalent of training and
sible experience in the operation |experience, may be substituted for
of varlous types of printing and|the business experience.
duplication machines and related| Applicants must posses a New
equipment such as folding ma-| York State driver's license and a
chines and inserters, two years of|car for business, and must be
whcih must have been as super-/ residents of New York State.
visor of a printing operation in-| To obtain an application, con-
eluding responsibility for produc-|tact the Civil Service Employees
tion scheduling, planning and|Assn., Inc, at 23 Elk St., Albany.
eupervision of subordinate em-| Applications will be accepted up
ployees. till July 20.
ALBANY—The State Teachers
Retirement System has named its
first resident actuary. He is Al-
| bert Alazraki of Brooklyn, who)
was formerly with the actuarial
division of the Metropolitan Life
Insurance Company,
He wil direct » new in-house
actuarial department and will be
responsible for maintaining the
financial stability of the system's
$2 billion in assets. The new unit
also will determine proper re-
serves to be established and rates |
to be charged employers of the
system's 145,000 active members.
AN IMPORTANT ANNOUNC
FOR NEW YORKERS
NOW YOU CAN READ YOUR
NEW YORK DAILY COLUMN
“EVERY DAY INCLUDING SUNDAY
EMENT
100
f the Nation's
Top Columnists
neludiog
"Brian
Winchell Jack 0'Br
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Joseph Aisop Red Cater :
Victor Riese! enn
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ie and Theater Review
County District Attorney Frank
Hogan.
IN THE SECOND event, which
|took place in Central Park in
broad daylight 24 hours after the
indictments were announced, a
jsmall army of police officers were
seen by just about everybody on
TV screens as heroic under dead-
ly gunfire.
TO PUT IT bluntly and briefly:
one day policemen had the image
of grafters. The next day mem-
{bers of the very same dapartment
| were heroes whose courage and
fearlessness were displayed for all
eyes to see.
NOW FOR THE critical ques-
tion—and the public relations
dilemma eveyone in civil service
faces every single day of his pub-
lic career:
DID THE second event featur-
ing outstanding police heroism
cancel out the first event which
smelled badly of police corrup-
tion?
REGRETFULLY, the answer is
no!
WE WISH THE answer would
be the opposite, but unfortunately
that’s not the way public rela-
tions operates.
PUBLIC RELATIONS |s cum-
ulative. Good public relations
Teachers Retirement
Picks First Actuary
Appointment of the first resi-
dent actuary in the 47-year his-
tory of the New York State
Teachers’ Retirement System was
announced by Harold N, Langlitz,
executive director of the System,
The actuary is Albert Alzraki,
a Fellow of the Society of Actuar-
ies, who has been on the staff of
Metropolitan Life Insurance Com-
pany, New York City, since 1957.
Mr. Alraki will direct a new
in-house actuarial department of
the Retirement System, which will
be responsible for maintaining
the financial stability of the
System’s $2 billion in assets, and
determining proper reserves to be
established and rates to be
charged employers of the System's
145,000 active members, the ma-
jority of whom are public school
teachers outside of New York City,
1s the human mind—hopefully,
a healthy, reasonable, prudent
public mind.
AT THE SAME time, the events
which add up cumulatively to
good public relations must oper-
ate on human minds which are
frequently distorted by prejudices
—some real, some fancied, but
all acquired within the environ-
ment in which the human mind
lives.
TO PUT IT more simply: some
People want to believe the best
of the police officers who protect
their lives and property. Others
living within an entirely different
framework want to believe only,
the worst of these same police!
officers.
WHAT WE SAY of police of-
ficers applies to everyone in civil
service. We are using police of-
ficers as our example because
their triumphs and their failings
are the more dramatic since their
duties are more dramatic.
JUST TO emphasize to our
readers how difficult it is to de-
velop cumulative public relations,
let’s turn the clock back another
24 hours before the indictments
or 48 hours before the Central
Park shootout.
THE $1.3 million modern police
communications center was dedi-
cated by Mayor Lindsay, thus in-
augurating 911 as the new police
emergency telephone number.
THE MAYOR stated flatly that
he considered the new electronics
communication system “perhaps §
the most !mportant event of my
administration.”
THE WORKINGS of public re-
lations are such that this was but
another steel girder in construct-
ing a skyscraper of good public
relations—which, in reality, is no
different from the technique of
building construction. It must be
done by hand, slowly, step by step,
girder by girder, floor by floor.
VICE DER
‘America’s Leading Weekly
Public Employees
juane St., New York, N. ¥. 10007
‘Telephone: | 212 man B-6010
Published Each Tuesday
at 299 Lafayette St,,
Bridgeport, Conn
clase matter and
8 postage paid, October 3,
1939 at the post office at Bridgeport,
Conn, under the Act of March 8, 1879.
Member of Audit Burean of Clroula-
Subscription Price $5.01
Individual Copies
heneeee>asene nena
Tuesday, July 16, 1968
ib r CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
Buffa's Competive Unit
Approves New Pact
For 820 Employees
BUFFALO—Members of the Buffalo competitive unit,
Erle chapter, Civil Service Employees Assn., voted last week
in the Statler Hilton Hotel to accept a contract with the
City of Buffalo and the Buffalo Board of Education which
calls for wage increases ranging
from $650 to $2,300 a year.
The unit represents about 600
white collar municipal workers
and 220 non-teaching Board of
Education employees.
The contract was negotiated un-
der terms of the Taylor Law.
“It's a very good package,”
said Joseph V. Drago, a Buffalo
Police Department civilian who is
president of the unit, “we actu-
ally did much better than we
expected.” -
The contract approved Friday
specifies upgrading each job by
one salary grade and applying a
seven percent pay hike to the
new grade,
In the second year of the two-
year contract, wages rise at least
$650—Account clerk, account
in the cost of living. The hike
would top two percent if the cost
of living ts higher.
Affected, Drago said, are 200
Job classifications in 18 salary
grades. Some typical pay raises
listed below:
$650—Account
clerk typist.
$760—Clerk, stenographer,
ist.
$735—Senior account clerk.
clerk, account
typ-
$835—Draftsman, legal steno-
grapher.
$1,045 — Assistant accountant,
auditor.
$-,145—Accountant, administra-
tive assistant.
$1,320—Assistant planner, ju-
nior engineer.
$2,135—Principal engineer, traf-
fic engineer.
The CSEA negotiators won sal-
ary increases of $2,300 for two
job classifications, assistant cor-
Poration counsel and examination
director.
Newburgh SEA
Wins 1-60th Plan
NEWBURGH — The New-
burgh City unit of the Civil
Service Employees Assn, has
announced that the City
Council has adopted the new
1/60th retirement plan—guaran-
teeing half pay retirement after
30 years service—for its em-
Dloyees. The retirement plan was
to be @ key negotiating point of
the unit in bargaining talks slated
later this month.
Jack Present, CSEA unit presi-
dent, was pleased by the plan's
adoption and said that its effec-
tlye date of June 26, 1968, can-
not help but improve the atmos-
Phere under which negotiations
will take place,
The new retirement plan will
affect both the 178 members of
CSEA and the few City employees
who are not members.
Dr. Joseph Named
ALBANY — Dr. S. Seymour
Joseph is the new assistant com-
missioner 1n charge of intramural
facilities for the State Narcotic
CSEA Salary
Comm. To Meet
ALBANY — Members of the
Civil Service Employees
Assn.’s salary committee will
hold an important meeting at
the DeWitt Clinton Hotel at 10
a.m. on Thursday, Aug. 1.
Solomon Bendet, committee
chairman, said the purpose of the
meeting will be to review the pre-
salary situation for State em-
Ployees and to consider facts
which will help to establish the
committee's recommendation for
the coming year.
Serving on the committee are
Salvatore Butero, Raymond Cas-
sidy, Raymond Heckel, Emil Im-
presa, John W. Raymond, Cor-
nelius Rush, Frank Talomie,
George LaFaro, and Lloyd Hogan.
‘Edward Wilcox
Re-installed As
Saratoga Prexy
(Special To The Leader)
| BALLSTON SPA—Edward 8S.
Wilcox was installed to a
fourth term as president of
the Saratoga County chapter
of the Civil Service Employees
Assn. during a recent ceremony
at the chapter's annual dinner at
Bohme’s Restaurant in thls com-
munity.
Also installed were Mrs. Pa-
tricia Morris, first vice-president;
John Diggins, second vice-prest-
dent; Charles Layerdiere, third
vice-president; Albeny Sawyer,
fourth vice-president; James Mc-
Carthy, fifth vice-president; Stel-
la Jivik, secretary; Gustave Lien-
au, treasurer; Nellie Dropper, re-
cording secretary, and Harry
Dutcher, chairman of the board
of directors of the county com-
mittee.
Wilcox noted that the chapter
had to add four new officers to
deal with the complexties of the
various county units. When the
chapter was formed three years
ago there were 180 members with
membership nearly doubling in
the first year alone. Total mem-
bership is now 586.
Richard Tarmey, CSEA State-
wide fifth vice-president, installed
the officers. He spoke of the vari-
ous conferences he is attending
to negotiate contracts and unite
the various units.
Present from CSEA headquart-
ers was Joseph Reedy, collective
bargaining specialist, who spoke
briefly.
———E
Addiction Control Commission,
His salary is $28,500 a year.
Dr. Joseph formerly served as
a psychiatrist with the State
Mental Hygiene Department. He
lives in Roslyn, Long Island.
HEARINGS — clerical employees of two
State Mental Hygiene Department
York City who are charged wil
without leave during a demonstration for clerical
reallocations last March were given formal hear-
ings last week at the State Office Building
Hospitals in New
ith being absent
in
Onondaga
(Continued from Page 10)
tory,
An examination of the pension
benefits of a worker with 30 years’
service and a final average salary
of $10,000 illustrates the increased
benefits under the plan.
If he had retired under the old
retirement plan, he would have
received 1-120th of his final aver-
age salary for each year from
1938 to 1960, and 1-60th for each
year after 1960—or a total of
about $4,000
Under the new plan, he will
receive aboue $5,833 annually
after retirement —plus @M AN-| started by July 20 “In order that
nuity from the amounts he has
contributed to the plan before
the non-contributory feature went
into effect.
Increased cost of the plan {ts
expected to add between one and
one-half percent to city and
CSEA Picnic
The Civil Service Employees
Assn, at Buffalo State Hospital
will have its annual picnic Au-
county payrolls.
Both Syracuse Mayor
F, Walsh and County Executive
John H. Mulroy supported the
chapter's request for the plan,
made in separate letters early
this year.
Nassau Chap.
(Continued from Page 1)
23 to expand the program.
Flaumenbaum made his demand
for action in a letter to County
Executive Eugene H. Nickerson
| and all members of the County
Board of Supervisors. He said in
the letter that talks must be
the proper time limits may be ob-
served.” The Taylor Law requires
agreement on the program 60
days before the filing of a budget
| for 1969, which is done in mid-
; November.
“The Nassau chapter has waited
very patiently,” Flaumenbaum as-
serted. “In view of the decislons
of the local PERB, there would
| seem that there is no doubt that
CSEA does, in fact, represent the
Manhattan, Representing the employees was Sana
Jacobs, assistant counsel to the Civil Service Em-
ployees Assn. Also appearing at the hearings was
John Carter Rice, CSEA associate counsel. The top
photo shows employees from Bronx State Hospital,
The bottom photo shows members of the Brooklyn
State Hospital chapter, CSEA.
William ‘Shannon Elected
By Masten Park
Chanter, CSEA
BUFFALO—Walter Shannon ts
the 1968-69 president of the Mas-
ten Park chapter, Civil Service
Employees Assn.
Other officers installed recently
at a dinner in the Executive
Motor Inn here, are:
Vice-president, Clifford P, Cht-
chester; secretary, Shirley A,
Czajka and treasurer, Kathleen
L. Driver.
Narcotic Aides
(Continued from Page 1)
importance of the narcotic secur-
ity assistant’s role in the rehab-
ilitation of the narcotic addict
patient and stressed the similarity
that exists between the assistant’s
duties and hose of the narcotic
correction officers who are four
grades higher,
Commissioners Alexander A.
Walk and Michael N. Scelst of the
gust 10, 1968 @t Cheektowaga employees. It is necessary that we Civil Service Commission presided
Grove, N.Y.
receive your early response.”
| at the hearing.
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER '
Tuesday, July 16, 196g
Page Four
we READERS OF THE CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
Who Never Finished
s HIGH SCHOOL §
a are invited to write for FREE booklet. Tells how you can Pi
earn a Diploma.
Address Apt,
AT HOME IN SPARE TIME
City Btate Zip a
180 W. 42nd St, New York, N.Y. 10036, Phone BR 9-2604, Day or Night
Send me your free 55-page High School Booklet.
Name Age.
22 Westchester Aides
Receive 25-Year Pins
WHITE PLAINS—A public expression of thanks for their
service with the Westchester government for 25 years or
more was tendered by County Executive Edwin G. Michaelian
yesterday to 22 County employees.
The occasion was the an-
nual ceremony, held in the Coun-
ty Office Building, at which each
honoree was given an award. The
award consists of a 25-year pin.
Each pin is a replica of the
AMERICAN SCHOOL, Dept. 9AP-85
OB @ 8 OR 7ist YEAR Be
Aman went to bed after watching a movie in which the hero was a
daring aviator. In his sleep he dreamed that he too was an ace flyer.
From the foot of his bed he made a fine take-off but lost altitude
rapidly and crash-landed on the floor. He awoke abruptly with a broken
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without his Accident policy!
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The C.S.E,A. Accident and Sickness Income Insurance program,
administered by Ter Bush & Powell, Inc,, covers over 52,000 mem-
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of dollars, It could also pay you an income each month if an accident
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SCHENECTADY
NEW YORK
FILL OUT AND MAIL TODAY...
BUFFALO
SYRACUSE
TER BUSH & POWELL, INC.
148 Clinton St., Schenectady, N.Y.
Please send me information concerning the CSEA Accident and Sickness Income Insurance
Name.
Home Address.
Place of Employment.
My age Is.
Date of Employment.
P.S. If you have the insurance, why not take
explain it to a new employee,
a few minutes and
County Seal superimposed on a
imap of Westchester with the nu-
meral “25” on it.
Women honorees recelved pins;
men honorees received tie tacks.
