Civil Service Leader, 1973 May 15

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EADER

America’s Largest Newspaper for Public Employees

Vol. XXXIV, No. 7

Tuesday, May 15, 1973

Price 15 Cents

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— See Pages 8 & 9

Suit To Challenge
Penalties Imposed
Under Taylor Law

ALBANY — Plans to push
its constitutionality chal-
lenge against the individual
penalties provision of the
Taylor Law to the United States
Supreme Court were announced
by the Civil Service Employees
Assn. last week, following a
meeting of CSEA’s Board of Di-
rectors.

‘The move to apply for a hear-
ing before the top federal court
followed the recent dismissal by
the State Court of Appeals of
CSEA's charge that the Taylor
Law violates a public employee's
constitutional rights when it pen-
alizes him for striking prior to
granting him a hearing.

The case stemmed primarily
from the imposition by the State
of monetary fines and loss of
tenure on several thousand
state workers accused of strik-
ing on Easter weekend of 1972.

When these penalties were ex-
acted on employees without bene-
fit of a prior hearing, CSEA con-
tended that they were being de-
prived of property without due
process of law, which is contrary
to both the State and Federal
Constitutions.

In announcing plans to pur-
sue the case, a CSEA official said
the union considers the matter
“sufficiently important to thou-
sands of public employees in
New York State and elsewhere
to warrant exposure to as much
Jegal thinking as possible.”

SUNY Albany Meeting

ALBANY ‘The SUNY at A
bany chapter of the Civil Ser-
vice Employees Assn. annual
membership meeting will be held

May 18 here at 5:30 pm. at the
Northway Inn, Central Ave, and
Colonie.

on?” ;
—_—
Repeat This!
For 1976
Both Dems & GOP
Shaping Up For
President Race
A are ripped off from the

daily calendar, the battle
lines are being drawn among
both Republicans and Democrats
for the Presidential elections of
(Continued on Page 6)

the pace that pa

udghan eases se

0 2

papas

SIGN ONONDAGA PACT — John H. Muiroy, Onondaga
County Executive, signs the hard-won labor contract between the
County and the Onondaga chapter of the Civil Service Employees
Assn, Contract negotiations, which began Aug. 23, 1972, reached
an impasse in December, A mediator and fact-finder were later
brought In, and in February an agreement was ratified by the
members and approved by the County Legislature in March. Wit-
nessing the signing are, from left, Gerald Roseman, chairman of the
Onondaga chapter negotiations team; Harmon Swits, CSEA collec-
tive bargaining specialist, and Andrew H. Placito, Sr., president of

Onondaga chapter,

For Social Workers

CSEA Victor In Suit

Forcing Differential
Pay In Westchester

ALBANY — After seven years of litigation, numerous
Appeals and court appearances, the Civil Service Employees

Assn., acting as intervenors

on behalf of involved CSEA

members, has apparently won a Supreme Court Appellate

Division decision in an action
brought by Louis P. Kurtis, com-
missioner of Social Services of
Westchester County, against
George K. Wyman, commis:
er of the State Department of
Social Services, in which the
State's right to reject an alter-
nate pay plan was upheld.

Tn 1965, state legislators en-
acted a law mandating percent-
age increases in salaries for so-
cial workers having graduate
training. The law called for a
10 percent increase for one year
of graduate study, 20 percent for
two years

The Jaw said that county so-
cial welfare departments could
submit a plan to the State Social
Services Department, in lieu of
the percentage mandate, to be-
come operative if determined to
be “satisfactory to achleye the
objective of such section” (the
retaining of qualified personnel)

In 1966, Westchester County
did not implement the mandated
pemwentage increases, but did
submit an alternate plan which
gave a $300 increase for one
year of graduate study and $600
for two years,

The State had not approved
this plan and members of CS-
EA, employed by Westchester
County as social workers at that
time, complained to CSEA con-

cerning this situation

A long court battle follow-
ed, with Westchester County
challenging the State's right to
reject the County's alternate
plan, CSEA entered the battle to
defend the rights of the CSEA
members involved.

The latest decision finds that
the state commissioner did have
(Continued on Page 3)

Approve 2 Regional Sites.

ALBANY — Regional sites for
offices to serve Region 3 (South.
erm) and Region 6 (Western)
were approved by the Board of

Directors of the Civil Service
Employees Assn. last week, as
steps toward a restructured
CSEA.

Headquarters for the South-
ern Region will be located on
Route 9 in Fishkill, and head-

quarters for the Western Region
will be in Buffalo, Presentations
to the Board were made by pres-
idents of the currently consti-
tuted conferences now serving
those regions: Southern Confer-
ence president Nicholas Puzai-
ferri and Western Conference
president Samuel Grossfield,
‘These local offices will be stafl~

CSEA Membership

Gives A

n OK To

New Work Pact

ALBANY — Rank-and-file members of the Civil Service

Employees Assn, who work

for the state have ratified a

three-year work contract between CSEA and the State of

New York,

The pact, which will be retro-

active to April 1, 1973, and ex-
tend through March 1976, covers
130,000 employees and is high-
lighted by a 12 percent pay raise
over the first two years, with a
contract reopener for salaries and
some fringe benefits In the third
year,
The contract also provides a
continuation of existing pension
benefits for present employees,
with some modifications in the
retirement arrangement for peo-
ple coming to work after this
June 30,

Under New York State's Tay-
lor Law, which governs collec-
tive bargaining for public em-
ployees, the contract must now
await passage of implementing
laws by the Legislature before go-
ing into effect.

Voting was conducted by mail
ballot over the past two weeks,
shortly after the tentative agree-
ment was reached between CSEA
negotiating teams and represent-
atives from the State's Office of
Employee Relations, According to
Bernard C, Schmahl, of Albany,
chairman of a CSEA special com-
mittee which handled the vote
count, balloting showed solid
support in all four state negoti-
ating units represented by CSEA

Institutional, Administrative,
Professional-Scientific-Technical
and Operational Services.

Schmah! also said that the
total return was well above aver-
age for a mail vote, “With more
than 60 percent of the ballots
returned, the results from rank-
and-file members. in the four
bargaining units indicate that

ed by various specialists serv-
ing the particular needs of their
regions. This will include field
staff and public relations per-
sonnel. All six regions will be
similarly aligned.

Two more major steps on the
road to restructuring were taken
when the Board authorized the
hiring of a comptroller for the
Association, and the creation of
@ single post combining duties
of a labor relations director and
A personnel director,

A, Victor Costa, CSEA sec-
ond vice-president who las
served as chairman of the re-
structuring committee, hailed the
Board action as “very impor-
tant, a ble step in the history
of CSEA,”

they are substantially in favor
of the terms of the three-year
agreement,” Schmahl noted.

CSEA president Theodore C.
Wenzl, head of the state’s largest
public employee union, referred
to the contract approval as “a
definite vote of confidence for
our union.”

SEA sends ratification bal-
lots on union contracts only to
its members in the negotiating
units affected. Each member re-
celves a contract summary of the
newly negotiated items and a
secret ballot with return en-
velope.

Union Membership
Ban To Be Fought
In Federal Court

ALBANY — The Board of
Directors of the Civil Ser-
vice Employees Assn, voted at
the May 9 meeting In Albany
to appeal the State Court of Ap-
peal's decision on management/
confidential employees to the
United States Supreme Court.

In connection with its appli-
cation to be heard in the na-
tion's highest tribunal, CSEA
will also seek legal stay which
would defer any administrative
implementation of the matter
pending disposition of the court
appeal

The State Supreme Court has *
ruled that, as of July 16, those
employees designated as “man-
agement/confidential” by the
State do not have the right
to maintain membership in CS-
EA or any other public employee
union

Tt was explained at the Board
meeting, that under the ruling
there would be no legal way for
CSEA to represent those people
who fall under the management/
confidential classification. It was
specifically brought out that
even direct payment of dues to
CSEA would not be allowed,

According to a CSEA spokes-
man, “This means that we would
not be able to protect these em~
ployees with legal representation
and insurance benefits as we
have in the past.”

A Washington, D.C., law firm
will be hired to handle the ap-
peal
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, May 15, 1973

In your column you men-
tioned the father-son tradi-
tion carried on in the Fire
Department and I would just
like to add another one

My = husband, William G
Nagle, was promoted to Captain and mother.
(you may know him from Com- Sincerely yours,
munity Relations or L. 125 in Marie Nagle.
Jamaica) and we are keeping LAS MOK REND
up the tradition with two sons
in the Department also. William
G. Jr. is in 26-2 and Steven is

a picture taken
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Name

Address

City Zip.

Phone No

r---"-"

: in 119-Tower Ladder in Brook-
lyn. William Jr. received the
Henry D. Brookman award last
Awards Day ceremony. We were
all at the ceremony and had
with Chief

Thank you from a proud wife

Thanks for your nice letter
Mrs, Nagle. That kind of letter
tickles me because it is the

d

rd, Jamaicn, N.Y. 11435 om |
I

4

1

I

4

kind of pride which you express
as a wife and mother which in-
dicates the special kind of pride
which we all feel about firefight-
ers. You have every reason to
be proud and I'm delighted that
you elected to share {t with my
readers and me, Good luck to
you and to your fine family of
firefighters. God bless you all.

This column has had several
calls from firefighters who were
part of the first alarm in
Brownsville where the six per-
sons were burned to death on
Monday, May 7th. It seems that
@ woman was seen standing in
the top floor window and one
of the troops from 120 truck
threw up a portable ladder and
went after her. Meanwhile she
ran from the window and he
had to go in after her. He
found her lying on the floor
quite a ways into the apartment
and had to drag her to the win-
dow sill. As he got her there,
the room exploded into fire and
he had to dive out on to the
ladder or burn to death in his
effort to save her. There were
two other persons later found on
the top floor who were in such
@ position that firefighters feel
they too could have been saved
if only they had had a third
due engine on the scene to wash
the top floor window and hold the
fire back just a few seconds to
give the tigers a chance to get
to the victims. I don't feel I
am stirring up a distasteful sub-
Ject because the feelings of the
men have already been register-
ed with their union represent-
atives and top brass will even-
tualy hear about it from that
souree.

An iffy situation has also come
up, which, according to the
phone calls I am receiving, cov-
ers a subject which is becoming
more and more widespread
throughout the city. I speak of
police radio cars arriving at
fires in droves and the mem-
bers of these cars being found in
the fire buildings attempting
rescues long before the arrival
of the apparatus.