Department heads and division
heads under whom each has served
attended the ceremony, Those hon-
ored, their place of residence and
the department were:
Armonk; Elain Lorson—Grass-
lands;
Elmsford: Mrs. Mary B. Market
—Laboratories & Research;
(Contined on Page 13)
LEGAL NOTICE
ee
SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF
NEW YORK COUNTY OF BRONX, —
LUIS MENDEZ and AIDA MENDEZ,
Plaintiffs, against RALPH AMADOR, if
living, and if he be dead, then it is’ in-
tended to hii
next of ki
tributes, inistrators and
in interest, all of whom and whose ni
and addresses and whereabouts are une
known to plaintiffs, and who are joined
ated aa a clase of “Unknown
“and SAMUEL K, HANDEL,
Bs acting Register of the Ci
York, Defendants—Index No, 61
Bronx’ County
basis of the venue
— Summone,
ast 1rd Street,
To "the aboye named defendants
You are hereby «#ummoned to answer
the complaint in this act
& copy of your answer,
Paint is not served with this summons,
notice of appearance, on the
day
10 daya after
the service 1s complete if this summona
{a not personally delivered to you within
the State of New York); and in case of
your failure to wppear or answer, jude-
Ment will be taken against you by default
for the relief demanded in the complaint,
Dated, New York, N.Y.,
, Office’ & Post Office Ad-
dress, 391 Bast 140th Street, Bi
‘New York 10455. Tel, No, MO 5-'
To: RALPH AMADOR, if living, a
he be dead, then it is intended to eue his
heirs at Inw, devisees, noxt of 0
tors, distributors, administrato
cessore in Interest, al of whom
names and addresses and
as acting Register of
Defendants,
lease (ake notice that the Summone
this action
Geller, granted on
inaction by plaintiff
NDEZ and AIDA MEN-
Bronx County Object of
the action is to bar claims against real
Property, hereinafter described and to
discharge certain mortgages of record
pursuant to Artic Real Property
Actions. and Procedings’ Law,, and ad-
judging the interest of plaintiffs free
from such mortgages,
Description of the
affected premines
piece or parcel
of land, with the buildings and improve
menta thereon erected, situate, lying and
being in the County of Bronx, City and
State of New York, being Known and
Gesignated as Part of Lots 647 and 648,
on Map 1672, building ‘ols, situated in
North New York, Wesichester County,
King to Clarence 8. Brown, dated
1866, filed Westchester County,
1866, as Map Number 419.
1—Situated on the corner of
southerly side of East 189rd Street (for
merly Southern Boulevard) and the west-
erly side of Willis Avenue being 27.28
ft. front and rear and 74 feet on both
eldes.
roel 2—Situated on the side of Bast
(formerly Southern Boulevard)
‘westerly from the
sides,
TOGETHER will al} the right, title and
Interest of the party of the first part in
and to all that certain atrip or parcel of
Jand, together with the buildings and
parte of buildings thereon erected, situ.
ated, lying and being in the County of
Bronx, City of New York, bounded and
described ax follows:
BEGINNING at a point on the south
erly side of Hast 183 Street, or Southern
Howlevard, distant eeventy-four (74) feet
westerly from the corner formed by the
intersection of the said southerly side of
Sonthern Boulevard (182rd Street) with
the westerly side of Willis Avenue: run-
ping thence southerly para!
westerly side of Willis
thence westerly, parallel
rontherly aide’ of Southern Boulevard,
(183rd Street) eight (8) inches; thence
therly again parallel with the westerly
thence easterly along the southerly side
ef Southern Boulevard, & Inches to the
Point or place of BEGINNING.
Dated: Joly 10, 1968,
HANNIBAL MILANO,
Attormey for Plaintitta,
Where to Appl
For Public Jobe
The following
directions tey
where to appry for public job,
and how to reach destinations tn
New York City on the transi
system,
w@ CITY
NEW €ORK CITY—The Appi.
cations Section of the New York
City Department of Personnel ig
located at 49 Thomas Bt. New
York, N.Y. 10013. It is three
blocks north of City Hall, one
block west of Broadway.
Applications: Filing Perlod —
Applications issued and received
Monday through Friday from 9
am, to 5 p.m., except Thursday
from 8:30 a.m, to 5:30 p.m, and
Seturday from m, to 12 noon,
Application blanks are obtain.
able free either by the applicant
in person or by his representative
at the Application Section of the
Department of Personnel at 49
Thomas Street, New York, N.Y,
10013. Telephone 566-8720
Matied requests for application
blanks must include a stamped,
self-addressed business-size en-
velope and must be received by
the Personnel Department at least
five days before the closing date
for the filing of applicavions.
Completed application forms
which are filed by mail must be
sent to the Personne! Department
and must be postmarked no later
than the last day of filing or as
stated ctherwise in the exam-
ination announcement
The Applications Section of
the Personnel Department is near
the Chambers Street stop of the
main subway lines that go through
the area. These are the IRT 7th
Avenue Line and the IND 8th
| Avenue Line. The IRT Lexington
Avenue Line stop to use is the
Brooklyn Bridge stop and the BMT
QT and RR local’s stop ts City Hall
Both lines nave exits to Duane
Street, a short walk from the Per«
sormel Department
STATE
STATE—Room 1100 at 270
Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10007,
corner of Chambers St., telephone
488-6606; Governor Alfred
E. Smith State Office Building and
The State Campus, Albany; Suite
750, Genesse Building 1 West
Genesee St.; State Office Building,
Syracuse; and 500 Midtown Tower,
Rochester, (Wednesday only)
Candidates may obtain applica-
tions for State jobs from local
Offices of the, New York State
| Bmployment Beryice,
FEDERAL
FEDERAL -- Second US. Civil
Service Region Office, News Bulld-
ing, 220 East 42nd Street (at and
Ave.), New York, NY. 10017, just
west of the United Nations build»
ing. Take the IRT Lexington Ave
Line to Grand Centre) and walk
two blocks east, or take the shut-
tle from Times Square to Grand
Central or the [RT Queens-Fish-
ing train tom any point on the
Mine to the Grand Central stor
Hours are 8.30 a.m to 6 pm,
Monday through Friday. Also open
Saturdays 9 a.m. to 1 pm Tele-
shone 573-6101
Application, are also obtain-
able at matn post office excep?
the New York. NY. Post Office,
Boards of examiners at the par-
ticular installations offering the
tests also may be applied to for
‘|| further information and applica-
tion forms No return envelopes
are required with mailed request#
for application forms.
Tuesday, July 16, 1968
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
Lunch Jobs
Open In City; File
By June 28 For Exam
Applications are being ac-
cepted until June 28 for an
open competitive examination
for school lunch manager in
New York City’s high schools and
funlor high schools, This position
pays from 96,080 to $7,490 year
to start,
Candidates must have a bache-
lor’s degree with major studies in
foods, nutrition, hotel admints-
tration or related fields or have
completed a 2-year course in these
fields and have two years @x-
perience in food service manage-
ment.
Official Key Answers
PROMOTION TO MOTOR
VEHICLE DISPATCHER
(Various Departments)
and
PROMOTION TO GARAGE
FOREMAN
(Department of Highways and
Department of Hospitals)
11, C; 12, C; 13, D; 14,
16, A; 17, B; 18, C; 19,
4, D:
29, A;
3H, A; 35, C;
39, B; 40, D;
i 44, C; 45, A;
49, C; D;
54, B; D;
D; 58, 58,
* C; 63, 4,
4 B; 68, 69,
B; 70, B; 11, A; 72, A; 73, 14,
D; 75, C; 76, B; 77, C; A;
Examination No. 1383, Promotion
To Motor Vehicle Dispatcher
, D; 92, B; 98, D; 9, B; 95, B;
%, D: 97, C; 98, B; 99, C; 100, C.
Examination No. 7508,
Promotion To Garage Foreman
101, A; 102, B; 103, A; 104, B;
105, B; 106, C; 107, D; 108, C;
109, D; 110, C; 111, B; 112, B;
113, A; 114, C; 115, A; 116, D;
117, D; 118, A; 119, D; 120, B.
SPECIAL SABBATH OBERVER
EXAMINATION for PROMOTION
TO MOTOR VEHICLE
DISPATCHER
‘1, C; 2, A; 3, A; 4, A and/or D;
PUBLIC NOTICE
HOLIC BEV!
ai LICENSE —
NOTICE is
eu that beer
"a 12475 has been
NOTICE
ME COURT OF THE STATE OF
RW YORK, COUNTY OF BRONX.
EW YORK, COUNTY OF BRONX.
MONYA ROSENBERG, Plaintiff, Against
WILLIAM” ROSENBERG, Defendant —
7 “8. Index. No. 4660/68., —
0 THE ABOVE NAMED: DEFENDANT.
YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to
of appearance on the Plain
y within twenty (20) days
after the service of this summons
elusive of the day of service where se:
in tinde’ by delivery. Upon sou. personally
within the State, or within thirty (30)
days after completion of ‘service where
service is made in any other manner, In
ease of your failure to appear, judgment
will be taken against you by, default for
the relief requested in the notice set out
below upon the termination of conciliation
Droceedings or one hundred twenty (120)
days atter the filing of a Notice of Cor
Meacement of this action with the Con-
aiigtion Bureau whichever ts sooner,
BASE TAKE
NOTICE that the ob-
Meee vies ya obese
Judgment divorcing and dissolving tha
bonds of matrimony on the ground of
eruel and Inhuman treatment and abandon-
ment of the Plaintiff, Monya Rosenberg
by the defendant, “William Rosenberg
eausing tho parties’ to live separate and
apart from one another. ‘That there
no fasue from the marriage and
Plaintiff aeeks no alimony or suppo!
Pialtif designates Bronx County asthe
inthe County. of
h 29, 1968—ISAAC
. Attorney for Plnin-
0, Address: B48 St.
Nicholas Avenue, New York, New York,
10031, TO THE ABOVE NAMED DE:
FENDANT: The foregoing aummons is
Serre pom you by, publication pursuant
to an order ce of June, 1968 of
the Hou, ABRA
GELLEI
of
| er,
u
5, B; 6, A; 7, C; 8, D; 9, D; 10, C;
; 12, D; 13, C; 14, D;15, D;
17, Ay
HOUSING CARETAKER
and
LAUNDRY WORKER
1, B; 2, D; 3, D; 4, C; 5, B;
47, C;
; | Stewart Kilborne has announced
School lunch managers super-
vise # junior high school or high
school cafeteria or several ele-
mentary school cafeterias or per-
form related functions in the
school lunch program.
They may be promoted to head
school lunch manager at $7,100
to $8,900 and to assistant director
of school lunches at $12,600 to
$15,300,
There will be no written exam
and appointments will be based!
on training and experience. Fur-
ther information and applications
may be obtained from the Depart-
ment of Personnel’s Application
. | Section,
Forest Ranger School
Conservation Commissioner R.
that 72 forest rangers completed
@ week-long in-service fire be-
Help Wanted - Male
MANAGER, FOR MUNICIPAL AUDIT
DEPARTMENT of Nassau-Suffolk CPA
. Offer participation in profite of
Department; opportunity to quality for
CPA Certificate, Send detailed resume
and salary requirements to Albrecht,
Marmafo & Company, 206 Main Street,
Farmingdale, Long Island, New York.
Help Wanted - Female
COLLEGE GRADUATES,
MEN OR WOMEN
BECOME A CASE WORKER
$7200 AFTER 6 MONTHS
SEE OUR HELP MALE AD
NYC DEPT. OF SOCIAL SERVICES
= 433-3469
AFTER 5 PM AND WEEKENDS
212 - 433-2650
Help Wanted
DRIVERS-TAXIS, Full or Part Time. It
you don't have m= Hack Licenee, we
Will help you get one, 608 W. 58 8t.,
Nyc. Tr 9424
Private Investigators
LEGAL NOTICE
Index No 8912-68. — Supreme Court
of the State of New York, County of
Bronx, PAULINE McCLOUD, Plain-
Plaintiff designates Bronx County as the
place of trial ‘The basis of the venue Is
place of residence. Summons
Plaintiff resides at 38 Marcy
ity of Bronx. ACTION FOR A
To the “above named Defen-
YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED.
ea notice of appearance, on tha
Plaintif Attorney(a) within 20 days
after the service of this summons, ex-
clusive of the day of service (or within
30 days after the service is complete
dant
to
if this summona (x not personally. de-
Hivered to you within the State of
New York): and in case of your fallure
to appear, Judgment will be taken againat
you by Uefault for the relief demand
din the notice ast forth below ton
the termination
ings or 120 4
of Commencen
Conciliation Bureau,
Dated
whi
Bronx,
Society, 16304
Bronx, New York 10459 (Lorenzo
F. Davis of Counsel). ‘To: TE Mee
CLOUD. The foregoing’ simmons is served
upon you by publication purmant to an
order of the HON.
County _ of
Courthouse thereof, 851
June 28,
nankwao" ¥ ot
Attorney for Plaintiff, Office
& Address: ‘The Tegal Ata So-
ciety, 1020 Hast 163rd Strect, Bronx,
New York 10459.
“1968.
SCHWAB
Counsel),
World-Wide Investigation
and Detection
CIVIL--CRIMINAL--MATRIMONIAL
ARMED ESCORT SERVICE
Scientific Modern Methods
Devices Used, Confidential Busi
Reports and. Background Checks.
W. N. CURRIER
261 Broadway —- BA 7-0272
and
We understand,
Walter B. Cooke
FUNERALS FROM $250
Call 295-0700
ta reach any of our
9 neighborhood chapels
‘in the Bronx, Brooklyn,
Manhattan and Queens.
e OFFICIAL
e DISCOUNT
| ige
e MAJOR APPLIANCE
CIVIL SERVICE EMPLOYEE PRICES QUOTED
ARE SLIGHTLY ABOVE WHOLESALE
* WASHERS ° DRYERS * REFRIGERATORS ° FREEZERS
© RANGES * DISHWASHERS ° T.V, * STEREO
© AIR CONDITIONERS
* Featuring — All Famous Brand Names
Phone Orders—10 AM-6 PM—Call With Make and Model Numbers
JAMAICA GAS & ELECTRIC
BAYSIDE, N. Y. BA
OPEN EVES TILL 9 PM - SAT TILL 6 PM.
OUTLET
42-24 BELL BOULEVARD
1853 BA 9.2400
Page Five
havior school conducted at Hiddem
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partment’s 16 forest districts.
Think of the price of « (aise
alarm, could cause death te
fireman,
the room; sound is surprisingly
new carton if you need itl
at $57
110 WEST 40th STREET
Truth in Sound
Home music listeners and professionals alike took to the ARS
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Now they say they can, and they have, The new AR-3a has the
same clean, honest 30-cycle bass as the AR-3, and is in the sama
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AR's Syear speaker guarantee covers parts, labor, freight and
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MANHATTAN: 118 EAST 15 ST., Near 4 Ave.