In the Brownsville matter Box
2109, three blocks from the fire,
was received and sent out at
0239 am, It was then of such
Proportions that it could be seen
that distance from the fire. Yet,
according to published reports,
& police radio car discovered the
fire and “turned in” the alarm.
A citizen living across from the
fire building said she called 911.

Buy your
Watches, Diamonds and
at Whole

Prices

Jewelry

MOND

IRVING ERDMAN, INC.
86 BOWERY
N.Y.C., N.Y, 10013
Tel: (212) 925-6340

According to the records, the
Brooklyn dispatcher received a
call from 911 at 0240 am. one
minute after the box, three
blocks distant, was received. Tt
was the only box pulled for the
fire. Suggest that the Pire De-
partment interview Rosya A.
May, who, in a TV interview,
had an interesting story to tell
about the police angle.

At Box 2338 in the Bronx (858
Hewitt Place) when 42 Truck
pulled up, two radio cars were
blocking their way to the fire
building and when Lt. Charles
Moran, Fireman Santangelo and
Fireman James Ginty got to the
fire floor (Sth) they found a
policeman from one of the cars
soaking his coat In a pail of
water preparing to enter the
burning apartment for a rescue
attempt. As it turned out, flames
were licking out from under the
door and Santangelo, with the
can, had to beat down the fire
so Lt. Moran and Jim Ginty
could flop and crawl down a
20 foot hallway past the fire
to search and rescue a pair of
two-year-old twins. Each fire-
fighter covered the child with
his turnout and then beat it
back past the fire, getting burn-
ed in the process, Santangelo re-
ceived burns of the neck and
Ginty got it on the nose plus a
good feed of smoke. All stayed
with the twins, got them to the
hospital and then had to be treat-
ed themselves.

Next Medal Day, Lt. Moran
will receive his fourth medal
He had received 11 citations
and is in line for a medal next
year for another heroic act. That
does not include the one describ-
ed above,

Last week at about 8 am. 26
Truck, commanded by Captain
John O’Reagan, was picked up
on the air and sent to a 7-5 at
Madison Ave, and 115th St, Sec-
ond due, they went above the
fire and looking across a shaft
and saw six people ready to
jump, Their doors were closed
but the fire was roaring in the
hallway just outside and they
couldn't live in the smoke, Cap-
tain O'Reagan had Firemen Tom
Seaman and Frank Bernard with
him. Without giving any thought
to the possible consequences,
he had the two tigers hold on to
his left leg and with one monu-
mental step, straddled the five-
foot shaft, The woman and three
kids in the opposite window
were hysterical and still determ-
ined to jump, They had to be
calmed first. After that, the
Captain took the youngest first
and while he straddied five-and-
a-half feet from ledge to ledge,
swung them over to Seaman and
Bernard, The last kid was 10
and heavy. Then a personal rope
came down from the roof and
he quickly snapped it around
the woman and half lifted and
half swung her over the shaft
to safety,

In another window were two

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men and they were really ready
to go. Only French doors separ-
ted them from the fire and the
glass was starting to melt,
O'Reagan now had to reverse his
Position to get to the men who
were in the next window, By this
tume antoher personal rope was
on its way down from the roof.
One man was so hysterical and
was so intent on jumping that
the good captain had to give
him a slight slap to bring him to
his senses. He got them across
the shaft just as the fire burst
into the room and blew.

Last Saturday Captain John
O'Reagan married Marguerite
Bern, former supervising regis-
tered nurse at St, Vincent's Hos-
pital. A little advice to you Mrs
O’Reagan; Never let John know
that you are worried about him
even though you will worry like
crazy, All firemen's wives do,
Also, don't ever try to change
him where firefighting is con-
cerned. He was born to be a good
fireman and a good fireman he
will always be. The utmost hap-
piness to you both and con-
gratulations.

30 Retirements

The Fire Dept. has announced
the retirement of 30 of its mem-
bers, effective between March 30
and July 23. Those retiring are

Deputy Chief William Brad-
ley.

Captains John J. Hogan, Ed-
ward T. Dunne, John P. Begley
B. Paul Crifasi, Franklin J
Smith

Lieutenants Walter G. Petro-
vitz, James H, Mayers, Norbert
I. Timmons, James P. Peerick
Ellis R, Crapper, John Pizzo,
Francis A. Chapleau, Attilio A,
Gallo.

Firemen First Grade William
H. Warnecke, Richard H. Kofod,
George W. Krause, Algerio Mul-
aradelis, John J, Bryson, Fred-
erick W. Rabuse, Harry J. Best-
mann, Benjamin H. Fay, Bene-
dict P. Barry, Joseph Baldassar-
re, Edward G. Collins, George F.
Braue, John C. Keeler, Edward
T. Lukasiewicz, Clifford C Mar-
sin, Joseph G. Knight

NYC HRA Cop
Cited By AFP

Lieutenant Anthony Bella,
training commander of the New
York City Welfare Police (Hu-
man Resources Administration),
received national recognition last
week, He was cited by the Amer-
ican Federation of Police in Mia-
mi, Florida, for his “exemplary
duty and untiring efforts to pro-
fessionalize the training of his
force and to academically raise
the standards of law enforce-
ment officers everywhere.”

Lt. Bella, of Brooklyn, was
awarded the Commendation
Award by Colonel Robert Fer-
guson, president of the AFP, a
fraternal organization of 30,000
law enforcement officers.

A Pint Of Prevention...
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Call UN 1-7200

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
America’s Lew ly
For Public

1 Warren S, N.Y, NY. 10007
Business and Edisorial Office:

11 Warren St, N.Y, N.Y, 1000

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Permanent Status Won

For Mental Hygiene
Aides In EEA Jobs

ALBANY — Recent labor-management negotiations be-
tween the Civil Service Employees Assn. and the State's
Department of Mental Hygiene have resulted in “significant
changes to the Emergency Employment Act implementation

Nominating Committee |
Named As CSEA Readies
For Officer Elections

ALBANY — The Board of Directors of the Civil Service Employees Assn. has an-
nounced their selection of a nominating committee that will choose candidates for the
union's general statewide officer elections scheduled for this summer.

The nomination committee selection, made at the general Board meeting held

procedures,” according to a CSEA sai fiat: Week as pine
committee spokesman, “which the failure of Congressional leg- sta) % .

4 Pp in CSEA's 1973 statewide wilt shape destiny of CSEA." Candidates’ nominations m
mandates, among other things, {slation to appropriate funds for election process which will in- ie pic pals rg ndidates’ nominations must

that employees currently on the
preferred list and temporarily
filling EEA positions be made
permanent.”

. e have been employed. The majori- retary and a treasurer, and state during CSEA’s annual meeting, 24, 1973 (85 days before the
Pe opsie fmPlovecs that were ia¢ ty of the items are assistant executive committee members. Sept. 16-20, 1973. “These are’ annual meeting). Regions will
mass cutback were placed on a therapy aides. President Nixon The nominating committee is tentative annual meeting dates,” also elect their own slate of of-
preferred list, to be hired back has suggested that the program composed of nine members from Schmah] stressed, “which are ficers as part of the statewide |
ab: postuons kadken. debs run until June 30, 1974, to be the union's State Division, four subject to change, but for the process. They will be responst-

the second year of the program.

Out of 1,100 job items allotted
to Mental Hygiene, 500 of 700

phased out by attrition. “Because

clude balloting on a president,
an executive vice-president, six
regional vice-presidents, a sec-

members from its County Di-

ficers and members of the State
Executive Committee will take
office, according to Schmahl.

be reviewed by the nominating
committee with sufficient time
to submit the final election slate
to the CSEA secretary by June

purposes of conducting an elec- ble for nominating their slates,
Rep dlarcbingri as aa of this,” according to Guild, “as vision and two past presidents of tion we must back schedule all and in addition their elected
ment meeting with the Depart- EEA {tems become vacant, they the organization. They are: constitutionally mandated dead- president will serve as a state-
aan tc. there individuatz Will not be filled, thus phasing (State Division) Timothy J. Me- lines from the first business ses- wide vice-president,

whose names still appear on the
preferred list and are filling

out the program by natural at-
trition.”

Inerney, Floyd Peashey, Anna
Bessette, Salvatore Butero, Ed-
ward Dudek, Julia Duffy, Al-

sion of the annual meeting,
which in this case Is Sept. 17,
1973.""

Nominations for the regional
elected positions will follow the

EEA positions are to be made CSEA, acting on behalf of same pattern and adhere to the
permanent. those employees currently filling bert J- Varacchi, James T, Welch, CSEA’s constitution calls for same qualifications as the state-
‘According to Robert Guild, EEA positions, filed to have all Vito Dandreano; (County Divi- two candidates for each state- wide positions. Nominations must
CSEA negotiator, “Most em. EEA workers, regardless of pre- om) Joseph Lazarony, Thomas wide office. Those running for be received by CSEA's nominal
ployees should have already been ferred list status, advanced to Kennedy, Harold DeGraff, Jean election must be members in ing committee on or before June
made permanent, but those who Permanent status by October [ivermore; (Past Presidents) good standing on or before June 22, 1973. “Regional nominating
are still to receive permanent ap- 1973. This move was accepted by John A. Cromic; Beulah Bailey 1, 1972, The same election quall- committees should meet and re-
pointment should contact me the department and, dependent Thull fications apply to candidates for port to thelr conference on their
here at CSEA headquarters for 0n individual employee perform- Bernard Schmahi, chairman of the State Executive Committee (Continued on Page 16)

a follow-up check.

Other Changes

ance rating, according to Guild,
“will protect incumbents in EEA

positions, assuring them perman-

CSEA's regularly scheduled (Continued on Page 14)

labor-management meeting with

CSEA’s special elections com-
mittee, is slated to appear at
the nominating committee's first
meeting, set for May 15 at 3
p.m., to explain new election pro-

Plan June

Workshop

turned up other = cedures mandated by recent re-
ihe Emergency Westohester Vielory —Structurine ‘commitice ‘changes Fo r C oun ty De legates

Employment Act program, direct- In addition, Schmah! will out-

ed by President Nixon's halt (Continued from Page 1) line the manner in which the
on program funding set, for neha ae ioe eisees election is to be conducted. ALBANY—A Civil Service Employees Assn. county dele-
30, 1974. naineartty art Sines ca. Schmahl said, "Any member gates’ workshop will be held on June 3, 4 and 5 at the Friar
August 1 is ips a akan aan can recommend to the nominat- Tuck Inn, Catskill, according to Joseph Lazarony, chairman

bi s ee ee “a py eis ee Seren committee a candidate for of CSEA’s County Division

mane — 2. eens tewide office for the State Registration will take place 1:30 p.m, there will be a meeting

ecutive Committee.” He ask-

from 4 to 8 pm. on June 3,

of the County Executive Com-

[ ed that such names be submitted in the main lobby. From 4:30 to mittee with CSEA president
rap) 1) to the nominating committee. § pm, a panel discussion will Theodore C. Wenzl presiding
| a en ar care of b jseoaeboss 33° be held on the various CSEA in- Chapter treasurers and civil ser-
Elk St lew York, 85 surance plans, with CSEA execu- vice workshops will take place

_— — _ soon as possible. Mail received

Information for the Calendar may be submitted directly

to THE LEADER. It should include the date, time, place,
address and city for the function.

17-18—Combined Chapter of Armory Employees: |! East Avenue
Rochester
5:30

sip meeting

Country Club

er-dance meeting and in
ty and social services units
7:30. p.m town,
18-19—Mental hop: F k Inn, Cairo
19—SUNY at C dinner-da 6 p.m. VFW Hall,
Main St.
ution and by-laws committee meet
trict Conference meeting: 5:30 p.m., Italien Bene.
lent Society Hall, Exchange St., Colonie.

21—Binghamton Ares Retirees chapter meeting: 2 p.m., American
egion Post 80, 76 Main St, Binghamton,

at CSEA addressed to the “Nom-
ing Committee" will be trans-
mitted to the committee unopen-
ed.

Important Election

elect the most able and capable
persons to these positions. Those
elected will be called upon, even
more so than in the past, to par-
ticipate in making decisions that

tive director Joseph Lochner as
moderator

On Monday, June 4, registra-
tion will continue from 9 a.m. to
12:30 p.m. At 9:30 a.m., meet-
ings coordinated by CSEA col-

the special social services com-
mittee with Patrick Monachino
as coordinator, and by the ad
hoc probation committee with
Nels Carlson as coordinator, At

at 2pm. A complimentary cock-
tail party will be held at 6 p.m.
followed by the banquet.

‘The agenda for Tuesday, June
5, calls for a general delegate
ion at 10 am. a meeting of

ses

| ting Sehmaht the impor- lective negotiating specialists will ‘the State Executive Committee

chapter meeting. tance of this CSBA eleotion and be held: the special non-teach- at 11 a.m, and a meeting of the
t officer election: 6 said, "Now as never before, it is ing school district committee statewide Board of Directors with

yn imperative that CSEA members with Danny Jinks as coordinator, Dr. Wenz! presiding at 1:30 p.m.

Joseph J, Dolan, CSEA direc-
tor of local government affairs,
predicted that ‘this workshop
will be an important one for all
CSEA county representatives,”

State chapter meeting: 8 p.m. Mt, Morris Vet's Club,
ite
District Armory Employees chapter meeting and elec
officers: 10 a.m., Guilderland Rifle Range. Guilderland.
28-30-—New York City chapter workshop: Concord Hotel, Kiamesha
Lake.
29—Statewide Personnel Committee meeting.
30—Metropolitan Armories chapter general meeting: 2 p.m., 42nd
S&T Armory, 1579 Bedford Ave.. Brooklyn
June
1—Dutchess-Putnam Area Retirees organizational meeting: | p.m.
Hudson River State Hospital Boathouse, Poughkeepsie. CRAIG STATE OFFICERS — installed as officers for Craig State School chapter of the Civil
!—Motor Vehicles chapter installation: 6:30 p.m., Herbert's Res- Service Employees Assn. are, from left, president Charles Peritore, alternate delegate Lyn Boyer, second
taurant, Albany vice-president George Delong; delegate Della Mae Smith, first vice-president Edna Carney, secretary
1.2—Western Conference meeting: Statler-Hilton Hotel, Buffalo

eR rune Be SS ML RNIN,

Margaret Townsend, Mental Hygiene alternate delegate Geraldine Bennett, Mental Hygiene delegate

Elleen Cole and treasurer Evelyn Brown,

ey “Aepsony “YadVAT SOIAUGS IAD

€L61 “ST

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, May 15, 1973

2 >

“Attention
all New York State employees-

, Blue Cross Statewide
insurance plan’ covets

® Rehabilitation

Medicine at “Briinswick.
Hospitaj Center

in beautiful new buildings with expert resident staffs

An individual treatment program is carefully established
by our Physiatrists (physician specialists) in physical
medicine. It is implemented by a team of rehabilitantion
professionals including nurses, physical, occupational
recreational and speech therapists, psychologists and
social service counselors.

The Hydrotherapy Department includes a therapeutic
Swimming pool, Hubbard tanks, and whirlpools; the
Physio-therapy Department administers electro-thermo
treatments and massage in private treatment areas and
therapeutic exercise in a professionally equipped gym-
nasium. The patient who is chronically it can also receive
special care in this facility.
Joseph J. Panzarella, Jr., M.D.
Medical Director

Mental Health

Most effective is the teamwork approach of psychiat-
tists, nurses, psychologists, social workers, occupational
and recreational therapists. All modalities of psychiatric
treatment ar lable—individual and group psycho-
therapy, hypn
and supplemental
and spacious socialization areas immedi
modern therapeutic approach to the care of the mental-
ly and emotionally ill, the drug and alcohol addicted
and those in need of custodial care.
Philip Goldberg, M.D.
Medical Director

Most major medical insurance plans, the Blue Crost Statewide Plan (VY. or Pa, certificate numbers)
tor of New York State, local subdivisions of New York State and appropriate participat-
™ and Medicare are applicable at these Divisions of this fully accredited Hospital Center, CB, ck

A color brochure will be sent upon request or call $000 .
mnaien $27 Pronies Nenobdiiones eee Other divisions: General Hospital + Nursing Home
slendion 200 fr Mental Hes. 966 Brosdwoy. Amityville, L, New York 11701 # 516-264-5000

L Hospitaj Cen

This Week's City Eligible Lists

EXAM 2095
HOUSING INSPECTOR

‘This lst of 137 eligibles was
established May 9. Of the 645
who filed during October, 643
appeared for the Dec, 9 written
exam. Salary is $10,000,

No. 1 — 96.0%

1 Albert O Torjesen, Thomas
P Corrigan, John Nicholas, Al-
len D Stein, Andrew T Mullane,
Edward Mazur, Anthony M
Fleres, Martin Steele, George
Schweitzer, Murray L Linker,
Anthony J Cotroneo, Ronald H
Silvers, Henry P O'Connell Sr,
Robert V Fournier, Edward PF
oohig, Nicholas Pellegrino, Paul

Valentino, Frank V Timpan-
aro, Albert Tedeschi, Joseph
Daly.

No, 21 — 85.0%

21 Wiliam M Montague, Jos-
eph 5 Caruso, Philip A Rosati,
Henry T Riehl, Patrick J Gil-
heany, George Denigris, Prank
V Sardi, Frank Lucido, Robert
W Vanalphen, Sylvester Smith,
Vincent R Cercone, Bjame R
Andreassen, Kenneth D Dunne,
Robert Sohne, James Davies Jr,
Martin J Squitieri, Gustav Helf-
mann, Louls Spamer Jr, Renard
J Lombardi, Gabriel Ceniglio.

No, 41 — 83.0%

41 Paul T Delisi, Angelo J
Fratlanni, Antonio J Amato,
Paul H Roseburg, Michael A Pa-
nico, Joseph M Talarek, John
P Munz, Henry L Sacripante,
Constantin Spatafora, Harold A
Williams, Daniel Lettieri, Mic-
hael A Preto, John J Kennedy,
Kenneth Ciaramello, Roland
Glick, Gasper J Tesoriere, Prank
Margolis, John D Curran, Rudolf
W Nanke, Patrick J Ormond.

No. 61 — 80.0%

61 Herman Oelkers, Anthony
G Vecchia, Rosario S Fichera,
Harold Meltzer, Kenneth J Caso,
Charles Burke, Valentine Gorec-
my, Louis Cicalese, Harry Ka-
rov, Nicholas ‘A Terardi, Andrew
F Duffy, Robert Liberatore, John
A Zizzo, Fred Altomonte, Alfred
R Arab, Henry Armendinger,
Kevin P McCann, Anthony Epi-
fanio, Daniel A Terribile, Ed-
mund N Caviasco,

No. 81 — 78.0%

81 James R Statler, Gerard J
Ogara, Robert B Bougades,
Francis X Pink Jr, Samuel J Ru-
tigllano, Nat Muroff, James A
Taylor, Sewell J Harrison, Louis
Cascio, Herbert Pilgrim, Pas-
quale Giovanniello, Joseph J
Padovano, Burton D Stobsky,
John J Fasano, Frank J Mallia,
Joseph Richerme, George E Ci-
mist, Frank J Inserra, Richard
Greco, Simon Jacas,

No, 101 — 75.0%

101 Joseph Santucel, Carmine
A Carriero, Prank Lentini, Mario
M Raimondi, Alexander Grillott!,
Philip C Messina, David Wat-
nick, Peter C Stasio, William

McBride, William F Chance, Abe
Levy, Mac Cooper, Patty Medure,
Joseph V Codeghin!, Joseph A
Jones, Marvin W Burch, Carl
Green, Paul Denardo, John La-
barbera, Fred N Parrotta.

No, 121 — 73.0%

121 Robert Lee, Andre F Boe-
tius, Thomas A Steccato, Felice
A Ditomasso, Barnet A Epsteln,
Bruce A Byrd, Ernest F Chris-
tiano, James J Gallagher, An-
thony Cella Jr, Harold Taylor,
Moe Herman, Rosario Zafonte,
Miguel A Feliciano, Arthur P
Fleming, James J Masella, John
D Muller, Louis A Persico.

EXAM 1098
SENIOR HUMAN RESOURCES
TECHNICIAN — MANPOWER
DELY & TRAINING

This list of 31 eligibles, estab-
lished May 9, resulted from the
Aug. 16, 1972 written exam. Of
the 180 candidates who filed for
the exam, 104 appeared. Salary
is $7,900.

No. l — 88.6%

1 Paula Ramos, Martin P Le-
vine, Marlene Dreifach, Morris
Roth, Jose M Nunez, Bernice O
Cox, Salvatore Eretto, Maria E
Cortes, Norma D Stephens, Ben-
jamin T Perry, Gertrude H Wil-
Iams, Linda C Nelson, Dolores J
Harvin, I V Crenshaw, Alma C
Hall, Frances D Suddreth, Eve-

lyn Gabay, Efrain Velazquez,
Dennis E Grady, Sixthus R
Laureano,

No, 21 — 73.4%

21 Annie M Elliott, Vercoun-
tes Cheatom, Estella Arlequin,
Evelyn C Pervis, Pola E Callen-
der, Dorene Suter, Alan D Za-
mochnick, Claudia Childs, Car-
los Pigueroa, Irma L Hegler,
Helen A Manning.