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Page Six
LEADER
America’s Largest Weekly for Public Employees
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations
Published every Tuesday by
LEADER PUBLICATIONS, INC.
97 Duane Street, New York, N.Y. 10007 212-BEekman 3-6010
elstein, Publisher
Joe Deasy, Jr, City Editor
Marilyn Jackson, Assistant Editor
N. H. Mager, Business Manager
Advertising Representatives:
ALBANY — Joseph T. Bellew — 303 So. Manning Blvd., IV 2.5474
KINGSTON, N.Y. — Charles Avdrews — 239 Wall Street, FEderal 8-8350
10c per copy. Subscription Price $3.00 to members of the Civil
Service Employees Association. $5.00 to non-members.
‘TUESDAY, JULY 16, 1968
Rockland Fills The Gap
OME months ago, George Celentano, president of the
Rockland State Hospital chapter of the Civil Service
Employees Assn., decided to aid his fellow workers in cover-
ing an educational gap. Several] workers in the hospital had
epressed the desire to complete their high school diploma
requirements through equivalency courses and Mr. Celen-
tano arranged for these courses to be provided through his
organization.
The success of the Rockland State Hospital chapter's
program was immediate. The same experimental program
was then tried by the Wassaic State School chapter of the
Employees Association. From these two imaginative actions
has been created a course of study which will now be avail-
able to employees in the Mental Hygiene Department's in-
stitutions all over the State.
We congratulate Mr. Celentano for hs creative thinking
in providing his fellow workers with the route for better
employment through education, and the State Mental Hy-
giene Department for its readiness to accept and act on @
good idea when it saw one. This is the kind of employee-
employer cooperation from which everybody benefits
Is It Necessary?
HE New York City Uniformed Fire Officers Assn, 1s
now canvassing its membership to approve a sub-com-
mittee report which calls for job action to begin at 8:45 a.m.
on August 1,
Should the report be approved—and signs of discontent
within the union indicate that it will—the fire officers will
Jead their men in actual firefighting and other emergency
operations only, Paperwork, inspections, and other depart-
ment programs will be disregarded.
Jerry
Pov! Kyer, Editor
{
The question is—Is this strong action necessary?
Can it be avoided?
We believe it can by implementation of the UFOA's rec-
ommendations to reduce the work load. Welfare workers
were forced to the streets several years ago to force the
City to reduce the work load. So were other unions. We hope
the firefighters do not have to act in a similar fashion.
The dangers of allowing the Fire Department to operate
at its present undermanned level have been pointed out
before. While the incidents requiring the department's serv-
ices have tripled over the past decade, the growth of the
department has not kept pace. In fact, this year, a man-
power reduction was called for in Mayor Lindsay’s budget.
While not agreeing on the number of additional men
needed, the fire commissioner, Robert O. Lowery and three
line organizations have called on the Mayor to provide ad-
ditional men to help reduce the load,
Efficiency experts from a private firm now surveying
the department to see if companies could be reduced, re-
located or eliminated should spend a tour or two with the
firemen, pulling hoses, chopping holes in roofs and putting
their lives on the line every hour, Then they will agree with
the commissioner and the line organizations that help is
needed now,
Again, we hope the job action will not be necessary.
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER *
Civil Service
Television
Tuesday, July 16
3:30 p.m.—Social Security in
America—film series.
4 p.m.—Around the Clock—N.Y.C.
Police Dept. training program:
“Auto Theft.”
Wednesday, July 17
4 p.m.—Around the Clock: “Auto
Theft.”
6 p.m.—Lee Graham Interviews—
Talk with George Hunter on
“How to Protect Yourself.”
7:30 pm—On the Job—N.Y.C.
Fire Dept. training program:
“Apparatus Accidents.”
8:00 p.m.— Behind the Laws—
Prof. Maurice Frey of Buffalo
Law Schoo] discusses the new
divoree law and procedure in
New York State.
‘Thursday, July 18
4 pm.—Around the Clock: “Auto
Theft.”
| 7:30 p.m.—On the Job: “Forcible
Entry.”
10:30 pm.—Community Action—
‘The Community Council of
Greater New York examines the
services in health and welfare
available in the City.
Friday, July 19
10 to 11 am—Staff Meeting on
the Air—Officials of N.Y.C’s
Dept. of Social Services answer
Phoned-in inquiries from the}
offices in the field (live).
4 p.m.—Around the Clock: “Auto
Theft.”
Saturday, July 20
7 pm—cCommunity Action.
7:30 p.m.—On the Job: “Forcible
Entry.”
Register Guns
‘By Aug. 13
The New York City Fire-
arms Control Board urged to-
day all City residents who
own rifles or shotguns to reg-
ister their weapons promptly.
|
Possession of an unregistered
rifle or shotgun in New York City
after August 13 will be a mis-
demeanor. The owner of an un-
registered long gun will be sub-
Ject to a fine of $500 or impri-
sonment up to one year or both,
The unregistered weapons will be
seized by police.
Registration of rifles and shot-
guns in New York City was re-
quired under the City’s gun con-
trol law enacted last November.
The law, which became effective
last February 13, provided six
months for rifle and shotgun own-
ers to register their weapons. That
six month period will end at mid-
night, August 13.
Forms for registration may be
obtained at any police station
house; at the office of the City
Clerk, Municipal Building; or at
the Firearms Control Board, 112
White Street, Manhattan. The ap-
Plication forms may also be ob-
tained at sporting goods stores.
When the application forms ai
completed, they must be submit-
ted to the Firearms Control
Board with a fee of three dollars.
Any number of rifles and shot-
guns may be registered on a single
It can be eliminated, Mayor Lindsay. Will you act?
permit,
Tuesday, Tnly 16, 19¢9¢
Civil Service
Law & You
By WILLIAM GOFFEN
(Mr. Goffen, a member of the New York Bar, teaches law at the
College of the City of New York, is the author ny books ang
articles and co-authored “New York Criminal Law.”)
Arbitrary Rulings
A PROCEEDING AGAINST a body or officer under Article
‘78 of the Civil Practice Law and Rules enables the Court to
ascertain whether an administrative determination was arbi-
trary and capricious. Such a finding was made in the case o}
Urbanezyk y. Lowery (New York Law Journal, June 28, 196:
Justice Charles G. Tierney).
THE PETITIONER (Urbanczyk) 1s a fireman. He was
subjected to a departmental hearing on a charge that he
claimed his eyesight rendered him unfit to drive a Fire De-
partment truck although examination by an honorary eye
specialist of the Fire Department established that his vision
was perfect, He was found guilty and fined two days’ pay.
WHEN JUDICIAL REVIEW {1s invoked under Article 78
to ascertain whether an administrative determination made
at_a departmental hearing was supported by substantial
evidence, the statute requires that initial review be had
by the five-judge Appellate Division, rather than by a
single judge at Special Term. If the proceeding has been
t
8,
erroneously transferred to the Appellate Division, however,
that Court will nevertheless dispose of the issues if the
papers before it are sufficient. Otherwise, it remits the
proceeding to Special Term for disposition,
IF SPECIAL TERM erroneously decides that the issues
do not call for transfer to the Appellate Division, the Ap-
pellate Division may decide all aspects of the case if there
is an appeal,
IN THE URBANCZYK case, Justice Charles G. Tierney at
Special Term properly retained the case for disposition al
though a departmental hearing had been held, because the
issue to be determined was the arbitrariness or capricious-
ness of the Fire Department in finding the petitioner guilty,
rather than the question of whether or not his guilt was
established by substantial evidence.
JUSTICE TIERNEY noted at the outset of his opinion,
in which he analytically reviewed the facts, that the de-
partmental charge was not in essence that Urbanczyk had
claimed poor vision but that this claim was made with in-
tention to deceive.
BEFORE HIS membership in the Fire Department, Ur-
banczyk had served in the Police Department, About 12
years ago he was required to report for an eye test to de-
termine his ability to operate Police Department vehicles.
The examination determined that he had poor depth per-
ception and he therefore was not permitted to drive police
vehicles. Ten years later while employed by the Fire De-
partment, the petitioner was given a driving course con-
ducted by the Department. He encountered difficulty back-
ing a fire truck into a simulated firehouse building. He ex-
plained that the Police Department years earlier had “failed
me in driving because I had bad @epth , perception,” He
also failed the Fire Department course, * hf
NEVERTHELESS, about eight mojiths'later, he was re-
guired to report to the Fire Department ‘Training School
for another driving course, He then) /informied’ ‘the officer
in charge of training, Lieutenant Lou{g Ca: e, that he had
failed the first course because of his ‘poor depth perception
and that he had also been told at the Police Department
that he had poor depth perception. The next day he was
required to report to Dr. John Sauer, the Department's
Honorary Eye Specislist who reported that Urbanezyk’'s vi-
sion was perfect.
IT IS SIGNIFICANT that Dr. I, Greenwald, also an eye
specialist, subsequently reported that Urbanczyk had ‘an
absolute inability to perceive depth changes.”
URBANCZYK resumed the course and achieved a high
passing mark. However, a fire officer testified at the disci-
plinary hearing that is was possible to have poor depth per-
ception and still pass the final test.
JUSTICE TIERNEY’S painstaking review of the facts
convincingly established that Urbanczyk had no improper
motive in referring to his poor depth Perception, As the
Jurist well expressed it:
It becomes apparent, therefore, that the claimed of-
(Continued on Page 10)
Tuesday, July 16, 1968
re CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
Page Seven
City Purchase
Inspector Sought
Applications for the October
amination for City purchase in-
spector will be open until July
90. Salary for the position ts $7,-
450 bo $9,250 per year.
Applicants must have at least
four years of recent experience
related to buying and/or selling
of construction supplies for a»
LEGAL, NOTICE
SUPREMM COURT OF THM STATE OF
DOROTHY CHERNUC!
dante — SUMMONS — Piaintift designated
Brome County av the place of, trial
Venue fe based on Section SOT of the
Givit Practice Taw: and lee tw that the
within action Is to foreclose a mortrare
attecting real property altuate in Brom
County.
To the above wamed Defendant and
auch of them
YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to
the complaint tm thie action and
@ 8 copy of your answer, or, if
the “complaint a Tot served "with this
summons, (0 serve a notlos of appear
anow, on the Plaintiff's Attorney within
20 dayn after the aervicn of this num
mona, oxclusive of the day of service
(or within after the worvice fa
complete if this summons 1a not per
sonally delivered to you within the State
of New York); and In case of your
failure to appear or answer, judement
will be taken ngninst you by default for
the relief demanded in the complaint,
Dated: March 5, 1968
DAVID BAUMGARTEN
Attorney for Pisintitt
Oftice and P.O. Addrosa:
18 Bast 41 Street,
- "A GRAND
LOVE STORY!
Well-acted,
well-directed,
strikingly
photographed!”
=William Wolf,
Cue Magazine
Columbia pictures PRESENTS,
A domino production
OSKAR WERNER
barbara ferris
‘Weiten by EE LANGLEY a HUGH LEONARD
eat ac cs vy Proc by DAVID DEUTSCH
‘vec 2 KEVIN Bi LINGTON COLUMBADOLOR
Semmens
Third Ave, al 6th St. PL 3-6022
ee
government agenoy or # large
private manufacturer or some ex-
Perience which would be consid-
ered equivalent,
For applications and further in-
formation contact the City De-
partment of Personnel, 40 Thomas
St, New York City.
T.V. Cameraman
Jobs With City
Open: To $7,490
The New York City Department
of Personnel has announced the
of television oameraman. The
Position pays from $6,050 to $7,-
490 per year. There are presently
13 vacancies with the Municipal
Broadcasting System.
Applications will be received
until July 30 for » test set tenta-
Candidates must have at least
‘One year’s experience at the time
of filing.
For applications and further in«
formation, contact the New Yori
City Department of Personnel, 40
Thomas St., New York City, 10013,
opening of filing for the position’ tively for Oot. 23.
Research
for Protection
...80 more
will live.
It is estimated that there are now
more than 350,000 blind people in
the United States. Another estimate
reveals that we may expect an
additional 30,000 people to lose their
sight in every year. Fortunately
there are people who have been
doing something about this
serious problem.
The National Association for the
Prevention of Blindness and its
affiliated chapters have conducted a
program of research, education and
preventive service for over fifty years.
The Society claims that more than
half of all blindness could be
prevented by full use of knowledge
we already possess. It also states that
more knowledge would undoubtedly
have been acquired if more money
were available for research,
While this program of research
continues, programs of rehabilitation
are being conducted. In every state
there are agencies both public and
private, which are helping blind people.
The National Society for the Prevention
of Blindness warns that one out of
every four school children is in need
of eye care and that children’s eyes,
even before they enter school, should
be examined regularly.
Every responsible person can
help advance the research program
that may eliminate many causes of
blindness. A contribution to your local
Association for the Blind is a concrete
way to help.
NEW YORK STATE'S
NO. 1 GET-WELL CARDS!
Benefits
for Protection
...§0 more
will be secure.
The Statewide Plan —since its
beginning in 1957— has been improved
and expanded to provide more
protection for eligible persons and
their dependents against the steadily rising
costs of hospital and medical care.
Medical research has given mankind
more ways both to prevent illnesses and
cure them When they strike. Hospitals
and doctors are far better equipped to
effect cures than they were a few years ago.
The benefits of the STATEWIDE PLAN
are constantly being expanded to
meet the needs of those it serves —-
employees of New York State, other
governmental units and agencies
and their dependents,
The Major Medical provisions of the
STATEWIDE PLAN — provided through the
Metropolitan Life Insurance Company —
are important! When the total amount of
covered medical expenses incurred by a
member (or one of his or her
dependents) is not covered through
Blue Cross-Blue Shield and/or exceeds
the benefits under the basic Blue Cross-
Blue Shield contracts, the Major
Medical expense benefits will cover 80%
of the excess covered medical expenses
up to a maximum of $10,000 during a
calendar year or $20,000 during a lifetime,
for each covered subscriber, The
initial amount for a member, or an
eligible dependent of a member is the
first $50 of covered medical expenses
in any calendar year.