EXAM 0645
PROM. TO FIRE MARSHAL —
UNIFORMED FIRE DEPT.
This lst of 220 eligibles, es-
tablished May 9, resulted from
the June 12, 1971, written exam,
Of the 1,291 candidates who filed

No. 1 — 86.21%

1 Frederick Mercilliott, Donald
F Pisculll, Michael J O'Connor,
James FP Sherrer, John V Brown,
John B Regan, Robert R Meyer-
hoff, Ernest C Graham, John J
Stickevers, John S Barracato,
Louls J Marrone, James E Kil-
len, Edward J Shea, Matthew H
Conlon Jr, Joseph R Bendas,
Ronald J Delucia, Victor U
Palumbo, William A Maxwell,
Edward J Heslin, John E Hut-
chison.

No. 21 — 81.4%

21 Thomas M Dixon, Joseph
F O'Dowd, Thomas G Maritato,
Ralph Feldman, Michael D
Poust, John F Connell, Ernest
A Mayer, Weber A Johnson,

Cm

spectacular exhibit
Great Porce'

ARPIQUES SHOW

ains Show
962 Third Avenue (Between 57th and 58th Streets)
Today through —June 10

Open 10: 30-6; Thurs.10:30 to 9; Sun, 1-6.

Closed Fridays except May 11

80 Dealers

Philip J Murtha, George F Mol-
joy, Enrique E Estela, Charles
G King, Raymond G Waters,
William J Twomey, Michael A
Dimareo, Frederick Egan, James
B Fleming, William I Brent,
William J Bolger, Edward A
Reardon.
No. 41 — 79.57%

41 John A Kittelberger, Robert
H McCann, James G Keelan,
Frederick Spiegel, Martin J Con-
nelly, Paul J Walsh, Thomas J
Russo, Arthur Perretti, Charles E
Hauser, Anthony Romero, Char-
Jes E Poznak, Allen N Murphy,
George M Leahy, James M Gib-
son, Aubrey L Nelson, Anthony
D Sarnelle, Eleuterio Graniela,
John F Burger, Joseph Maucer,
Neil FP McBride.

No, 61 — 18.5%

61 Joseph Degeorge, Joseph PF
Perreira, Thomas M Sweetman,
Thomas R Suilivan, John E
Knox, George Felton, Herbert K
Johnson, Prank Schiraldi Jr, Ru-
dolph D Dick, John C Dehayes,
Joseph P Nash Jr, John J Lovett,
Arthur R Mazza, Anthony P
Kiesel, Vincent Asciolla, John M
Santiago, James J McCormack,
Thomas A Breheny, Louis J
Sample, Norman R Foggie Jr.

No, 81 — 71.55%

81 William A Shaw, Hugh O
Haughwdat, Walter A McCarthy,
Salvatore Pilato, James J Cal-
lender, Salvatore Calabretta,
Phili $ Davi, Michael F Temp-
esta, Michael J Heaphy Jr, Ron-
ald R Russo, William H Collister,
Thomas F Flanagan, Malcolm G
O'Brien, John W Daly, Vincent
Dipippo, Robert N Pinto, John
V Kendrick, Cecil P Maloney
Jr, Donald 8 Jones, Richard
Olivieri.

No. 101 — 76.875%

101 Thomas E White, Joseph
8S Valenti, Thomas R Keenan,
Timothy J Cashman, Joseph P
Schneider, Francis J Cassidy,

Help Wanted M/F
WANTED — REPRESENTATIVES
TO LEARN TRAVEL INDUSTRY —
fo expetinece necesury — Comemis-

travel benefits — Pall o¢
Hous open — Call for
between 2:00 P.M, and

212 336 1000 or $16 872 3111

NEW YORK

— INTERESTING
OPPORTUNITIES —
Fer Men and Women
EXCELLENT BENEFITS:

O%
Asst. Alc Palut Control Engr

$12,700

Civil Engr. 12,700

Foge & Ci, (Mwy Tele) 13,170

81650

11,000

11,730

7:300

535

81650

5.900

9:850

16,000

Ray Technician 8250
APPLY NOW TO MAY 22, 1973

12,700

Amt. Supyr, Elect Install,
Asse. Bidg ‘Cusodian

At jobs cea. ol. cap. 0 sil
all applis, requests, mute be
powmarked: by May 15, 1973,

Civil Service Tews
Ms. Conlon
opt, of Personnel
49 Thomas $t, NYC
(212) 5966-8702 or 566.0989
An Equal Opportunity Emplorer M/

Joseph F Donohoe, John G Pla-
neta, Donald F Washington,
Norman E MeQueen, Carl F
Fuchs, Onofrio Zucchero, Joseph
FP Pfundstein Jr, Peter J Sch-
neider, Warren E Burger, Char-
les B Reddeck, Charles J Zim-

mermann, Richard A Bianchi,
Anthony A Bruno, Pasquale A
Zummo,
No, 121 — 76.025%
121 George B Johnson, Ralph
J Leinoff, Mario J Pascucel,

(Continued on Page 10)

THE DELEHANTY INSTITUTE

60 years of education to more than a half million students.

ASSISTANT FOREMAN
SANITATION DEPT.

Enroliment Now Open

CORRECTION CAPTAIN

Enroll now to prepare for June 30 exam.

Police Officer N.Y.P.D.

(Formerly Patrolman, Policewoman)

Continuous Classes to prepare for exams
ordored by Civil Service Commission

POLICE PROMOTION

Intensive course

featuring
CASSETTE STUDY SERIES
Convenient Locations—Day & Evening Sessions
FREE CASSETTE OFFER

Exams ordered by Civil Service
Commission for Sergeant and Lieutenant

FIRE LIEUTENANT

most important of all Fire
Promotion Study Courses

DEPUTY FIRE CHIEF

Exam. Scheduled for June 9th.
Classes Resume April 2nd and bi-weekly thereafter.

High School Equivalency

DIPLOMA PREPARATION
5 week course—day & evening classes

Enrollment now open

Delehanty High School

A 4-year Co-Ed college preparatory high school
ACCREDITED BY THE BOARD OF REGENTS

Vocational Division

approved training in
¢ AUTO MECHANICS

LICENSED BY THE NEW YORK STATE
EDUCATION DEPT.

The Delehanty Institute
For Information on all courses

GALL (212) GR 3-6900
Manhattan: 115 E. 15th Street
Office Open Daily 9 A.M.-5 P.M.

S26U ‘St Aew ‘Mepsony, “YaAdVAT ADIAUAS ‘ADD
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, May 15, 1973

Civil Sewiee 1
LEADER:

America’s Largest Weekly for Public Employ
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations
Published every Tuesday by
LEADER PUBLICATIONS, INC.
Publishing Office: 11 Worren Street, New York, N.Y. 10007
11 Warren Street, New York, N.Y. 10007
212-BEeckmon 3-6010
406 149th Street, Bronx, N.Y.
Jerry Finkelstein, Publisher
Paul Kyer, Editor
Marvin Baxley, Executive Editor
Kjell Kjell City Editor
N. H, Mager, Business Manager
Advertising Representatives:
ALBANY — Joseph T. Bellew — 303 So, Manning Blvd. IV 2-5474
KINGSTON, N.Y. — Charles Andrews — 239 Wall St., FEderal 8-8350
Se per copy. Subscription Price: $3.70 to members of the Civil
Service Employees Association. $7.00 to non-members.

TUESDAY, MAY 15 ,1973

10455

er

Kinzel Oversteps
His Role As An Advisor

N urging the Legislature not to approve that portion

of a recently negotiated pact between the State Admin-
istration and the Civil Service Employees Assn, that deals
with retirement, the Kinzel committee on public employee
pensions has definitely overstepped.

The committee was appointed to make a study of cur-
rent retirement systems all over the State and to make
recommendations for revising these pension schemes. The
committee was not invited to participate in collective bar-
gaining between the State and its employees.

The committee statement, issued last week, took no rec-
ognition of the fact that both the State and the Employees
Association had indulged in give-and-take bargaining on
the pension issue. Yet, the committee stubbornly insisted
that the Kinzel recommendations and only the Kinzel
recommendations be approved.

Well, that's not the way things are run in a democratic
country, For the Kinzel committee to take a dictatorial
rather than an advisory role on this issue is nothing less
than arrogant

Let us once more remind the members of the Legis-
lature that the contract between the CSEA and the Adminis-
tration was arrived at by good-faith bargaining on both
sides,

We urge approval of the necessary laws to put this very
fair contract into effect immediately.

Praise For Civil Service
Commission Action

AST week The Leader published an editorial citing the

problems resulting from the use of temporaries in the
title of fire marshal, Almost all of the city's 62 fire marshals
were at one time temporarily assigned to act as fire mar-
shals, a job which has been a promotional position for over
three years, After losing a legal fight to exempt them from
the promotional test ordered by the Civil Service Commission
almost two years ago and other court action to prevent the
establishment of an eligible list, the Commission last week
voted to establish a list of 220 eligibles who passed. As
expected, many of the incumbent fire marshals were not
among the top 62 on the list and unless the city decides to
hire everyone ahead of them on that list, they will have to
go back to being firemen. Over 1,000 firemen took the test
and the best are on top. This is what the civil service merit
system is all about, Some of the incumbent fire marshals
didn't pass the test. What happens now to the many arson
cases already adjudicated or under way in which they had
to give “expert” testimony? A defense lawyer can claim they
were not qualified to render testimony, This is what the
civil service merit system is designed to prevent, The Leader
congratulates the New York City Civil Service Commission
and its chairman, Harry Bronstein, for establishing the List
so quickly after the matter was settled in the courts. We
hope that certifications from the list will be made just
4s quickly so the inequities that exist can be corrected,

(Continued from Page 1)
1976. Tt is only in terms of 1976
that former Treasury Secretary
John Connally’s conversion two
weeks ago to the Republican
party makes sense, particularly

since the announcement took
place at the very moment when
the essential outlines of the
Watergate scandal were unfold-
ing.

John Connally, a protege of
the late President Lyndon John-
son, a former Democratic gover-
nor of Texas, and Navy Secre-
tary in the Johnson Administra-
tion, was delivering a message to
Republicans. His message to the
Republicans was, in President
Truman's phrase, that he could
stand the heat in the kitchen
no matter how hot.

Connally's gesture by no
means makes him the front
runner for the Republican nom-
ination. Vice President Spiro
Agnew, however cautious he may
be at the moment, has no in-
tention to bow out in favor of
Connally, Agnew remains the
darling of Conservative Repub-

Means and like Connally is
so far unscathed by the
Watergate scandals. Sharing

Agnew's popularity among Con-
servative Republicans 1s Gov.
Ronald Reagan of California.
Reagan has no intention of run-
ning for Governor for ‘a third
term, a circumstance that may
destroy his power base at the
Republican nominating conven-
tion.

Occupying a centrist position
in Republican circles are both
Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller and
Senator Charles Perey of Illinois.
Governor Rockefeller has recent-
ly racked up a large number of
brownie points by pushing
through the State Legislature his
tough program for driving nar-
cotics pushers out of the state.
By contrast, Senator Percy has
provoked the enmity of Presi-
dent Richard M, Nixon because
of certain of his comments in-
volving Watergate.

The next hurdle confronting
Governor Rockefeller is the state
gubernatorial election of 1974.
No politician in his right mind
entertains any doubts that the
Governor will pass over that
hurdle in flying colors. His vic-
tory in 1974 will clearly make the
Governor the front runner for
the Republican nomination in
1976, because, among other

things, he will have firm control .

of the huge New York delegation
to the Republican convention in
1976.

The rea} infighting between the
group of Republican contenders
will probably take place between
Agnew and Connally, both of
whom have executive sultes next
to the White House and each will
be contending for the support of
President Nixon in 1976,

The Democrats are likely to
have their typically unruly con-
vention in 1976, In view of
Watergate scandal disclosures,
Senator Edmund Muskie of
Maine has every reason to be-
Meve that he was cheated out
of the Democratic nomination in
1972 because of Republican chic-
anery, He ts likely to try again.
Senator Hubert H. Humphrey,
for reasons not unlike those that
may motivate Senator Muskie,
may also choose to make one
other attempt at the Democratic
nomination.

Senator Sedop Jackson, &
hawk on Vietnam, but otherwise
& Uberal with warm support of
AFL-CIO, was also a victim of

(Continued on Page 12)

Civil Service

Law & You

Wa RICHARD GABA

lil he 8 mor tthe thease. Wi, Walsh and Gaba,
of the Nassau County Bar Association Labor

and chairman
Law Committee,

Model Cities Residency

One of the purposes of the so-called Model Cities Pro-
gram, which is funded by Federal money and supplemental
grants, is to upgrade the total environment of slum and
blighted neighborhoods selected to be included within such
program:

In the City of New York, under the Model Cities Pro-
gram, the City created certain positions in the Fire De-
partment, the Police Department, and the Housing Author-
ity, known as Aides Model Cities. In order to obtain such
positions, applicants had to take competitive examinations,
However, they also were required to reside within the
model city areas intended to be benefited by the legis-
lation.

A proceeding was commenced in the Supreme Court,
New York County, by the heads of various unions, involved
on the theory that the residence requirements were illegal,
since within those various departments employees are not
required to live within the City of New York. In the lower
court it was held that the requirements were fllegal and
the residence requirement was held to be improper.

. * .

AN APPEAL was taken to the Appellate Division, First
Department, which considered the problem overall and de-
cided, with two Judges dissenting, that the requirement of
residence within the model city area was proper and legal.
The court, in its opinion, pointed out that the Aides’ posi-
tions had duties that in each category are fairly well-
defined, and in no case did they include law enforcement
or fire-fighting authority.

It was contemplated that at the end of six months the
Aide would take or become eligible to take a promotion
examination for Patrolman Model Cities or Fireman Model
Cities. In no way could they be promoted as a result of that
examination to any regular title within the Fire Depart-
ment, Police Department, or the Housing Authority. Further-
more, his salary is not paid from New York City funds but
rather from the Federal government. The court further
pointed out that the residency requirement applied only
while the Aide was in a Model Cities title, If he was success-
ful in passing the initial examination and becoming an
Aide, he could remain in that title a maximum of 15 months.
During that period he was required either to pass a second
examination or his employment would be terminated, The
successful applicant, therefore, will have taken two exam-
inations and not yet become a policeman, fireman or Housing
Authority patrolman. For this reason, the court said, peti-
tioners are complaining before they are hurt in any manner
and stated that present action is premature. "Since the job
categories created and the duties prescribed are complete-
ly different from any heretofore existing, the argument
that they necessarily fall within the contemplation of the
prohibitory statutes with respect to residency requirements,
or the New York State Constitution with respect to competi-
tive examinations, is of doubtful merit. We do not at this
time pass upon any issue which might arise in the future
when, conceivably, the lines of development merge.”

THE DISSENTING judges stated that they were certain-
ly in favor of the objectives of the Model Cities Program
and felt that it was laudable to afford job opportunities to
residents of those areas. They pointed out, however, the
diMiculty which is presented by the case does not arise from
the program but rather comes out of an obvious evasion by
the New York City Civil Service Commission of the consti-
tutional requirement of appointments on the basis of merit
and fitness. The dissenting Judges stated, “To say to other
young men In the same age bracket that they cannot par-.
ticipate in this excellent program because they do not live
in a particular neighborhood is a complete abandonment of
the principle of merit and fitness, discriminatory and un-
fair, It does not contribute to harmonious relations amongst
the residents of our city and, indeed, is likely to create dis-
cord, dissension and unrest at a time when everyone is striv-
ing for peace and understanding.”

It would appear, based on the dissent, that the matter
will most assuredly be appealed further to the New York
State Court of Appeals, and we look forward to a decision
on this matter from that court, Michael J. Maye, et al. v
John V. Lindsay, et al., 341 NYS 2d 371 reversing 330 NYS
2d 14,
File For 7 Top-$-Level
State Jobs Open To Public

Seven high-paying jobs
with New York State agen-
cies are open to the public
for filing until early June.
New York State residency is
not required, but extensive
experience is, The State
Dept. of Civil Service also
announced a promotional
exam.

Applications may be received
from and returned to any of the
branches of the State Depart-
ment of Civil Service listed on
Page 15 of The Leader under
“Where to Apply.” Candidates
will be evaluated on their train-
ing and experience. There will
be no written exams.

Motor Equipment Manager,
Exam 27-284; Motor Equipment
Management Program Coordina-
tor, Exam 27-273 (starting sal-
ary for both is $15,512)—Vacan-
cies exist in the Dept. of Trans-
portation: statewide for mana-
ger; in Albany for coordinator.
Minimum qualifications for both
seven years of progressively re-
sponsible experience in the man-
agement of a large well-round-
ed motor equipment fleet. Man-
agers must know maintenance
and control of at least 50 ve-
hicles including direct supervi-
sion of inventory control, vehicle
scheduling and cost control. Co-
ordinators should know develop-
ment of equipment requirements,
analysis of fleet operating costs
and related computer output
Applications are due June 4

Real Evtate Appraisers (mass
appraisal systems): at least one
vacancy with the Board of
Equalization and Assessment of
the Office of the local govern-
ment, Albany, exist at the fol-
lowing levels: Chief Real Estate
Appraiser, Exam 27,265 ($21,-
271); Principal Real Estate Ap-
praiser, Exam 27-264 ($18,182);
Senior Real Estate Appratser,
Exam 27-263 ($15,512); Real Es-
tate Appraiser, Exam 27-262
($11,929) — candidates at all
levels must have a bachelor’s de-
gree In real estate, mathematics,
statistics, engineering or econo-
mics, supplemented by experi-
ence with electronic data pro-
cessing, plus the following num-
ber of years’ experience of a)
general real estate valuation;
and b) specialized experience in
the mass appraisal of residential,

agricultural, commercial or in-
dustrial real estate: chief: a) 2,
b) 6; principal: 2, 4; senior: 2,
2; real estate: 1, 1. Applications
due June 4.

Supervisor of Administrative
and Computer Planning, Exam
27-266 ($17,263) —one vacancy
now in the Dept. of State, Al-
bany. Required: eight years’ pro-
gressively responsible experience
in the design and installation of
complex electronic data proces-
sing systems, one year in an ad-
ministrative capacity. Applica-
tions due June 11. The 10 best
qualified candidates will under-
wo oral testing during the sum-
mer, and be judged on their oral
testing score only.

Promotional

The following promotional
exam is open to qualified em-
ployees of the Dept. of Trans-
portation:

Motor Equipment Manager,
Exam 35-289 (G-23)—one va-
cancy in Hornell, more are ex-
pected, Open to candidates who
have served one year of com-
petitive service as motor equip-
ment maintenance supervisor
(G-19) in the Dept. of Transpor-
tation. Applications due June 4,
followed by oral testing to be
conducted during July or Aug-
ust.

Nominations Open For
Teacher Of The Year

A State selection committee is
accepting nominations until
June 30 for New York State
Teacher of the Year for 1974,
the State Education Department
announced.

Nominees should be skillful,
dedicated teachers in any ap-
proved school — prekindergarten
through grade 12, Junior college
and university teachers are in-
eligible, as are school personnel
whose major responsibilities are
administrative or supervisory.
The major purpose of the pro-
ject is to recognize the contri-
butions of the classroom teacher

All candidates will be screen-
ed and a final selection will be
announced to colneide with
American Education Week, Oct
21-27, so that nominees will re-
ceive local recognition on Teach-
er Recognition Day, which is
scheduled to be held that week.
Entries should be addressed to
New York State Teacher of the
Year, Rm. 662, Education Build-
ing Annex, New York State Edu-
cation Department, Albany, N.Y
12204

New York State's Teacher of
the Year will enter a national
Teacher of the Year competition
co-sponsored by the Council of
Chief State School Officers, the
Ladies’ Home Journal, and the
Encyclopedia Britannica Cor-
poration.