If you are not now enrolled in the
STATEWIDE PLAN, get all the details ¢
how you may enroll from your Payroll
or Personnel Officer,
BLUE CROSS EA
ALBANY * BUFFALG » JAMESTOWN * NEW YORK * ROCHESTER * SYRACUSE ® UTICA * WATERTOWM
THE STATEWIDE PLAN — COORDINATING OFFICE — 1215 WESTERN AVENUE, ALBANY, N. Ye
INY 122-16-1859
BLUE CROSS
ream ins)
Saeakete
Secctine
TAY OF ME CON re
Ba gt mae
See Gla ad 10 Abkat
IER PAN BANK 300
S BLUE SHIELD
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
Tueeday, July 16, 1969
Now. A car with a computer in it.
Every Volkswagen Squareback now comes with
a computer.
It looks like a box, about a foot wide, and:is
connected to the engine in 9 places,
Let us explain. (Or try to.)
The Volkswagen Squareback Is one of the few
cars in the world with a fuel injection system.
A computer was designed to control this system.
To think for it.
For instance, the computer can actually figure
engine speed, engine load and engine temperature,
Amityville Monfer Motors, lid.
Auburn Martin Berry, Inc.
Bolayia Bob Hawkes, Inc.
Bay Shore Trans-lsland Automobiles Corp,
Bayside Boy Volkswogen Corp,
Binghamton Roger Kresge, Inc.
Bronx Avoxe Corporation
Bronx Bolk-Defrin Motor Corp,
Brooklyn Aldan Volkswagen, Ine.
Brooklyn Economy Volkswagen, Inc,
Brooklyn Kingsboro Motors Corp,
Buffalo Jim Kelly's, Inc.
Elmsford Howard Holm
Fulton Lokeland Vo
Geneva Dochak Motors, Ince
Glens Falls Bromley Imports, Ine.
Hamburg Hal Cosey Motors, Ine,
Harmon Jim McGlone Motors, Ine,
Hempstead Smoll Cors, Inc,
Hicksville Wolters:Donaldson, Ima
Hornell Suburben Motors, Inc.
Horseheads H.R. Amacher & Sons, Ine,
Hudson John Feore Motors, In.
each cylinder.
Then’send precise amounts of fuel and air to
Fuel waste decreases; mileage increases. And
you'll get about 27 miles to the gallon.
What you won't get are carburetor problems.
fuel injection system and a thinking computer.
Huntington Feorn Motors, Ine.
Inwood Volkswogen 5 Towns, Ine,
Whaca Ripley Motor Corp.
Jamaica Mones Volkswagen, Inc,
Jomestown Stoteside Motors, Inc,
Johnstown Volley Smoll Cor Corp,
Kingston Amerting Volkswagen, Inc,
Le Grangeville Ahmed Motors, lid.
Latham Academy Motors, Inc,
Massena Seaway Volkswagen, Inc,
Merrick Soker Motor Corp,, lid.
Middletown Greenspan Motors, Ince
Monticello Route 42 Volkswagen Corp.
Mount Kisco North County Volkswagen, Inc.
New Hyde Park Auslander Volkswagen, Inc,
New Rochelle County Automotive Co,, Inc.
New York City “Volkswagen Bristol Motors, Ince
New York City Volkswagen Fifth Avenue, Incy
Newburgh F&C Motors, Inc.
Niogara Falls Amendola Motors, Inc.
Olean Olean Imports, Inc.
Oneonta John Eckert, Ince
Plattsburgh Celeste Motors, Ine.
Queens Villoge Wels Volkswogen Corp,
Volkswagens always made sense.
Now they have sense.
Rensselaer Cooley Motors Corp,
Riverhead Don Wold’s Autohous
Breton Motors, Inc,
FA. Motors, Inc.
jer Mt. Read Volkswagen, Inc.
East Rochester Iimer Volkswagen, Ince
Rome Seth Huntley and Sons, Inc.
Roslyn Dor Motors, lid.
Sayville Bionco Motors, Inc,
Schenectady Colonie Motors, Inc.
Smithtown George and Dalton Volkswagen, Inc.
Southampton Brill Motors, Lid,
Spring Valley C. A. Hoigh, Inc.
Staten blond Sioten Islond Smoll Cars, ltd,
Syracuse Sprogue Motors, Inc.
Fost Syracuse Precision Autos, Ine.
Tonawanda ‘Gronville Motors, Inc,
Utica Martin Volkswagen, Inc.
Volley Stream Vol-Siream Volkswagen, Inc,
Watertown Horblin Motors, Inc.
West Nyack Foreign Cors of Rocklond, Ine.
Woodbury Courtesy Volkswagen, Inc,
Woodside Queensboro Volkswogen, Ine.
Yonkers Dunwoodie Motor Corp.
There is no carburetor. Nothing to adjust, nothing
to clean, nothing to ice,
Only the VW Squareback (and Fastback) has a
Authorized
Deslere
Guards/ Armed
Good Pay/Bnfts
All Shifts — Steady Work
Openings all boros. NO AGENCY FEE
‘Must have permit to carry pistol,
iCall Mr. Lane * PL 7-9400
wanted with er
without experience,
Must have «:
(We pay mileage)
Salary depends on background,
New York or New Jersey.
Walter N. Currier
261 Broadway BA7-0272
Help Wanted - Male
COLLEGE GRADUA
Men and Women
What Happens
To People
Without Hope?
Nobody hires alcoholics. Or
hide. Or a blind man who can’t
floor in the winter. Nobody wants
them, Nobody needs them. There
half a million of them, In our
fair city.
It is pot an ece
Jem, You can't buy
Peop'e have to
tenemente, Pe
volted by tenaments, People who
People who
ie not giv-
ing at and paying
taxes.
Case workers are funny peo-
ple. In an axe wh # etrielly
high button shoce to do any
bne
ck themselves
ople
turn, around and y
they‘re doing Jt for themselves,
Be a Case Worker jt you're
funny that way, After 6 months
$7,200
And all the bénefits the city can
give you.
Any college graduate can apply.
Listen if we can beat this
‘thing in ~ we can get an
example for ‘everyone.
Help Thy Neighbor.
Apply in Person For
Aptitude Test,
NYC Personnel Dept.
July 16, Tues 9AM or 1PM
40 Worth St.
(Mezzanine) N.Y.
Future Test Dates:
Aug. 6, 20
Tues, 9AM or 1PM
40 Worth St.
(Mezzanine) N.Y.
Or Call 212-433-3469;
After 5PM & Weekends
Call 212-433-2650
Or Request Brochure
New York City
DEPARTMENT OF
SOCIAL SERVICES
Recruitment Section
200 Church St., NY, NY 10013
An Equal Opportunity Employer
Tuesday, July 16, 1968
“CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
Page Nine
LEGAL NOTICE
SUPREME COURT OF THH STATE OF
NEW YORK, COUNTY OF BRONX.—
ANDREA CARTER, Plaintiff, against
SAMUEL OARTER, Defendant, Index No.
8100-1968, Plaintitt designated Bronx
County as the place of trial, ‘The basis
of the venue {a the residence of piain-
tiff, SUMMONS, Piaintift resides in Bronx
County. Action for Divorce, YOU ARE
HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the
complaint in this action and to eerre x
copy of your answer, or, if the com-
plaint is not served with this summons,
to serve ® notice of appearance, on the
Plaintiff's Attorney within 20 days after
the nervice of this summons, exclusive of
the day of service (or within 30 daye
after the service is complete if thie
simmon# is not personally delivered to
you within the State of New York): and
in oxse of your failure to appear or
anewer, judgment will be taken againet
for the relief demanded
int
York, June 19, 1908
moi n, Beg.
Attorney for Plaintiff,
JAMAICA HOLIDAY
NOVEMBER 10 - 17, 1968
Meals, Hotel (Jamaica
Hilton) - Round Trip Jet,
etc. $249.00
For Further Information
Contact:
Miss Mary Calfapietra
¢/o Dana Travel Agency
91 Third Avenue
Mineola, New York
Tel: Area Code 212 ~ 747-4884
Limited Space Available
RY THIS QUIZ!
DID YOUR MEDICAL PLAN
PROTECT
YOU AGAINST...
Out-of-Pocket Expenses
for Doctor Visits?
Maternity Bills?
Extra Charges for Surgery?
Extra Charges for
Specialist Care?
Confusion over panels
of participating doctors?
Uncertainty as to services
covered in full or in part?
New York
E oo
mpl oyees: * Limitations on Certain Services?
Filling in claim forms?
Discussion of fees or
income with the doctor?
Ey UG ba ot ee. Be a
iia ea fh oes
If you belong to a medical plan, we suggest you
check theabove list* against your family's experiences
with medical care over the past year or so.
If you can check the“yes” box for eyety question,
you are either an H.I.P, member or you haven’t had
Unwind with much need for doctors’ services lately,
¢
special room rates
($8.00 single) at
these Sheraton
Motor Inns
BINGHAMTON = Sheraton Motor
Inn (call 723-8341)
BUFFALO — Sheraton Motor Inn
(call 884-2121), Sheraton-Camelot
(call 825-8100)
ITHACA — Sheraton Motor Inn
(call 273-8000)
ROCHESTER — Sheraton Motor
Ton (call 232-1700)
SYRACUSE — Sheraton Motor Inn
(call 463-6601)
(IN ALBANY CALL 462-6701 FOR
RESERVATIONS, IN NEW YORK
CITY, CALL CH 4-0700.)
Sheraton Hotels
& MotorInns©
“In HAPs basic service program, claim forms are needed only for emergencies requiring the
use of non-HILP, physicians, They are also needed for optional benefits such as anesthesia and
prescribed drugs and appliances,
HMALTH INSURANOE PLAM OF GREATER NEW VOR
@26 MADISON AVENUE, NEW VORK, 4 dLVinI00R8
HiP
Page Tea
CIVIL SERVICE
LEADER
Tuesday, July 16, 1968
No Special Requirements| Seven Mental Hygiene
For City Stenographers
Applications are now being taken for City stenographers
starting at $4,600.
There are no formal educational or experience require-
ments for stenographers. The citizenship requirement has
been waived, but any non-citizen
appointed will not be eligible for
continued employment unless he
an application for citizenship| *htough Friday from 9 a.m. to 1
files
within ane year after the appoint- | P”
ment is made.
Applic:
candidates for the examinations!
required for the position at the)
Recruitment Division of the New
ations will be issued to|®mination may also be made by
Springs.
Commissioner Alan D, Miller
presented the employees with pins
| signifying membership in the de-|
partment’s Twenty-Five Year
Club.
‘Those honored are listed below.
Thomas Conkling, department
safety director at the Albany of-
office), JA 2-2428 (Brooklyn of-| fice since January, An employee
York City Department of Person-
nel, 220 Church St. Monday
| P.m,
Appointments to take the ex-
telephone to the New York State
Employment Service, Governmen-
tal Unit, PL 9-1020 (Manhattan
Do You Need A
for civil service
for personal satisfaction
6 Weekn Avproved by
NY
Write or Phone for Information
Eastern School AL 4-5029
721 Broadway, N.Y. 3 (at 8 St.)
about the High
State Rducation Dept
Hloawe write mo fe
Salinnt
Namo
Addressee
fice) or GI 7-2931 (Staten Island).|of the Department of Mental Hy-
Applicants interested in em-|giene since 1939, he received his
ployment with the Department of| 25-year pin at Willowbrook State;
Social Services may take the re-| School where he had been safety|
quired tests by reporting to the| officer. |
2nd floor, Department of Social} Emil J. Elsner began his term
Services, 250 Church St.. on any|of service with the Department
Wednesday from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m |of Mental Hygiene in 1943. He]
office). is a ~rincipal account clerk at the
= —| au y office.
iH SCHOQ, | jm arse
senior stenographer, began her
Equivalency
career In State service in 1943,
DIPLOMA
She also is employed at the Al-
This N.Y. State diploma
bany office
LYVA 1 the legal equivalent
James Ryan joined the Depart-
ment of Health in 1941. He is now
stgredustionfromad- | | Head psychiatric nurse at Sing
yeor High School. It is valuable to | |Sing Prison, Ossining
non-gradvates of High School for:
yment © Promotion
© Advanced Favcattonel Training PUBLIC OPINION
© Personal Sotisfaction INTERVIEWER
Our Special Intensive 5-Week Brooklyn, Nassau, Queens, Bronx
Course prepares for official exams Become an interviewer for national re-
conducted at regular intervals by search firm. No selling involved. Ste
[ SANITATION
MEN
(CLASS 3)
SPECIAL RATES
P.O. Truck Practice
$10.00 per hr.
TRACTOR TRAILER
TRUCK and BUS
INSTRUCTION
For Class 1-2 & 3
LICENSE
College Trained Instructors,
Private Instruc
7 DAYS A WEE!
MODEL AUTO SCHOOL
145 W. 14th Street
Phone: CH 2-7547
© For CIVIL SERVICE
© For Employment
5 Weak N.Y, Educat
or AT HOME in your 81
nopenTs SCHOOL, Hst
Si7 W, S7 Street, New York, N.Y, 10031
Please seid me PREE information on ¥!
N. Y. State Dept. of Education. all year ‘round, 6 to 10 hours per
Attend In Menbattan or damaten divided between face-to-face and
ENROLL NOW: ci! i wing, Part of each as
require some week end
2.
nce not necessary. Our
men and women of all
+ and satisfaction |
in getting out to meet the public. Car|
holpful, Starting rate $2.50 per hour. |
Ww stating telephone number, edu- |
cational background, related past ox-
perience if any.
PRINCETON NATIONAL SURVEYS,
INC.
P.O. BOX 21, Dept. 24,
PRINCETON, NEW JERSEY 08540
lor evening
Survey exper
staf includes
gos who find inte
5:45 oe Ts aM.
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ree advisory plar
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Commercial Programming
UNLIMITED, INC.
853 B’way (14th St, N.Y. N.Y.
YU 2-4000
SCHOOL Equivalency
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if ‘|
igh School Eauivatencys
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' “SCHO
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TO COLLEGE!
MONROE INSTITUTE — IBM COURSES
Spocia’ PREPARA
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Individual attention guarantees
acceptance of your application
by a 2 yr. or 4 yr. college.
omputer Proj
~— | guilty of misconduct.
Employees Are Honored
ALBANY—Seven employees of the State Department of
Mental Hygiene have been honored for long-term service
at a luncheon at the Gideon Putnam Hotel in Saratoga
Paul Tafler was first employed
by the State in 1937. He is an as-
sociate administrative analyst at
the Albany office.
Edith Wieland joined the De-
partment of Mental Hygiene in
1943, She is s psychiatric social
worker in Manhattan.