Thelma Patel, a fourth-grade
teacher in the Hewlett-Wood-

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LITTLE WONDER USES HOUSE WIRING SYSTEM AS

mere, Long Island school system,
was Inst year's New York State
Teacher of the Year and one of
five finalists in the national com-
petition,

Mrs. Ernest Lange, a represen-
tative of the New York State
Congress of Parents and Teachers
Association, is chairman of the
selection committee. Serving with
her on the committee are Norm~
an W, Allen, New York State
School Boards Association,
Shaghticoke; Lorraine Brown,
New York State United Teach-
ers, Albany; Frederick Burdick,
principal, Bethlehem Central
Middle School, Delmar; Donald
Kearns, superintendent, Mec-
hanicville Public Schools; George
Lowe, New York State School
Boards Association; and John
Mars, principal, Zoller Elmentary
School, Schenectady. William K.
Plynn, State Education Depart-
ment, will serve as coordinator,

Suffolk Applications

‘The Suffolk County Civil Ser-
vice Department has announced
that—effective June 4—applica-
tions will be accepted for all
open competitive exams whether
or not there is a current exam~
ination announcement, Applica-

tions will be held until such time
as the examination is scheduled.

Appt. Asst. Foremen

The Environmental Protection
Administration will “soon” be
appointing approximately 50 as-
sistant foremen. The appoint-
ments will be made from the
eligible list resulting from exam
no, 8635. Certified for appoint-
ment were 77 eligibles, between
nos 544 and 615.

St. George Meets

‘The St. George Association of
the Dept. of Sanitation will dis-
cuss important matters and serve
refreshments at a meeting May
25 at 8:30 p.m. at Room 1002, 71
West 23 St., Manhattan.

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CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, May 15, 1973

Conference president Floyd Peashey, right, discusses success
of retirement seminar with James Terry, Retirement System
information representative, who answered questions from
delegates Friday evening

Carrying minutes from meeting, Conference recording
secretary Irene Carr talks over business with Conference
corresponding secretary Helen Raby

of

Conference treasurer Helene Callahan, who served as chair-
man of the scrapbook contest, discusses event with two of
the judges, Marvin Baxley ft, executive editor of The
Leader, and Kirby Hannan, CSEA assistant director of public
relations

ONONDAGA COUNTY CHAPTER IS JUDGED THE AnsT- PLACE WINNER IN FIFTH ANNUAL CENTRAL slaps SCRAPBOOK COMPETITION

Edward Knight, president of St. Lawrence
chapter, receives congratulatory kiss from
Central Conference third vice-president Pat-
ricia Crandall after his chapter received
honorable mention in Conference scrapbook
contest.

Harriet Casey accepts award for Willard
State’s fourth-place finish in the fifth an-
nual scrapbook sweepstakes from CSEA
treasurer Jack Gallagher and Central Con-
ference second vice-president Dorothy Moses.

As the excitement mounts toward the top
awards, Margaret Wareing thanks CSEA first
vice-president Thomas McDonough after
Binghamton chapter was announced as the
third-place winner in fifth annual contest

So SUNY at Syracuse chapter won't feel
cheated of any of the prizes, co-host Broome
chapter president Angelo Vallone busses Wil-
lam O'Neill as the award for second place is
made to the Upstate Medical Center leader.

ah
yt

“Don't let this be swept un-
der the carpet,” Oswego
County chapter vice-presi-
dent Thomas Elhage warns
delegates on agency shop.

Syracuse Psychiatric Hos-
pital chapter president Aud-
rey Snyder was one of par-
ticipants in discussion of
dental insurance plan

Joseph Dolan, CSEA director
of local government affairs,
explains changes in Civil
Service Law relating to lay-
off and reinstatement.

Nominations committee

chairman Gerald Brown
presided over portion of
meeting that determined

nominees for Region 5 of-
ficers.

Francis Miller, president of
Central Conference County
Workshop, leads delegates in
opening prayer at Saturday
evening banquet.

e

Richard Cleary, president of
Syracuse chapter, accepted
nomination to be a candi-
date for regional president
in election this fall

KP ppon of Conference planning committee get together for Saturday morning meeting.
Clockwise from left are Eleanor Percy, Jefferson County; Pat Ridsdale, St. Lawrence Coun-

ty; Rita Curtis, SUNY at Syracuse;
Weed, Syracuse State School; Helen Raby, Oswego County; Fran Miller,

Flora Jean Beaton, St.

Lawrence County;
Oswego County;

Peter Grieco, Jefferson County, and Dorothy Moses, Willard State Hospital,

Joanne «
e

Central Conf Endorses
New State Compact

OWEGO — At a three-day meeting in which five of the Civil Service Employees
Assn. statewide officers participated, the CSEA Central Conference discussed many current
problems and continued several traditional activities,
Statewide president Theodore C. Wenzl praised the contract negotiating committee

and urged membership support
in the ratification vote. The Con-
ference, later in the meeting,
gave its official support as it
yoted to go on record in favor
of the contract. (See ratification
results on page 1.)

During the course of the busi-
ness session Saturday afternoon,
CSEA first vice-president Thom-
as McDonough, who also served
as & member of the coalition
negotiating team and as chair-
man of the Administrative Unit
committee, fielded questions from

alk. -_-.

the floor over fine points of the
contract, At one point, he prom-
ised to follow through on a re-
quest for information on man-
agement/confidential status. (See
memberhsip ban story on page
1)

Jack Gallagher, CSEA treas-
urer, announced that he would
be conducting a series of seminars
for chapter treasurers during the
next several months, These ses-
sions will be held in conjunc-
‘tion with regular Conference

Interested delegates at Saturday afternoon business session
were, from left, Nancy Muldoon, representing new Confer-
ence member Hutchings Psychiatric Center in Syracuse;
Clarence Laufer, president of Syracuse State School chap-
ter, and James Moore, president of Utica State Hospital

chapter.

Members of host Broome County and
Binghamton State Hospital chapters in
charge of arrangements for affair were,
seated, Broome chairman Mary Pompeti
and Binghamton State chairman Beth
Stover. Standing from left are Ginnie Pos-
semato, Anne Maywalt, Bert Tarbox, Joyce

Tassel,

Rick Sroka,
talks over some problems with Boyd Van

meetings, and chapter presidents
will be advised to send their
chapter treasurers, as well as
delegates, to the meetings at
which the treasurers’ seminars
will be held.

Statewide second vice-presi-
dent A. Victor Costa was master
of ceremonies for the Saturday
Juncheon and dinner festivities.
At the luncheon, the Confer-
ence awards were presented to
winners of the fifth annual scrap-
book competition, Statewide third
vice-president Richard Tarmey
was among the judges for the
contest. Other judges were John
8. Wyld, director of regional of-
fices for the NYS Department
of Commerce; Devere W. Mc-
Rorie, Jr., construction safety
inspector for the NYS Depart-
ment of Labor; Kirby Hannan,
assistant director of public re-
lations for CSEA, and Marvin
Baxley, executive editor of The
Civil Service Leader, Bingham-
ton State Hospital chapter pres-
ident Leo Weingartner and
Broome County chapter pres-
ident Angelo Vallone were honor-
ary judges in their positions as
heads of the two host chapters
for the Conference meeting.

Winning scrapbook was judged

(Continued on Page 14)

CSEA field representative,

outgoing vice-president of Bing-
hamton ehanter

Watndariner, Dottie Gross, Mary Battista
and Sandy Petrovic

Big winner in the scrapbook competition was Onondaga
County chapter as Rae Scharfeld accepts the big kiss of the
day from CSEA president Theodore C, Wenzl while chapter
president Andrew Placito beams. For her efforts in compiling
thé winning scrapbook, Ms. Scharfeld received the first place
trophy and a new book from The Leader to start working
toward a repeat victory next year.

Exchanging opinions during meeting were Fran Williams,
of St. Lawrence State Hospital chapter, and James Frisina,
of St. Lawrence County chapter.

Dinner speaker Patrick D
trict Attorney, advises public employees to remain dedicated
to their responsibilities in spite of skepticism shown by many

Monserrat, Broome County Dis-

members of public. Listening attentively is CSEA second
vice-president A, Victor Costa, who served as master of
ceremonies for the day's social events

61 ‘st 4ew epsony, “wadVaT SOIAUAS TAD

34

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, May 15, 1973

City Eligible | Lists

No. 161 — 74.775%
161 Richard H Kofod, John M
Rosendale, William M McKin-
ney, William F Nolan Jr, John M

Preston, Carmine R Bianco,
a Kane, William P Del-

He

: nie
Nir
Hrd

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Brian F McCullagh, Settimio A
Daccordo, James J Murtagh,
Ronald H Caffiero, John R Al-
ban, Gaetano A Castronovo,

This list of 1,036 eligibles was
established May 9. A total of 1,-
731 filed during July, 1972, for
the physical test held August 15.
Salary is $6,000-6,400.

No. 1 — 107.8%

1 James E Persley, Noel Gon-
zalea, Manuel Aree, William
Meny, Nathaniel Cohen, Jerome
Felton, Daniel A Ancrum, Theo-
dore Bright, Frederick Kane,
Claude Ramsey, Willie Butler
Jr, Thomas Davis, Vietor R Diaz,
Leroy B Scotland, Vincent A
Bowman, Edward A Prokopiak,
Richard M Gamba,
Sinclair, Joe N Herring, Timothy
J Goldbach

No, 21 — 100,.50%

21 Stanley Whitehurst, Felix
Perez, Ronald Smith, Thomas J
Walker, Eddie L Brown, Marcos
Roldan, Virgilio Almodovar, Ed-
win Dennis, Tommy L Smith,
Orlando Carmona, Stanley T All-
man, Lorenzo Carrasco, Roose~
velt Hedrington, David Taylor,
Elijah Wells, Barl Davis, Char-
les M Ladson, Frank Silano, Bob-
by Johnson, Jorge R Ortega.

No. 41 — 98.50%

41 Wilfredo Espada, David L
Harvey, Wilbert C Weaver, Elio
Montalvo Jr, Arthur H Maroon-
ey, Anthony D Lymus Jr, Ar-
nold B Curtis, Manuel O Classen,
John W Ivory Sr, Wilfredo Me-

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Major Appliances — air conditioners, washers, dryers, refrigerators, freezers,

dishwashers, ranges and ovens, humiditiers, dehumidifiers

Photo Equipment — cameras and photographic equipment

Home Furnishings — compiete furniture line and rugs, carpeting, custom

drapes and slip covers (home service) — Office Furniture

Gifts — furs, jewelry, watches, diamonds, silverware, china, luggage
Equipment

Home

— lawn mowers, typewriters, calculators

Home Entertainment — televisions, radios, recorders, stereos, stereo

cabinets, pianos, organs

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BETTER BUYING SERVICE OF AMERICA e wn
Suite 1208, 400 Madison Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10017

L Wentz, George Nelson, Nicho-
Tas Veliotis, Ramon Ramos, Jose
Juncos, Edwin Rivera, Rodrigo
Cabezas, Victor Viera, Sam
Young, Andrew Stone, Jose V
FPormoso, William H Giles Jr,
Cecil Romney, Joseph Quacinel-
la, Pedro Caro, Maurice R Frye,
Juan Carmona, Angel Ortiz, Ra-
fael Montalvo.
No. 81 — 97.0%

81 Robert T Hannigan, Char-
les E Wilkes, David H Price,
Angel M Gonzalez, Thomas B
Craig, General Hemingway, Ed-
ward M Raysor, Ismael Davila,
Ronald Cromartie, Edward J
Dunn, Anastacio Andrades, Ron-
ald Monroe, Arnold D Brown,
Bruce W Kennedy, Dennies
Smith, Angel Cintron, Ronald S
Lowe, Angel L Ramos, Primitivo
Rodriguez, Teddy Velez.

No. 101 — 96.50%

101 Hulle White Jr, Manuel P
Mena, Peter A Cariglio, Albert
F Gwathney, Billie Herring, Jo-
seph Lowery Jr, Michael Devine,
Joseph Agro, Andrew Johnson,
Jose V Oyola, Louis Manner.
Wilfredo Rodriguez, Robert Ve-
wa, Esteban Vazquez, Jorge L
Olivera, Allen Lynch, Mariano
Rosado, Robert L Hollis, Ger-
man Torres, Anthony J Gennaro.

No. 121 — 96.0%

121 Melvin L Willams, Na-
thaniel Cooper, Harold B Phil-
Ups, James W Bond, James A
Spruill, Frank A Natale, Harts-
well Doughty, Jack B Vanieuyan,
Pha R Overstreet, Ernesto Gon-
zalez, Violo Rivers, Ronald S
Kitt, Federico Rivera, James
Mack, Andrew Harper, Carltan,
A Williams, Berry Rice, John W
Scott, Angel L Rosario, Santos C
Ramos.

No. 141 — 95.50%

141 Angel Lugo, Larry Willis,
Ricky Lugo, Tony C Martin,
James Kirse, Victor M Collazo,
Ferdinand Plowden Jr, Dennis
Gilford, Octavio Cruz, Stephen D
Cabell, Benedetto Tammone, Ber-
nard J Green, Thomas A Boone,
Robert Thomas, Willie Tooley,
Robert Grant, Stephen W Lima-
to, Herminio Vega, Walter
Hough Jr, Kenneth L Pearcy.

No. 161 — 95.0%

161 James E Jones, Juan A
Rivera, Jeffrey A Spencer, Leroy
Gilbert, James R Maye Jr, Mic-
hael Grant, William M Harvey,
Lloyd M Brathwaite Jr, Chris-

Wright, Reginald W
, Clarence D Miller Jr,
Bobby L Morgan, Anthony Stan-
co, Henry Grant, Pedro Rosario,
Richard R Brown, Juan M Col-
on, Juan Martinez, Isaac French,
Andrew Hardy Jr.

No, 181 — 94.10%
181 Carl Neely, Larry L Simms
, George Diaz, Wilfredo J Ar-

ayant
EF
li
i

i
i
Hi
He

i

HEL
Hi
filni

No. 261 — 93.0%

261 Sandalio Mercado, Marcial
Robles, Barkley Cook, Jose San-
tos, Chester Rose, Edward R
Smith, Vernon L Davis, Wendell
E Bentley, Antonio 8 Roldan,
Prank E Gansel, Lawrence Dicks,
Raymond E Jordan, James Rig-
gins, Thomas E Robinson, Raul
Ruiz, Wilbert L Sharpe, Edward
King, Eugenio Bullet, Walter J
Cummings, Jesus Nieves.

No, 281 — 92.50%

281 Samuel Vazquez, Clyde
Taylor, Prancisco Barreto, Craig
G Edwards, Donald Jackson, Os-
car O Medina, Manuel M Davilla,
George R Brown, Timothy L
Johnson, Rudy Williams, John B
Eames, Robert O Cole, Olivero
Hernandez, Juan Laboy, Sylves-
ter Jackson, Jorge L Rivera, Ul-
ric Joseph, Kenneth Miller, Rich-
ard Celimano, Harriett E Har-
ris.

No. 301 — 92.50%

301 Charles Kellam, Willie Al-
len, Wilfredo Feliciano, George
Ramsey, Thomas Lawson Jr,
Edisol Rivera, Gonzalo Ramos,
John B Williams, Luis J Can-
deau, Byron Simpson, Gaillard
Smith, Vincent P Tola, Joe L
Foster, Michael Harden, Pedro
Palermo, Bernard Brown, Vir-
ginio Rivera, James Coley, Sam~
uel A Nevels Jr, William E Jack~-
son.

No, 321 — 92.50%

321 Leoncio Gonzalez, Juan

Rodriguez, Joseph T Calanna,

Marvin E Taylor, Nicholas c
Defrancesco, Roscoe Jackson,
Leroy Harris, Betty L Miller,
Rafael R Pena, Miguel Adorno,
Jimmy L Thomas.
No. M1 — 20%

34) Phillip H Peyton, Pran-
Cisco Torres, Osborne D Bradley,
John Wright Jr, Ramon Torres,
Eligibles

(Continued from Page 10)
dor, Justiliano Dquendo, Dion-
ijcio R Tejada, Miguel A Diaz,
James M Curry, Lamont P Brad-
ley, Miriam Uribe, Regina John-
son, Larry Stephens, Oscar Diaz,
William Ortiz, Sharon Y Curtis,
James Huggins, Herbert Single-
ton, David L Gatling, Nubert G
McDowell, Joseph G Goines,
Rena L Godbee, Carrol] E Kans-
ton

(To Be Continued)

EXAM 3508
PROM. TO CABLE SPLICER
FIRE DEPARTMENT

This list of one eligible, estab-
lished y 9, resulted from the
April 10 practical exam. Salary
is $6.02 per hour.

No. 1 — 79.45%
1 John McCole.

EXAM 1140
HUMAN RESOURCES
TECHNICIAN

This list of 53 eligibles, estab-
lished May 9, resulted from the
September 16, 1972 written
exam, Of the 234 candidates
who filed to take the exam, 121
appeared. Salary is $6,200.

No, 1 — 96.2%

1 Morris Roth, Emanuel J
Congedo, Barbara P Norman,
Jose A Figueroa, Paul P Cun-
ningham, Charles W Shaw,
Christina Fox, Helen A Onysenk,
Lureathea Taylor, Herman P
Yahn, Marilyn N Rosenbaum,
Alexander Veress, Linda C Nel-
son, Ruth Holzer, Aleccla D
Matthews, Barbara Lesch, Alice
McKanic, Charles W Robinson,
Muriel E Moore, Jean E Bonner

No, 21 — 82.3%

21 Carmen Negron, Alan D
Zamochnick, Earl J Robinson,
Pablo Delatorres, Nancy Karma-
zin, Candida Gomez, Joseph D
Lewis, Eva Sanchez, Eugene
Simon, Jose Vasquez, Doris G
Johnson, Kay F Owens, Cleone
M Durant, Marie Ford, Rosalyn
Y Spriggs, Shirley T Jones,
Brenda Peterson, Carmen Cadiz,
Cecilia M Diaz, Elaine S Cope-
land.

No, 41 — 74.7%

41 Jayne M Marsh, Ann Wil-
Kiams, Jimmie L West, Harvey
S Hutcherson, Edythe J Camp-

Windiey, Calvin Cupidore Jr,
Carmen D Flores, Annie L Jen-
kins, Carolyn Brockett, Elsie N
Melendez, Ruth Wright.

EXAM 1096
SENIOR HUMAN RESOURCES
TECHNICIAN

This list of 99 eligibles, estab-
lished May 9, resulted from the
Sept. 16, 1972, written exam, Of
the 408 candidates who filed, 224
appeared to take the exam, Sal-
ary is $7,900,

No. 1 — 96.2%

1 Alvin D Knott, Barbara J
Demayo, Sidney Allerhand, Su-
san D Frost, Marlene Dreifach,
Emanuel J Congedo, Martin P
Levine, Sam Wolfson, Sheldon
Oliff, Martin C Kramer, Fred-
erick Norton, Rita L Lee, Ron-
ald Filmore, Cynthia D Mayes,
Sharon L Cheadle, Julian A
Vaughan Jr, Laurence F Yer-
mack, Charles W Robinson, Her-
man P Yahn, Marilyn N Rosen-
baum.

No, 21 — 4.8%

21 Livia Birnbaum, Neil A
Danoff, Dorothea G Hickman,
Salvatore Eretto, Bella M Lip-
shitz, Mary E Ohser, Louise G
Fitzpatrick, Rose Mendelson,
Candida Gomez, Inez McAlpin,
Abraham Z Fromm, Marian
Schwartzman, Edwin F Lobel,
Jane E Aptekar, Carmen Negron,
Floyd J Johnson, Theresa A Er-
etto, Willie L Churehill, Bernice
© Cox, Barbara Lesch,

No, 41 — 82.3%

41 Wesley J Horner, Joseph D
Lewis, Mamie Matthew, Elaine
Massiah, Linda C Nelson, Julia
M Quinlan, Barbara P Norman,
Alan D Zamochnick, Evelyn Ga-
bay, Frances Rosenbaum, Mad-
eline H Green, Thomas A Carr,
Frankie Dotson, Dolores J Har-
vin Evelyn Payne, Alma C Hall
Ann Williams, Barbara Coch-
rane, Paul S Burkhalter, Shirley
T Jones.

No, 61 — 17.2%

61 Frances M Bell, Pablo J
Delatorres, Sylvia Mantz, Cecilia
M Diaz, Rejiner S Speller, An-
nie M Elliott, George J Tatsios,
Margaret Thompson, Delores
Roberts, Audrey E Scott, Joann
Harris, Rosalyn ¥ Spriggs, Mar-
@aret Spruill, Muriel E Moore,
Naomi G Brown, Elaine Breland,
Carmen Cadiz, Elois M Callahan.
Marie Ford, Allen W Brown

No, 81 — 73.4%

bell, Delores Mack, Frances L 81 Jayne M Marsh, Joan Ty-

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HIGHWAY, B’KLYN. 377-7674. George and John Panagahos of ”

"The Famed Jimmy's.”
Open 7 days. Luncheon — Dinner — Supper, Free parking

ler, Elsie N Melendez, Linda
Humphrey Janice G Lewis, Hen-
rietta Thompkins, Pauline E El-
lington, Christine Spencer, Mar-
garet B Jackson, Brenda Peter-
son, Doris G Johnson, Iris B
Gumbs, Marcia W Paw, Jimmie
L West, Sylvia Estrine, Anne M
Kerman, Vernessa W Heywood,
Dora V Boyd, Delores Mack.