Frederic Willner, M.D., is dir-
ector of the aftercare clinic in
Brooklyn. He began his career
with the Department of Mental
Hygiene in 1943.
School Aides
Sought By City
Male school aides for City
high schools are being sought
by the City. Applications will
be accepted at Samuel Gom-
pers Vooational-Technical High
School Monday through Friday
mornings,
Male school aides perform mon-
{torial and patrol duties and are
paid starting at $1.75 per hour,
‘They may work up to five hours
day, generally between 8 a.m.
and 3 p.m. There are provisions
for vacation, holidays and sick
leave.
Applicants should appear in per-
son and report to Room 125 at
9 am. promptly at the school,
which is located at 455 Southern
Boulevard at 145th St., Bronx,
Civil Service
Law & You
(Continued from Page 6)
fending statement was not made in the context alone of
petitioner’s call-up to attend a driving course and of
the contemporaneous eye examination, but rather in
the context of what had occurred before, both while
petitioner was a member of the Police Department and
in the prior training course while he was a member of
the Fire Department.
ACCORDINGLY, Justice Tierney annulled the determ-
ination of the Fire Department in finding the petitioner
¢
Noiselessly, Several Words
(Trains to Chambers St.,
YOU CAN EARN
$8,000 to $14,000
| PER YEAR WITH
STENOTYPE
Uses ABC's
No Prior Steno Needed
You Take Down Trials, Hearings, Hi-Speed Dictation,
July Classes Start This Week
Choose DAYS or 2 EVES., or SATS, ONLY
YOU GET A
WRITTEN GUARANTY OF SUCCESS
AIR CONDITIONED CLASSROOMS
For Free cATALoG ca. WO 2-0002
STENOTYPE ACADEMY
259 BROADWAY, N.Y.C, (at city Hail)
Bklyn Bridge or City Hall Stations)
At A Time, on to a Tape.
Post Office
Thursdays thereafter,
Full cove:
Promotion text.
Phone MU 4-0180
College Selection & “Advisory Center
GR 3.6900
Exam to be held September 28
CLASSES START JULY 29
Classroom instruction course of 17 lectures will start
July 29, at 115 East 15th St, Manhattan at
lecture repeated at 6 p.m, Mondays and
je of exam subject matter, including new
topics of Postal Manual and Work Situations,
Full fee, $50.00, including Delehanty Supervisory
Recent purchasers of this text will be allowed full
credit for the $8.75 purchase price.
The Delehanty Institute
115 East 15th Street, New York, N.Y. 10003
Supervisory
For Information
Tuesday, July 16, 1968
CIVIE SERVICE LEADER
By A. L.
Tool Room Assistant
Sought By MDT
The Manpower Development
‘Training Program will accept ap-
plications continuously for posi-
tions as tool room attendant at a
pay rate of $3.15 per hour for
assignments to the Harlem and
Bedford-Stuyvesant Centers with-
in the program, These are full-
dime day positions. No part-time
applications will be accepted. Re-
quirements are a high school or
equivalency diploma and at least
nine years of recent full-time paid
work experience in the use of
common hand tools. Candidates
must be citizens of the United
States or declarants,
Arplicants may apply to
Peter F. Guida, 110 Livingston St.
Rm, 814, Brooklyn, N.Y. 11201.
Group To Evaluate
District 14 Projects
The Pratt Center for Commu-
nity Improvement, 21 St, James
Place, Brooklyn, has been assign-
ed by the Board of Education to
evaluate the decentralization pro-
jects in School District 14 cov-
ering the Williamsburgh-Green-
point areas of Brooklyn. The cen-
ter is an agency of Brooklyn's
Pratt Institute.
‘The District 14 decentralization
programs are supervised by Act-
ing District Superintendent Ralph
Brande. They involve English as a
second language in elementary
schools; Operation Optimum in
junior and senior high schools de-
signed to bring students up to
their maximum potential; the
Williamsburgh performing arts
which includes play-writing, act-
ing, producting, ete. by children
of the district and the music pro-
gram, which involves thousands
of children in instrumental music
programs and supplemental pro-
grams in community centers.
H.S. Equivalency Class
Set Up In Bklyn
The Board of Education has ap-
proved establishment of day
classes for adults in high school
equivalency preparation at the
Brownsville Community Council,
92 Rockaway Ave., Brooklyn. The
classes will prepare adults for
examinations leading to the ‘ssu-
ence of high school equivalency
diplomas.
‘The Board closed the day class
for adults at the Maria Lawton
Day Center in the Eleanor Roose-
velt Houses, 400 Hart St., Brook-
jyn, Facilities have been made
available at nearby PS 81, 990
DeKalb Ave,
A .
Reading Kit
Tn an attempt to provide a
fraded, sequential program of
‘otivities for Kindergarten chil-
dren, PS 396, 110 Chester St. in
Brooklyn's Brownsville section, has
developed a reading readiness kit.
‘The materials are being used to
tlimulate children to begin to
tead. David Marcus is principal
‘f the school (telephone 498-
\h130),
News Of The Schools
PETERS ae xacanenescn sme,
Vocational School
Grads Placed In Jchs
Last year's graduates of New
York City vocational high schools
are holding jobs which will
pay them $17.3 million a year,
according to a report issued by
the New York City school system
high school office.
Assistant Superintendent Mau-
rice D. Hopkins, head of the Of-
fice, said that of 4,608 graduates
employed, 77.9 percent or 3,679 are
in jobs related to their school
programs and 17.6 percent or 829
are employed in occupations not
related to their studies at school.
‘There are 4.5 percent or 216 un-
employed, according to the report.
It said there were 7,585 grad-
uates in 1967, of whom 517 did
"|not respond to a questionnaire on
job status. Of the 7,068 who re-
sponded, 2,344 were not available
for full-time civilian employment
because 1,625 were continuing
their education in full-time high-
er institutions of learning, 588 had
entered the armed services and
131 had married, were {ll or had
left the city. 1967 graduates are
earning between $1.25 and $2.50
hour.
Teaching Computers
In Five Schools
Computer laboratories have been
installed at the Bronx HS of Sci-|
ence, Mobile Language Labora-
tories at IS 117 in Manhattan,
Science Laboratories at Forest
Hills HS in Queens, an Electronics |
Laboratory at Brooklyn Technical
HS and Team Teaching Units with
movable walls at JHS 27 in
Richmond.
Since 1958, through Title IT
of the National Defense Educa-
tion Act (NDEA) the City school
system has been reimbursed by
the federal government on a 50-
50 basis for major expenditures
like these and for materials and
equipment in the total sum of
$18,000,000.
“Education is enriched, enliven-
ed and strengthened,” says Dr.
Bernard E. Donovan, Superin-
tendent of New York City’s
schools, “when supoprted and re-
inforeed by equipment and ma~-
terials that keep pace with new
curriculunt and the rapidly-chang-
ing educational needs of the space
age.”
Three Schools Named
The Board of Education has
conferred names; upon two public
schools in Brooklyn and another
in Queens.
Junior High School 281, Brook-
lyn, which opened in September,
1966, at 8787 24th Ave., will
be called the Joseph B. Cavalaro
School in memory of the attorney
who served’-as a member and
chairman of the Board of Higher
Education.
Primary School 396, which open-
ed on February 1, 1967, at 110
Chester St. will be known as
the Ramon Emeterio Betances
School in memory of the hero
of Puerto Rican history.
PS 144, Queens, 93-02 69 Ave.,
Forest Hills, will be called
the Jerome Remsen School in
memory of the Revolutionary
War hero.
|
|
Decentralization Sill
Fight Will Go To 1969
Although the State Legislature |
passed a modified form of al
bill to decentralize New York |
City’s school system, it appears
clear that City-wide decentraliza-
tion will wait until June 1969,
except for the three special dis-
tricts already in operation.
‘Under a compromise plan which |
passed during closing hours, the |
Legislature, the Board of Educa-
tion must prepare a decentraliza-
tion plan for submission to the
next session of the Assembly and |
Senate.
‘The compromise {s a partial de-
feat for Governor Nelson A.
Rockefeller and the State Board |
of Regents, who were demanding |
almost immediate action in aivia- |
ing the Board’s powers among 30- |
40 local boards.
‘The decentralization battle has
produced a new partnership of the |
United Federation of Teachers and
the Board of Education, both of | ste
which would like to see certain key
powers retained by the Board
Both want the Board to retain
City-wide hiring powers because
they believe some districts would
be understaffed unless teachers
are assigned to them.
Both want the Board to have
final authority on firines, al-|
though they recognize that firing | Si
is now basically a local function.
A UFT spokesman said “We are.
not opposed to local firing if there |
1s due process with a chance to
appeal.”
‘The possibility of 30-40 separate
contracts and negotiations has
also been rejected by both sides,
which want one City-wide con-
tract. A Board spokesman said it
might be possible to have repre-
sentatives of the local boards sit
in as advisors at negotiations.
The UFT spokesman said local
bargaining could create chaos in
the school system, although it
might be advantageous to the
union in the short run. “As one big
union, we could whipsaw the local
boards back forth at will, but we
recognize that this would not be
good for the system,” he said.
City-wide tenure is another item
the UFT may fight for, although
its spokesman admitted that its
position on tenure was not defin-
ite.
Evans Heads JHS 20!
The Board of Education has
formally appointed Ronald R.
Evans as Acting Principal of Dem-
onstration Junior High School
201, Manhattan, 2005 Madison
Avenue,
Mr. Eyans has been acting head
of the school since he was trans-
ferred there last March from
his former post as a teacher at
JHS 145, Manhattan, 150 West
105 Street.
Homework Program
An example of the Homework
Helper Program 1s to be found at |
PS 64, Manhattan, 605 East Ninth |
St. With a thousand tutors and
2,500 pupils as participants, this
program gives high school sis
dents with potential experience as
tutors and provides individual as-
sistance for other pupils on all
grade levels in need of help with
basic skills. Coordinator of the
project in District I, where PS 64
is located, 1s Donald Fine (tele-
phone 777-1860). we
Page Eleven
Teacher Eligible Lists
SUPPLEMENTS TO ELIGIBLE
DAY ELEMENTARY SCM
Norms Banith, Auxiliary Teacher. 69.00;
| John Viera, Auxillary ‘Te 68.
‘Joan K. Pullen, ‘Tr. of Early. Childhood,
78.19; Etinor Fraber, ‘Tr. of Barly Child:
hood. 68.56; {da Halbersiam, ‘Tr. of Barly
Childhood, 62.32.
ists
[s
5
SUPPLEMENTS TO
DAY SCHOOLS
Muriel E. Ruhaler, School Secretary,
| $2.48: Zine Behaeter, 79.98: Vivian Spaul:
hool Secretary, Karen_ D,
Rabin, GA AA: Rove Le Levine, School See:
retary, 67.
BLE LISTS
SUPPLEMENTS TO ELIGIBLE LISTA
DAY HIGH SCHOO!
Joseph J. Battiato, Chairman of De-
partment — Industrial Arts, 82.34D: Wil-
Ham A. Hoefener, Chain of Depart-
ment — Industrial Arte, 74:55.
Nana M. Filipino, Tr. of Spanish,
David Mazliah, ‘Tr. of Spanish,
Gretchen H. Stone, Tr. of French, 83.30,
Ruth Miller, Tr. of Hon
‘Thomas Delvecchlo, ‘Tr, of Speech, 08.08,
SUPPLEMENTS TO ELIGIBLE LISTS
JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOLS
Yvan H Bolerond, Tr. French, 90,78.
Stophem Karmiol, ‘Tr. of Health Educa:
tion, 69:06; Stewart Hausfeld, ‘Tr. 0
Health Edueation, 04.80: Paul’ M. Kay,
‘Tr. of Health Education, 63.
aida M. Rivera, ‘Te. of span, 86.37.
William ‘J, Kelly, Tr. of
$1.00; Yan Farber, ‘Tr. of So at
lea Spirael, Tr. of Soe
dA. Borak. Tr. of
aie
So:
+ Naftali Levy, ‘Tr. of
10.43: Denise D.
Social
Jonas D.
ai
SUPPLEMENTS TO RLIGINLE LIST!
(NON-COMP! E_EXAMINATION)
Fita J. Bernstock, Principal in Junior
High Schools: Ralph Caporale, Principal
in Jugior High Schools.
Ruth A. Vernon, Admiinstrative Aesie-
it in Vocational High Schols; Miriam
miinstrative Assistant.
Sisson,
SUPPLEMENTS TO ELIGIBLE LISTS
Marvin 8, Kasow, School Psychologist,
TEACHERS—HFALTH CONSERVATION
Barbara A.
5.
402M; Diana N.
Too: "Carel B. Linde,
Fine, 402M
Bronx
Michael D. Eran, 10, 8X: Helen M
Corrigan, 10, 46X: Mary M. Connell, 10,
46X° Giadya E. Stern, 10, 46X: ‘Theo-
dora Farrel’. 10, 46X: Susan Steinhart,
10, 85X: Tilan R, Tera, 10, 85X: Helen
J. Hall, 11, T8 144X- Ruth ©. Weiss, 401X.
Brookly
Donald Butehin, 43K; Viola Violet,
K: Eve
Ann R. Schwartz,
Stein, 4019
HOLOGIST.IN-TRAIN!
RUKEAU 0) @
pe ei
Rita A. Carroll, Marlen
J. Ferguson, Seymour 1
rence Ful, ‘Shirtey D. Glickman. Tiliian
Heifetz, Robert L. Hylton. Phyllis Lam-
pitelll, Jean Lau, Barbara 8. Lerner, Ralph
I. Rosenerg, Abraham Greenfleld, Harry M
P.
mR. Brainin.
Coburn, Carole
jedan, Law-
Shear, Waiter Blau, Sheldog J. Salin-
sky, Stanley Faden, Carole "G. Altman,
Myron Larkin.
CHER IN SCHOOL. AND
ITY RELATIONS:
Flotwazaues, 4, 80: Ste ker,
Hilda M, Haylor, 5, 87: Guilerm:
ina Fitzpatrick, 4. 101: Edith Alfon:
no, Twi i Dora B. Cebollero,
na Em:
ama, 7, 43
Gertrude, F. Bereer
bi:
Virginia A. Morales, 7,
49
“SIX: Alda
TLopezsantingo,
13, 20
Armstrong, | 7
7B; Nestor A
Encarnacion Bar
Fllzabeth Murowils. 6. 64; Rosemary
6, J186; Namie B. Hocknday,
Bronx
Ronpie E. Schrager,
8, BB; Anita Ay
Marmer, 9, 70: Lawrence 8. Dav
86: Matllyn R. Pozmanter, 8(
in. 10, 04; Dinne B, Kalt,
1195
Simon, 8, J120: Tetin H, Walter,
Brooklyn
Sonia 8 19, 906
Gish, 17, Martin Kanefeky, 17,
Anthony Ferriggo, 14, 120
Ronald J.
2105
Dore. Richa
Robert, “taihe 28, 204
Carol “A. Delaney,
OTC, 721,
ie
Richmond
Mary A. Hein, 20. 0,
TEACHERS ft HARD of
Colente ML CI 2, J-47M: Mary
M. Buming, 2, J47Me Marcle R Winkele
ntoin, 2, 47M: Cora W, Earner, 2, J47ME
"| Catherine K. Herlihy, 2. J-47M: Bedeet
TATM: | France
Sandra P. Pratt,
2. 47M: Bliew Youngelean, 2, ATM
Ronni ‘Terr, 4, YM: Donna M. Valenti,
2, 158M: Andren RB. Stein, 2. 168M: Pat
tlola B. Citaceo, 20, 10K: Leah G. Tens
enbaum, 20, 162K: Joan B. Kaptan, 20,
162K; “Donna G. Goldman, 20, 168Kt
Gaily P. Currag. 20, 163K: | Barbara,
M. Renjamin, 2” 158M: Marion B. Care
berg 2, USRM: Suen Castleman, 16,
5AM: Celeste M. Cheyney, 2.
PCurran 90, ia aL, Doratele,
2. 158M: Gloria M. Duffy, 8 306X: Mary
M. Durning, 2, J-47M: Larry T, Feldman,
2, 158M; Marcin R. Finkelstein, 2, a
47M: Dogna G. Goliman, 20, 168K,
PRINCIPAL DAY ELEMENTARY
SenOOT,
(Appolnted @ne of 9)
Josenh Mitchell, 4, 80M: ‘Thomas 3,
8,
Biler, 20, 48K: Sturri Gale, 409 2
PRINCIPAT, — JUNIOR AIGH SCHOOL.
Jacob Shapiro, J8&M, 5.
REE LISTS
(NON-COMPETITIVE EXAMINATION)
Benjamin 8. Chancy. Director of Muale,
Hrebert A. Orehan, Director of Mnale.
John L. Motley, Assistant. Administra:
tive Director. Office of Mnale.
SUPPEEMENTS v0 FLIGINER LIST
(NONCOMPETITIVE EXAMINATION)
Principal In JHS.
Myer Boland, Albert Cowen, Trma
Fnentes, Irving M. Gerten, Pan] Kahn,
Harvey ‘Nagler, Norman Peck, Alan Plank,
David Resnick, Daniel A. Salmon, Robert
Schain, Irwin Schwartz, Clarence. Stolper,
Irwin Tobin,
CHAIRMAN, OF DEPARTMENT OF
STRIAT. ARTS IN DAY
HIGH SCHOOLS
9554
508; Milton Hochron, 821
Arthur 8, Kat-
Miers
is Bach,
Rudolf Baver,
vis, 7657: Thomas J. Donel
ert W. Graham. 7607
fer, 7476 Jack 1. Daniel
J. Hochman, 7347.
Maria A. Gnaser,
aun, 8638: Rob:
Joseph T. Pagano,
RAR7; Jonn Miner,
Martha M. Clausen,
8000; Barbara,
chele rey,
Scoblette, 7600
Barbara. ‘Bialsiock,
ner, 74: Marin Vanontryve, 7493¢
Phyllis A. Oenatow, 7833: Doorthy @,
Haynes, 7207: Phyllis M,_ Napolitano,
7206; Beth B. Fleckman, 7200:
Reiss. 7167; Margo §._ Proopt
Delmonte, 7120:
Josephine
Marathe, 760
Janet RK, Rinde
npbe'l, 7087: Anthony Ry
Bioasom R. Werblood,
Ferrixno,
709%; Marilyn Schwartz
A. Beckinella, O867: Lin
G800; Bonita Winter, 6
Pitta, 6734: Yolanda J
©, Fertix, 6833; Vivi
Harv
i 66005
Singer. 64985
Bileen M. Mae
ne,
Rose Green, 6560: Toby
Lucia § Winston,
cuire,
$483:
Barbara A, Monroe,” 4005
ibere, 640; Niki T. Lagone
8. Bisenrod, 6198;
6100: Helen F. Got-
teaman, 6100; Marcie A, Robenstein, 6098,
OF SPEECH IN
6400
R. Goddard Jr,
$608; | Suzanne J. 6653; Myron
chkoff, 6610; Frank A. Carncel,
tean: Kathleen K. Aucoin, 0460; Pauling
Peter
Vigdor,
L, Demairo,. 6283! Marin 1. Cubilette,
6053.
SUPPLEMENTS TO ELIGINE LISTS
i, aA. Duarte, HIGH CHOOT
328; ‘Cannes 16, Dist, Office. Cromwell, Tr, of Bome
Lawrence Schwartz, Tr. of Muele, 78.9%,
Joseph P. Kabacinski, Tr, of Social
Doorthy M. Clark 40° Minna T.. | Studies, 69.80: Ronnie F. Hofetetter, Tr.
Immerman, 4. 83 fr. 4, 247 | of Social Siusies, BO
Key Answers — Recent Tests
Regular Teacher — 28, 2; 24, 3; 25, 4; 26, 1; 27, 33
28, 3; 29, 3; 90, 2;
Mathematics 1; 92, 4; 33, 2; 34, 4; 35, 87
In Junior High Schools 36, 4; 37, 2; 38, 3; 38, 3; 40, 4p
1, 3; 2, 2; 3, 2; 4, 4; 5, 3; 6, 4; | 41, 1; 42, 1; 43, 2; 44, 3; 45, Up
7, 3; 8.4; 9,1; 10, 1; 11, 4; 12, 2;|46, 2; 47, 4; 48, 2; 48, 1; BO, Bp
18, 2;°14, 3; 15, 1; 16, 3; 17, 4;/51, 4; 52, 1: 53, 4; $4, 3; 88, ap
} 18, 1; 1;9, 3; 20, 4; 21, 1; 22, 3;]56, 1; 57, 1; 58, 2; 38, 1; 60, 4
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER 1 ) Tuesday, July 16, 1968
Federal employees:
Wanta
better
Blue Shield
plan?
eep the one
youve got.
Because as of July 1, tne one you've got
has paid in full benefits, including, for the
first time, paid in full maternity benefits.
All you have to do is make sure you have
the Blue Cross and Blue Shield High Option
Health Plan and go to a Blue Shield partici-
pating physician. Not too much to ask when
you consider what you get. Paid-in-full
doctor services. No deductible. No dollar
limit. No matter what your income.
It's nice to know that no matter what medical
roblems you have, they won't be financial.
jecause when your Blue Shield benefits are
pald In full, you've got everything you need.
Greater New York's
BLUE SHIELD
@
Inited Medical Service, Ine.
Tuesday, July 16, 1968
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
Page Thirteen
Service Awards
| (Continued from Page 4)
Harrison: Mrs. Mary 4H.
@chroeder—Laboratories @& Re-
search;
Hawthorne: William B. Godwin
—Parkway Police;
New Rochelle: Patrick F. Or-
Jando—Health;
Ossining: Mrs. Dorothy Somers
Division of Family é Child So-
lal Services;
Peekskill: John H. Kipp—
Health;
Port Chester: Ellen M. Nether-
cott—Law;
Thornwood: Mrs, Carolyn F,
Bonville—Grasslands;
White Plains: Joseph Marazio
—Parks, Recreation and Conserva-
tion; Leroy Peterson—Parks, Rec-
reation and Conservation; Mrs.
Helen M. Potillo—Public Works;
Julio J. Bpiconardi—Public Works;
‘Mrs Derothy 8, Kinaman—Tax
Commission; James McHale—
Land Records; Gladys V. Stroud—
Grasslands and Fre Bucc!—Labo-
ratories & Research;
Yonkers: Dominic A. Rossi—
Sewers; Alexander L. Thomson—
Facilities & Services; and William
iF. Moran—Probation, who retired
‘February 29, 1968.
COLUMBIA COUNTY
Country Homes, Estates,
Farms, Canvys, Acreage.
COXON REAL ESTATE, Inc,
Chatham, N.Y. 392-4941 of JO2-7421
BUY
BONDS
FIAT '6B
Immediate
Delivery
Bpcclal discount to elvil
service personnel,
BUYING VICE CARDS
HONORED
IMI SALES LTD,
side
phe a Tia00
peda py
AUTOMATIOS ARE HERE!
civil service
ye
G@_ SERVICE CARDS
WONORED
mi SALES Urb:
‘tL 9 pm
BUSHAILL
area.
FROM NEW YORK CITY AREA: From
at Denville, T
om Rout
when you
own a
vacation home
(like this)
at PINE R
YOU HAVE EVERYTHING FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY
¢ SWIMMING » BOATING © SKIING + GOLF
FISHING + HUNTING + GALA NIGHT LIFE
The Pine Ridge vacation community is planned for year-round
vacation living, and features full width roads, complete water
system, electricity and telephone service, and a nearby shopping
At Pine Ridge, you will find a wide selection of vacation house
styles to suit the needs and desires of your family,
and JUST $195.00 STARTS YOU OFF.
Route 46 West iS cue Lincoln Tunnel to Route
ff Route 80 at Route 15 Exit (Sparta).
ite 206 past Branchville and turn tat “past Culver Lake to
'y Bridge. Then South on Route 209 to the properly,
ACT NOW SEND COUPON!
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IDGE
PAL 18924
George Washington Bridge to Route 80 to
i fats 46 to Route 80
yw Route 15 to Route
[Send for exciting, comprehensive, pictorial brochure and revealing study ny
J Vacation home ownership,
J Name.
T Address.
V oiy State.
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Tip.
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pant ers cf sach eins copy th ot
Farms & Country Homes
Colambia’ county
c Columbia County,
orsinall sal tne tf
YW, Turner, 408 Warren, Hudson, NY
+3804
House For Sale - Islip, NY.
MODERNIZED home partly
fully fraulated, bulla air
fenced,
ir ation, ator
churches, mn seen to appreciate.
516—277-2418,
CONCRETE WORK |
Driveways, Sidewalks, Patios, Walks,
Garage Floors, Concrete Stoops,
Patch Brick Stoops, ments,
Porches, Small Alterations.
| Call For Free Estimates
|Frank Fodera IV 9-9320 |
Farms & Country Homes
Orange County
Retirement Homes,
the Tri State area.
GOLDMAN AGENCY
85 Pike, Port Jervin NY (914) 856-6228
Houses For Sale - New Jersey
BERGEN CO. (15 MINS NYC)
Farms & Country Homes
New York State
NEW SUMMER catalog of hundreds of
Real Estate & Business Bargoins, All
es & Prices, Dahl Realty,
N.
Catskills
+ REAL ESTATE VALUES «
SAVE ON YOUR MOVE TO FLOKIDA
Compare our cost per 4,000 ibs to
St. Petersburg trom New York City,
$400; Philadelphia, $882: Albany,
10B FLA. — INTERN DY
SEW H. N. WIMMERS, REALTOR,
ZIP CODE 33595
$432. For an eatimate to any dest:
sanion in Florida write | SOUTHERN
TRANSFER & STOR.
Dept GPO. Bow 10217
burg, Florids
Stuart, Florida
RETIREMENT HOMES $6,600, up
EVERYTHING IN REAL ESTATE
at perare:
ST.. PETE — the City for Living
FREE! "LIVING IN ST, PETE" book.
lot. Packed full of facts, figures and
fotos of SUNNY ST. PETE, Popular
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L PULFORD, SfUART, PLA Hearnan
WRITE REQUIREMENTS. Ph. 287-12881] Wonderful (age fen
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CAN v fo} U dog races, baseball. WRITE TODAY
for this informative book.
AFFORD O8.1. Mulling, Dept, 1212, C&L 6.18
amber of ree, Bi.’ Pelersborg
$1.00 per day Vorita 39791
for Retirement Home in. Fi
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6. includin
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Complete and ready to move into:
id $39 per month. (Cover
paved streets,
val and | interest) app, taxes
ut $20.00. Lake — stocke
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HOLIDAY HILL
Box 295
New Port Richey, Florida
SWIMMING, ing year round
furn, home, ipped kitchen, 11%
bath rms, 3 bedrms, plus converted barn
‘uest house. Low taxes, $19,900. P.O.
fox 32, Elka Park, NY or 5i8—589-
6495,
Business For Sale ~ Florida
PAINT Store, DeBary, Fla. Well estab-
lished on Hwy 17-92,'in center of town.
Owner alone and_wants to return north
Write DeBary Paint Store, 103 Hwy
17-92, DeBary, Fla.
House For Sale - Bronx
EAST 216th ST, 2 fam. $19,900 det.
S0x100, 4 garages. Only $1,000 dn,
J. J. Lawrence ‘OL, 3:2300
S05 Waite Plains Rd.
Days
CAMBRIA HGTS. $21,500
Detached Col. 7 rms, 4 bedrms, 1%
baths, finished basement, garage.
‘ONG ISLAND HOMES
168-12 Hillside Ave., Jamaica
9-7300
FULL size model homes in Hicksville, Dd,
Old Country Ra J
516) WE
Farms & Country Homes
Orange County, N.Y,
W/M REALTY
Rural Property. Specialy
WE HAVE ALL
84488)
Hwy 209
‘Tel: (914) 754-
Motel For Sale - Adirondacks
SCHROON LAKE, modern 6-unit motel,
winterized, centralized heat, | furnished,
$13,200, Send for free catolog,
LAKES REALTY, Chestertown,
518—494-3115,
Real Estate For Sale
Connecticut
1 hour from George Washi
NY.
“House For Rent - Queens
LAURELTON-Springfield Gardens
8 rooms with
pancy Sept.
QUEENS VILLAGE
ACE COLONIAL
$20,490
banquet dining room,
ed basement, garage,
MUST BE
FLAME REALTY AX 1-7406
168-14 Hillside Ave., Jamaica
House For Sale - Queens
- 2 family, deteac rite aif
IV 9-209)
Phone
QUEENS
Kitel
0 buy
with. option
HOMES, OL 8-7510.
BAISLEY, PARK — $17,990
SACRIFICE SAL!
this
rooms,
nite club fin bamt,
on a tree-lined street, no
ediraul areas
ultra_mo-
Owner reducing
CAMBRIA HEIGHTS — $21,990
SEPARATION SALE
All brick English Tudor home. 3 Ige
bedems plus 2 baths, fireplace, garage,
, garden grounds, move right
A ALBANS VIC. —_ $24,990
MODERN DET 6 & 6
Ige Dutch
all modern thruott,
fu a garden, section, oe
OTHER 1 & 2
FAMILY HOMES AVAIL,
QUEENS HOMES
OL 8-7510
170-18 Hillside Ave,, Jamaica
rms & Country Homes -
Ulster Count;
VACATION — RECREATION
2 BEDROOM new 10x50 trailer, 12x16
Added jalousie room, 114 wooded acres
All utilities. Adjoining forest preserve
Price $9,000,
KOPP OF KERHONKSON, N.Y.
) 626-7500
“Farms & Country Homes
New Jersey
List of Rarlesaneat Homes
Farms — = Acreaue
FARM & HOME REALTY
WM. SCHMIDT, lis Realtor
Newton, N.J. Closed on Swi
BRONX SPECIAL
MORRISON &
WESTCHESTER AVE.
(SOUNDVIEW SECTION)
Det, 4 fam brik, 1. bik ub,
available to vets with no down
ment or non: with mall
payment, Leave the hendaches
seecuring a mike to us,
FIRST-MET REALTY
8525 BOSTON ROAD, BRONX
OL 4-5600
To Keep Informed,
Follow The Leader,
TO TODAY'S
FOLLOW THE LEADER
BEST VALUE
CAMBRIA HEIGHTS
This 414 year old dwelling is in ABSOLUTE PERFECT CONDITION,
YOU CAN
51/2% FHA $1
6 truly spacious rooms, 114 luxurio
finished basement, EXTRAS GALORE for wonderful living MUST
BE SEEN TO BE APPRECIATED.
ABCO REALTY
169-12 HILLSIDE AVE,
LIKE NEW
ASSUME
5.000 MTGE
us colored tlle baths, NITE CLUB
OL 7-7900
JAMAICA
[QUEENS VILLAGE
— A RARE
Owner leaving state gelling
| only minutes to. sub
SPRINGFIELD GARDE
10 YEARS
| 6 Rooms—3 Bedrooms—Hollywood Bi
spend a dollar to. improve it!
ONLY $750 DOWN
__§1,01 000" NEEDED ON CONTRACT
— BRICK RANCH —
| Automatic Heat—Every essential extra included! You will not h
$20,990 |
GEM —
LOCK, STOCK & BARREL!
NS | $23,990
YOUNG!
jath—40x100 Landscaped gre
ON CONTRACT
‘LAURELTON
oom—Main floor
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CiviIt
DONT REPEAT THIS |
(Continued from Page 1)
For that purpose, we list be-
Iow this week the full list of New
York delegates to the Republican
session and urge our readers to
have their say again by writing
their thouchts to these delegates.
Delegates-At-Large
Charles ochoeneck, GOP
State Committee chairman, 110
Juneway Rd., Syracuse; Wilma C.
Rogalin, vice chairman, Cedar Hill
Lane, Pound Ridge; Dorothy B.
McHugh, secretary, 10 Gracie
Square, New York City; Sen.
Jacob K. Javits, 911 Park Ave.,
New York City; Attorney General
Louis J. Lefkowitz, 575 Park Ave.,
New York City; State Sen, Earl
W. Brydges, Wilson; Assembly-
man Perry B. Duryea, Jr., Old
Montauk Highway, Montauk;
Mayor John V. Lindsay, Gracie
Mansion, New York City; Leon-
ard W. Hall, Feeks Lane, Village
of Lallingtown, Locust Valley, and
William E. Miller, 418 Willow St.,
Lockport
Alternate
Delegates-At-Large
William L. Pieifter, 73 Thorn-
dale Rd., Slingerlands; John A.
Wells, 69 Rye Rd. Rye; Amory
Houghton, The Knoll, Corning;
Edward J. Speno, 863 Richmond
East Meadow; John Hay
27° Valley Rd. Man-
hhasset; Jack R. Robinson, 121
West 88 St, New York City;
Samuel Hausman, 980 Fifth Ave.,
New York City; Walter N. Thayer,
Hilltop Place, Rye; Robert I.
Wishnick, 111 East 56 St., New
York City, and Marguerite B.
Kiuhn, 592 East 7 St. Brooklyn.
District Delegates
Ist C.D.
Delegates—Edwin _M Schwenk,
Hampton Park, Southhampton and
Richard Beidier, 55 Whippoorwill
Lane, Patchogue. Alternates—Ni-
™ cholas Barbato, 221 Mount Plea-
sant Road, Smithtown and John
©. Cochrane, 132 South Wind-
sor Avenue, Brightwaters.
2nd C.D.
Delegates—Aldo D. Donno,
Btraight Path, Huntington and
Gilbert C. Hense, 130 Little Neck
Rd, South Babylon. Alternates—
Thomas C. Platt, West Neck
Road, Lloyd Harbor, Hunting-
ton and Angelo D. Roncallo, 266
Toronto Avenue, Massapequa.
3rd C.D.
Delegates—John D. Caem-
merer, 11 Post Avenue, East Wil-
liston and Michael M. D'Auria,
465 South Oyster Bay Road, Pine-
view. Alternates—Robert C. Mead,
36 Arrandale Avenue, Great Neck
and John E, Kingston, 97 Ward
Street, Westbury
4th C.D.
Delegaies—Joseph M. Marglotta,
844 Bedford Court, Uniondale and
John W. Wydler, 67 First Street,
Garden City. Alternates—George
A. Farrell, 116 Carnation Avenue,
Floral Park and A. Holly Patter-
son, 244 Greenwich Street, Hemp-
stead
5th C.D.
Delegates—Ralph G, Caso, 2045
Baldwin Court, Merrick and Jo-
seph F. Carlino, 605 East Bay
Drive, Long Beach. Alternates—
Francls T. Purcell, 25 Croyden
Street, Malverne and Harold W.
McConnell, 2831 Harding Avenue,
Bellmore.
6th C.D.
Delegates—Vincent L, Leibell,
Jv, $955 Glenwood Ave., Little
Neck and Frederic M. Reuss, 219-
41 94th Avenue, Queens Village.
Alternates—Arthur E. Spitz, 201-
19 24th Avenue, Bayside,
7th C.D.
Delegates—Sidney Hein, 249-22
144th Avenue, Rosedale and Al-
fred H, Van Inwegan, 78-22 88th |
Road, Woodhaven. ‘Alternates— |
Delegates—Martin Knorr, 6146
Palmetto Street, Brooklyn and
Deighton Edwards, 128-20 175th
Street, Jamaica. |
8th C.D,
ates—F. William Guma,
20-28 143rd Street, Linden Hills
and Vince Fabrizi, 104-47 Rose-
velt Avenue, Corona. Alternates— |
Ralph Halpern 140-10 84th Drive,
Jamaica and John D. DiLeonardo,
4527 Parsons Boulevard, Flushing.
9th C.D,
Delegates—George
2220 81st Street,
Thomas S. Agresta, 5328 64th
Street, Maspeth. Alternates—
John J. Leahey, 3018 36th Street,
Long Island City and Irene Jac-
obs, 47-55 44th Street, Woodside.
10th C.D.
Delegates—Robert J. Crews, 345
Clinton Avenue, Brooklyn and
Daniel N. Camoia, 192 East 37th
Street, Brooklyn. Alternates—Pas-
quale DiBlasi, Sr., 1021 Remsen
Street, Brooklyn and Frederic E.
Hammer, 13203 Newport Avenue,
Belle Harbor.
llth C.D.
Delegates—Joseph M. Soviero,
16 Warwick Street, Brooklyn and
Anthony N. Durso, 1618 East 92nd
Street, Brooklyn, Alternates—Ben-
jamin F. Westervelt, 1845 Putnam
Avenue, Brooklyn and Robert D.
Clark, 54 Orange Street, Brooklyn.
12th C.D.
Delegates—Dr. Sandy S. Ray,
1281 President Street, Brooklyn
and Arthur Bramwell, 236 McDon-
ough Street, Brooklyn. Alternates
—Bertha Diggs Warner, 1245 Un-
ion Street, Brooklyn and Ben-
jamin J. Lowry, 1363 President
Street, Brooklyn.
13th C.D.
Delegates—Joseph E. Parisi,
1327 East 4th Street, Brooklyn and
Jack J. Duberstein, 60 Turner
Place, Brooklyn, Alternates—Ger-
ald S. Held, 2301 Kings High-
way, Brooklyn and Seymour Be-
sunder, 2505 Avenue R, Brooklyn.
14th C.D. |
Delegates—John R. Crews, 25
Monroe Place, Brooklyn and Mi-
Cc. Clark,
Flushing and
Avenue, Brooklyn, Alternates—
Mildred P. Rosen, 85 Livingston |
Street, Brooklyn and Frank X.|
Gargiulo, 203 Huntington Street, |
Brooklyn.
15th C.D.
Delegates—John J, Gilhooley, 35
Prospect Park West, Brooklyn and
Armand J. Starace, 421 Bay
Parkway, Brooklyn. Alternates—
Edmund G. Seergy, 34 Colonial
Court, Brooklyn and William T.
Conklin, 7905 Colonial Road,
Brooklyn.
16th OD, |
Delegates—Thomas G. Parisl,
1818 West 10th Street, Brooklyn
and John A. Garbarino, 586 Ocean
Terrace, Staten Island. Alternates |
—Robert T. Connor, 8080 Coven- |
try Road, Staten Island and John |
J. Marchi, 79 Nixon Avenue, Sta-
ten Island.
11th C.D.
East 85th Street, New York and
Vincent F. Albano, Jr., 350 East
30th Street, New York. Alternate:
—John E. Doyle, 10 West ésth!
Street, New York and Paul J.
Curran, 201 East 21st Street, New
York.
18th C.D.
Delegates—Harold C. Burton, 10
East 138th Street, New York and
Pasquale Cappola, 318 East 104th
Street, New York. Alternates—
Arnold Fraiman, 1225 Park Ave-
nue, New York and Daniel J.
Riesner, 920 Park Avenue, New
York.
19th C.D.
Delegates—Joseph Gimma, 800
Park Avenue, New York and Irv-
ing Kirschenbaum, 165 West 65th
Street, New York. Alternates—
Gertrude Hess Parker, 165 West
60th Street, New York and Henry
Steinberg, 575 Grand Street, New
York.
20th C.D.
Delegates—Kenneth R. Huggins,
315 West 105th Street, New York
and Lawrence S. Huntington, 895
West End Avenue, New York.
Alternates—John G. Produfit, 215
West 90th Street, New York and
Eugene McIntosh, 610 West 174th
Street, New York.
Zist C.D.
Delegates—Michael Squitieri,
1212 Grand Avenue, Bronx and
Abraham D. Levy, 1021 Grand
Concourse, Bronx. Alternates—
Samuel Winner, 888 Grand Con-
lourse, Bronx and Leon Rothberg,
1549 Wythe Place, Bronx.
22nd C.D.
Delegates — Alphonso Wyatt,
1631 Fulton Avenue, Bronx and
Phillip Myer, 1159 Boynton Aye-
nue, Bronx, Alternates—Dorothy
M. Campbell, 1440 Bronx River
Avenue, Bronx and Abraham
Eletz, 1375 Jerome Avenue, Bronx.
23rd OD.
Delegates—Willlam J. Drohan,
2985 Botanical Square, Bronx and
Pasquale E, Mele, 2934 Valen-
tine Avenue, Bronx. Alternates—
George Sweeney, 3033 Godwin
Terrace, Bronx and Henry Fergu-
|son, 2295 Andrews Avenue, Bronx.
24th C.D.
DelegatesPaul A, Fino, 1601
Metropolitan Avenue, Bronx and
A. Josepr Ribustello, 1244 Choc-
taw Place, Bronx. Alternates—
Gabrielle Gunther, 2750 Gifford
Avenue, Bronx and Frank J.
Mastantirea, 11 Oak Lane, Bronx.
23th C.D.
Delegates—Albert T. Hayduck,
ERVICE LEADER
Tuesday, July 16, 1968
148 Ramsey Avenue, Yonkers and
Marion P. Mack, 40¢ Fort Wash-
ington Avenue, Hawthorne. Al-
ternates—Marion E Siciliano, 7
Locust Street, Elmsford and
Thoma A, Collins, 162 Main Street,
Cold Spring.
26th C.D.
Delegates—Frederic B. Powers,
180 Overlook Road, New Rochelle
and Jeanne A. O'Brien, 7 Bay
Avenue, Larchmont. Alternates—
Norman M, Stone, 2 Roberta
Place, No. White Plains and Mi-
chael Roth, 92 Captains Lane,
Rye.
27th C.D.
Delegates—William E. Doulin,
318 North Montgomery Street,
Newburgh and Harold W. Cole,
Hurleyville, Alternates—Carmine
Freda, 85 River Road, Grandview-
on Hudson, Nyack and Wilbur S.
Oles, Sr., Delhi.
28th C.D.
Delegates—Ben J. Slutsky, Ne-
vele Road, Ellenville and Neal
Brandow, Route 9-W, West Cox-
sackie. Alternates—Albert S. Cal
lan, Old Chatham and Thomas A.
Johnson, Jr., Stanfordville.
29th C.D.
Delegates—Joseph C. Frangella,
New Street, Coeymans and Guy A.
Graves, 22 North Church Street,
Schenectady. Alternates—J. Pal-
mer Harcourt, 6 Cherrytree Road,
Loudonville and Telford K. Hum-
Phrey, 13 Sunnyside Road, Scotia.
30th C.D.
Delegates — William H. St.
Thomas, Strawberry Hill Road,
R.D. No. 1, Gloversville and Jo-
seph F Casey, 80 Campbell Ave-
nue, Troy. Alternates—Carl R.
DeSantis, Holly Drive, Lake
George. and John B. Knox, Lake
Pleasant.
31st C.D.
Delegates—H Douglas Barclay,
7380 Park Street, Pulaski and
Clinton W. Marsh, 762 Ball Ave-
nue, Watertown. Alternates—Ho-
ward C. Marsha, Peru and Carl
A. Shaver, R.D., Glenfield.
32nd C.D.
Delegates—Ann Johnson, Cana-
sota and John R. Tenney, 15 Slay-
tonbush Lane, Utica. Alternates—
Jim Ray Hammond, 7 Warren
Street, Mohawk and William R.
Valentine, 916 W. Thomas Street,
Rome.
33rd C.D.
Delegates—Richard F. Kuhnen,
11 Avon Road, Binghamton and
William T. Smith, If, Big Flats.
Alternates—Richard B. Thaler,
Hilleret Road, Ithaca and Nathan
Turk, 137 Main Street, Candor,
34th C.D,
Delegates—Thad L. Collum,
Marvelle Road, Fayetteville and
Thomas Elmer Bogardus, Lake~
view Drive, Fayetteville. Alter~
nates—John H. Hughes, 31
Brookford Road, Syracuse and Me.
laine A, Kreuzer, 1811 Cour:
Street, Syracuse.
35th C.D.
Delegates—Donald A, Campbell,
89 Locust Avenue, Amsterdam and
William S. Kingman, Fuller Road,
Norwich. Alternates—Charles L.
Wallis, Keuka Park and Betty W.
Wallis, Keuka Park.
36th C.D.
Delegates—Richard M. Rosen-
baum, 19 Penonville Ridge, Pen-~
field and John P. Lomenzo, 1889
Highland Avenue, Rochester. Al-
ternates—Vincent A. Palmer, Jr,
215 East Lake Road, Pultneyvills
and Rosemary M. Waterman, 4
Brown Square, Ontario.
37th C.D.
Delegates—Gordon A. Howe, 402
Beach Avenue, Rochester andi
Vincent L. Tofany, 29 Ridgecresi
Drive, Rochester. Alternates—Ed-
ward T. Cain, Fargo Road, Staf-
ford and Robert Bentley, 415
Main Street, Arcade.
38th C.D,
Delegates—Charles E. Goodell,
504 Fairmount Ave. W.E., James-
town and Thomas Waaland, 2:3
Pine Street, Corning. Alternates—
William B. Harrison, 35 Hillerest
Drive, Alfred and James E. Hasi-
ings, 63 Main Street, Allegheny.
39th C.D.
Delegates—Thomas W. Ryan,
56 Winspear Avenue, Buffalo and
Williard C. Allis, 403 Walton
Drive, Buffalo. Alternates—Johu
F. Aszkler, 6921 Old Lake Shora
Road, Buffalo and George Hend-
erson, 1 Summit Avenue, Buffalo.
40th C.D,
Delegates—Urban A. Railff, 61
Lowell Road, ‘fown of Tonawat-
da, Kenmore and Allan W. Van
De Mark, 479 Willow Street,
Lockport. Alternates—Edward A.
Dunlap, 298 Avon Road, Town of
Tonawanda and Benjamin N.
Hewitt, 5044 Woodland Drive,
Lewiston Heights.
4ist C.D.
Delegates—Edward V. Regan, |3
Oalkand Place, Buffalo, and Ja-
cob A. Latona, 639 Bust! Avenu:,
Buffalo. Alternates—Joseph F.
Binkowiski, 1881 Clinton Stree!
Buffalo and Murriel S. Davidson,
98 East Lelvan, Buffalo.
To simplify your writing, Leader readers who wish to express their feelings to
chael J. Chiusano, 115 Franklin the Convention may fill out the coupons below.
You may send this coupon to your delegate or to The Leader
Editor,
(
(
( ) Other
In addition 1 urge that you
-) Richard M. Nixon
following planks:
I urge you to vote to support the candidacy of:
) Nelson A. Rockefeller
a @ your repre’
tative on the platform committee fight for the
( ) Other
platform:
In addition, I have suggested that he fight
for the following planks in the Democratic Party
Civil Service Leader
97 Duane Street
New York, N. Y. 10007
| have written to.......
urging him to vote to support the candidacy of:
) Richard M. Nixon
) Nelson A. Rockefeller
Name
Address
(You may 6éign or not, as you wish)
Tuesday, July 16, 1968
City Police Dept. Seeks
Attys.; No Written Test
The New York City Police Department ig currently in-
terviewing applicants for assistant attorney (provisional)
on its legal staff. There is no written examination for the
position.
The duties of this position shall
include service as trial counsel in
the New York City Family Courts
and before other lower courts and
quasi-judicial bodies; preparation
of memoranda on law and other
correspondence; confer with and
guide members of the depart-
ment in connection with legal
problems; assist in the preparation
and the review of legislative pro-
Posals; digest and advise on the
implications of court decisions and
statutes on law énforcement prac-
tices and procedures; etc.
Salary starts at $9,100 per an-
num and advances to » maximum
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SERVICE & SAVINGS
CALL EV 8-0800 for the address
of your local member of the:
RETAIL PHARMACY LEAGUE
of $12,400 over a five-year period.
No less than three years’ experi-
lence subsequent to admission to
the New York State Bar is neces-
sary. There are no residence re-
quirements.
An appointment for an interview
may be made by sending a resume
to R. Harcourt Dodds, Deputy
\Commissioner, Legal Matters, 240
Centre St., New York, N.Y. 10013.
Samuel Lepler
NEW YORK—Funeral services
were held for Samuel E. Lepler,
67, a member of the State Tax
Commission, July 10 at the River-
side Chapel.
Named to the commission Feb.
associate attorney of estate tax
with the department prior to the
appointmen, He died afer a brief
illness.
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Page Sixteen
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
3 CSEA Staff Aides (Resident Engineers
Assume N
ALBANY—Two veteran
program specialist, |
John M, Carey, former field rep-
resentative for the northeastern
section of the State, is the new |
program —_ specialist replacing
Thomas J, Luposello, who ts now
fleld supervisor for the southeast-
ern area, Including New York City |
and Long Island |
The field supervisor for the}
Northern and western areas is
John D, Corcoran, Jr., former
field representative in the Long
Island region, Corcoran and Lup-
osello are ten-year veterans of
the CSEA staff, while Carey has
JOHN D. CORCORAN, JR.
been empioyed for than
five years.
Responsibilities
Carey is responsible for coor-
dinating the preparation of the
CSEA program of legislation af-
fecting both State and local gov-
ernment employees introduced as
bills each year to the State Leg-
islature. He is also involved in
wemany of the CSEA special com-
mittee pr He Is a grad-
uate of Siena College and a Navy
veteran, Carey formerly was @
hospital equipment repre-
sentative. A native of the Albany
area, he is married and the fath-
er of three children
Luposello and Corcoran are re-
sponsible cordinating the |
services rendered to members by
CSEA field representatives in|
thelr respective areas, both re-
porting directly to the head of
field services in Albany.
Luposello, also a Navy veteran,
® former field representative sery- |
ing both downstate and in the
more
ams,
sales
for
36 State Aides Named
To Internship Program
ALBANY
State employees have been
Trainees and will begin a year
In the selections,
the Governor said
“This training program 1s one |
of vital importance in the public
administration field. Through it,
we have stimulated initiative and
greater interest in developing ad-
ministrative skills among our own
State employees. In the constant
search for greater skills and ef-
ficleney in State government, this
training has been of
marked benetit to the State, and
announeiny
program
the trainces themselves have found!
members
Employees Assn. staff have assumed their duties as regional |
field supervisors while another has been named a:
Governor Rockefeller has announced that 36
r of special training,
|pation in the program.
ew Duties Maintain Demands
‘For Reclassification
of the Civil Service
ALBANY —More than 40
“resident” engineers of the
State Department of Trans-
portation met here recently to
consider action on their CSEA-
sponsored demand for a reclassi-
fication to grade 27
retirement plan and several
ciate
Albany area before becoming |
gram specialist. Currently a re-
sident of Peekskill, he is a native
of the Westchester area. Luposello
holds a bachelor’s degree from
Florida Southern University and is|
Rockland
HS Classes
(Continued from Page 1)
The group composed of en-
gineers from throughout the State,
and amounting to more than two-
thirds of those in the position,
conferred with John W. Ray- | Pants.
mond, a DOT representative on| CSEA mental hygiene chapter
CSEA’s board of directors, and| Presidents have been asked to
Willlam L. Blom, CSEA director | form committees at their institu-
of research. tions whose members would con-
| tact any interested workers and
receive applications for the pro-
Raymond summarized a history
of their apepal, informing them |
of the results of his last meet-
ing with DOT officials. He noted
that the department wished to
break the group into a three-
tlered ttle structure, with some
engineers remaining at grade 23,
and others promoted to grade 25
and grade 27. He described some
of the difficulties a plan of this
type would ental, especially in
terms of chain of command, and
the allotment of assistants,
The Rockland CSEA chapter
|not only helped in setting up the
program but convinced the insti-
tution director to grant an hour
off for each hour of personal time
used by the employee toward the
course.
CSEA officials are optimistic
that this policy could be imple-
mented by directors in the other
institutions. The State Depart-
men of Education paid the salary
of the instructors at Rockland
and Wassaic,
A mental hygiene Education
Bureau spokesman said the “par-
ticipation of CSEA in this project
would be most helpful. It is up to
the employees to provide the im-
petus for the program.”
The department spokesman said
that institution personnel direc-
tors are being informed of the
Program’s availability by the
| Bureau of Education and Train-
ing. In the coming weeks, the
spokesman said, the personnel
heads will receive preliminary
guidelines as to how to begin
the program and then will be
called in for a meeting to finalize
a:
THOMAS J. LUPOSELLO
working on nis master’s degree
in public administration at New
York University.
Corcoran, a native of the Al-
bany area, services Nassau and
Suffolk Counties for a number
Blom went on to explain the|
effects of the CSEA-sponsored |
appeal, and discussion folowed.
Later, Raymond called for a vote, |
and the engineers unanimously |
chose to remain firm in their
demand for the grade 27. Ray-
mond promised them that he
would continue to press for fay-
orable action by the State.
C. Julian Parrish
A ‘Human Dynamo’,
Directs New EOU
ALBANY—The State Civil
Service Department has put
\ spotlight on C, Julian Par-
hh, the veteran State em-
ployee who now serves as director
of the State’s new Equal Oppor-
tunity Unit.
In a profile printed in the de-
| partment’s personnel newspaper,
jh is referred to as a “hum-
sent post. A Marine veteran, Cot-| an dynamo,” who is able “to cram
coran is a graduate of Siena Col-| more activity into one day than
lege and has done graduate work! most men find time for in a
in management at Hofstra Unt-| woop»
versity. He 4s a former sales rep-
vesentative for the R. H. Donnelly! Partish recently, the paper
RAV ePtis na tpoencata noted, was “putting the finishing
touches on the exhaustive ‘Ethnic
Survey’ of employees in State
government, conducted by his
unit, in the midst of coordinating
the Albany area job fair and
planning for a seminar on fair
testing.”
Up Misunde
\N
JOHN M. CAREY
of years berore assuming his pre-| par
: g his pre-| parr
(From Leader
BUFFALO—Grumbles tur)
Civil Service Employee Assn.
The contract, approved early in
July, meant wage increases rang-
Ing from $650 to $2,300 a year
for more than 600 white collar
worekrs represented by the Buf-
{alo Competitive unit, Erie CSEA
chapter,
Despite the pay hike, unit mem-
bers were alarmed because the
In private life, Parrish is a contract eliminated one month of
serious musician, covering a Shorter summer hours, Previously,
career as a composer, arranger,| Most persons on duty in Buffalo
choral director, pianist and vio-|City Hall worked from 8:30 a.m,
lnist. to 4 pm. from July 1 through
at Oct. 31,
|part with Public Administration| Under the contract now in ef-
“One indication of its value, |Interns in Institutes on New York | fect,
both to the State and to the pub-|State and local government ad-|
lic is the competition for partlel- | ministration, personnel adminis-| July through September.
|tration and financial administra-| Before the contract, City work-
“This year, 12 State employees|tlon. They will also receive spe-|ers had 13 pald holldays a year.
were nominated by more than 30|clal training within their own de- | Now they will get 11.
State agencies on the basis of |partments and agencies. Gdulg Explains
work performance, potential for] During the training year, the} But Henry Gdula, the CSEA
administrative skills and ability )employees selected will continue |regional representative, explained
to profit from intensive training.” |in thelr regular job titles and |that the contract will give workers
The 36 persons chosen will take | salaries. a net gain of two hours a year
selected as State Employee
thelr service to the State more
rewarding.
the shorter summer hours
apply only for three months, from
Tonia, Tay 4 16
Greece School Unit
Ratifies New Contract
ROCHESTER—A seven percent pay increase, the 1/60th
fringe benefits were won this
week by the Civil Service Employees Assn. in negotiations
with the Town of Greece Central School District.
“Certain clarifications remain,”
however, said Burton G. Thomp-
son, president of the Greece unit
of the Monroe County chapter of
the CSEA, Thompson is the dis-
trict's chief maintenance man.
The one-year contract, ratified
almost unanimously by the 150
CSEA members who attended a
meeting June 15 at the Hoover
School, also calls for an impar-
tial study of job specifications
and wage structures over the
next year,
| Regularly-scheduled bus driv-
jers, under the contract, will re~
\celve such fringe benefits as four
weeks of vacation after 15 years
of service, sick time and personal
days off, They must be drivers
who work at least 30 hours a
| week,
| Cafeteria workers who work
|full-days for the 190-day school
year will receive six paid holidays
under the contract,
The contract covers 400 district
employees, 230 of whom are CSEA
|members. Thompson said a” .ve
| will begin soon to envvil 100
more members,
Although the unit has been In
existence for six years, it did not
[receive rull recognition under the
|Taylor Law until until Feb. 14.
) Members of the unit drive the
buses, run the cafeterias and keep
up the buildings and grounds
\for the Greece Central School
District.
plans for the courses.
Dr. Theodore C. Wenzl, CSEA
president, praised the program,
noting that the courses “will
benefit the employee, the employ-
er and the patient.
Buffalo And CSEA Clear
rstandings
On A New City Contract
Correspondent)
ned to cheers last week after
representatives cleared away
misunderstandings about a Taylor Law contract between the
City of Buffalo and a CSEA group.
because it stipulates five days of
personal leave and five days of
bereavement leave.
He also said that the agreement
“balances benefits” for all em-
ployees covered by the unit,
The shorter summer work week,
he said, applied only to workers
who happened to be located in
City Hall, and now it applies to
everyone in the unit. Over a year,
he said, it would mean about 2!
hours in additional paid time off
for some workers.
And other CSEA representatives
Jexplained that all benefits now
are binding in a legal contract.
Applause
“Before we had a contrac’
one official said, “the benefits
could be taken away at any time.”
About 150 CSEA members al-
tended the “clarification” mee!
ing in City Hall. They applanded
Gdula and unit president Josep
ly, Drago at the end of the sessiot