EXAM 3008
CABLE SPLICER

‘This list of 69 eligibles was
esablished May 9. Of the 246
who filed during March, all took
practical testing April 10, Salary
is $6.02 per hour,

No 1 — 103.0%

1 Richard A Sharples, John T
Bizohan, Joseph J Gormley,
John E Grable, George E Wright,
Salvatore Delligatt!, Matthias
Leili, John V Stora Jr, Thomas
M McLaughlin, Donald W Sch-
mitt, Leroy D Little, Harold
Wright, Robert J Cascone, Paul
A Macek, Roy Riveland, Edward
W Anderson, Thomas R Fuchs,
Edmond V Kenny, Robert Neri.
Kevin M Gomes.

No, 21 — 90.40%

21 Anthony N Scardilio, Loren
P Cole, Dennis F Connolly, Wil-
lam B Lyons, Edward W Smith,
Alson L Riddick, Charles T Ma-
dine, Joseph D Anniello, Joseph
A Scaglione, Eugene A Gar-
guilo, Milan J Millevoy, Patrick
P Marinelli, John G Colon, Dan-
jel Panarella, Salvatore Petrac-
clone, Kent A  Handlowitch,
Thomas J McGuire, William J
White,Stephen V Gorla, Augusto
J Brugman

No, 41 — 83.40%

41 Michael J O'Connor,
H Bell, William J Fehn, John
Bakos Jr, Carl N Swalling Jr,
John-R_Moran, Peter N Ciccone,
Henry Zelman, Patrick Dimaio,
John Rotondo, James M Laferla,
Vincent F Corsaro, John J But-
ler, Jeffrey Yee, Marco M Pa-
gano, Thomas E Dalton, Joseph

Robert

Mileski, Mario R Diangelis, John
C Geil, Michael Martinelli
No. 61 — 75.20%

61 Vincent G Willebureher.

Edward Gomez.
chinger, Dominick V Lafalce, Ro-
bert W Kelsey, Kenneth W
Reilly, Joseph 8 Yandoli, Andrew
E Langert, William M Odell,

Joseph K Dis-

Final Key Answers

The Bureau of Examinations
has rendered final the following
decisions concerning key an-
swers

Prom. to Ferry Terminal Su-
pervisor, Exam 2515: test held
Noy. 18, 1972; proposed key an-
swers appeared in the Dec, 5
Leader: No. 2 from delete to C;
No. 7 from D to C and/or D;
No, 40 from C to delete

Prom. to Principal Addiction
Specialist, Exam 1628: test held
June 24, 1972; proposed key an~
swers appeared in the July 11
Leader; No, 6 from B to delete.
No, 61 from D to C and/or D.

Prom. to Senior Addiction
Specialist, Exam 1629; test held

Dec. 9, 1972; proposed key an-
Swers appeared in the Dec. 26
Leader: No, 53 from B to A
and/or B,

Prom. to Supervising Addiction
Specialist, Exam 1630; test held
June 24, 1972; proposed key an-
swers appared in the July 11
Leader: No. 6 from B to delete

The Civil Service Commission
has adopted the following
changes to key answers

Exam 0645, Promotion to
Fire Marshal (Uniformed): test
held June 12, 1971, and original
proposed key answers appeared
in the June 29, 1971 Leader: No.
3 from A to delete; No, 23 from
A to delete; No. 29 from D to
A and/or D; No, 32 from C to C

HEROES —

honored for acts of heroism receive certificate of commendation and
U.S. Savings Bonds from General Manager Irving Wise.

right) Alan Jones, Wise, Robert

Lee Appointed Sup

Of Port Auth's Police

The Port Authority of New
York and New Jersey has an-
nounced the appointment of

=

.

g

=

| 4

w

=

z=

<

=

=

tad

Three New York City Housing Authority employees 3
(Left to i

Cohen and Augusto Hernandez. F
=

Sr. Bidg. Custodian =
The city Dept. of Personnel &
has summoned 35 candidates for _,
promotion to senlor building 9
custodian to take the written \_
part of exam 2613 on May 19. §
—_——$——___—————_—_ +

William Lee as superintendent
of its 1,100-member police force.
Lee, the bi-state agency's assis-
tant superintendent since 1970,
succeeds Thomas Reilly who is
retiring after 27 years with the
fore.

WILLIAM LEE

Lee joined the force in 1947
and worked his way up to In-
spector in 1963. He has served in
the Holland and Lincein Tun-
nels, LaGuardia and Newark Air-

Do Your Neeed A

igh Scheol
f, mialeney

for civil service
for personnel satisfaction

6 (Weeks Course Approved by
S*State ‘Education Dept

Write or Phone for
Information

Eastern School AL 4-5029
721 Broadway, N¥ 3 (at 8 St)

Please write me free about the
High School Equivalency class

Name
Address
Boro u

HIGH SCHOOL
EQUIVALENCY
DIPLOMA

= 5 WEEK COURSE $75 4

ports, the Port Authority Bus

Pe Prepare you 10 pass NAY. State
Terminal, and at the Police Di- HS. EQUIVALENCY pirLoma
vision Headquarters fe In class of Home Study,

Reilly became assistant super- Mauer Chi accepted. FREE
intendent in 1967 and was ap- ff BOOKLET "L
pointed superintendent in 1970. PL 7-0300
I ROBERTS SCHOOLS '

Asst. Bridge Operator I

The city Dept, of Personnel
has summoned 233 candidates
for assistant bridge operator to
take the physical part of open

517 West S7th Sceeee
New York, N.Y. 10019
ee ee

competitive exam 2032 on May .
17 P €
E A
Bidg. Super D
‘The city Dept. of Personnel has Rg Dd
summoned 181 candidates for = Mimeos Appressers, ©
promotion to resident building E STENOTYPES
superintendent to take the writ- : STENOGRAPH forsale S
ten part of exam 2604 on May 19. $ and rent. 1,000 ethers.
and/or D; No. 64 from D to A Low-Low Prices
and/or D; No. 75 from D to C ALL LANGUAGES
and/or D; No. 78 from A to A TYPEWRITER CO., Inc.
and/or D; No. 83 from D to A | 119 W, 23 St. (W. of éth Ave.)
and/or D; No. 98 from D to Bo | N.Y. N.Y. CHelseo 3
and/or D.

SCHOOL DIRECTORY

oe
MONROE INSTITUTE — IBM COURSES “yopsic:,Propiammine

FOR CIVIL SERVICE TE Switchboard,
VALENCY.
IN RD. BRON’

Tas TRE
us TAST FORDHAM ® ROAD, BRONX — 933-6700

AVE.

Apprdwed for Vets and Foreign Studews. Avcred. N.Y. Staie Dept. of Education
12

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, May 15, 1973

General Entrance List

EXAM NO. 2088
GENERAL ENTRANCE SERIES
‘This list of 3,576 eligibles was
established April 11 as result of

No, 801 — 95%

801 William R Magner, Dean
FP Tulipane, Nan S Smith, Jack
Rubenstein, Alean Hughey, Wil-
liam Rostoker, Seymour Roth,
Jacob Leibowitz, Freddy Infante,
Elizabeth Montgomery, Stuart M
Schnapp, Gilbert Gonzalez, Den-
nis P Garabrant, Roberto E Cruz,
Ronald Levine, Rhonda L Kauf-
man, Ofelia Ellis, Adele Walker,
Vincent A Lumia, Warren J
Robinson.

No, 821 — 95%

821 Rose H Foster, Robert G
Arciola, Gerald Farano, Ruth H
Bethea, Leonard A Ramsey, Jos-
eph G Brown, Leopold M Sharpe,
Marilyn A Callabrass, Pardue
Ellen, Florence J Leavey, Hens-
ley Abrams, Roslyn Johnson,
Joseph D Pranchak, Edward J
Taylor, Paul T Allen, Dorothy S
Williams, Murie] B Roth, Irene
Diggs, David W Mitchell Jr, Pat-
rick A Hendrie.

No, 841 — 95%
841 James L Dota, Claudia P

Allen, Timothy A Krysouk, Ber-
nie Perla, Norman J Altabet,

(Continued from Page 6)
Vietnam philosophy, and is mo-
bilizing his forces for another
attempt at the Democratic nom-
ination.

Overshadowing all potential
Democratic candidates is Sen-
ator Edward M. Kennedy of Mas-
sachusetts. Senator Kennedy is
the heir to the mystique that
surrounds the Kennedy family,
and thus far he has played Pres-
idential politics close to his vest.
‘That happens to be the height
of wisdom, since it is not likely
that Muskle, Humphrey, Jack-
son, and other Democratic hope-
fuls will withdraw just because
Senator Kennedy has thrown his
hat in the ring.

As of this moment, the man-
euvers aré quiet and subtle, The
only certainty that looms on the
horizon is that both the Repub-
ican and Democratic nominating
conventions will be exciting.

REAL ESTATE VALUES

SPFD thee $26,990
ROOM TO ROAM
bek/shingle cape cod, 6 lg ems,

Pinay a ‘master size Bdrms, foishable borat.
ly decor, Vacant, move right in.

CAMBRIA HTS $36,990
4 BR CAPE plus INCOME
ot dee as cape, 7 rms ae tent:

able bent Gar, To see is wo
Sty Exeras
CAMBRIA HTS $41,990

LEGAL 2-FAM BRK

jus fin Dame & for
Sri pes me Bir at oe icone.

4 ft garden
MANY Oriiek Ta "FAM Hosers

Queens Homes OL 8-7510
170-13 Hillside Ave., Jamaica

Farms, Country Homes
New York State
Spring Catalog of Hundreds of Real

Enate & Als
i Realy, Cobier

NO AGENCY FEE

Chalet — To Rent
$0, VERMONT, 6 bedems, 3 baths,

Prashersdryet,., dishwasher, | sailboot
for July. 914-693-2020,

eves
House For Sale
Arverne Rockaway

er ROOMS, a, pation,

detached
Jen fence, 3 bl fo sabes, Seca

Secriace for $13,000
Fa (ry “aon.F99

CAMBRIA HTS. $30,990

Colonial wich 2 baths, Ic

sarage.
SPRINGFIELD GDNS.
$29,990

Deluxe 3 bedrm home on 40x100°

plot, all feaced in with double garage.

Bimston Realty 723-8400
22912 Lindeo Blvd.
Cambria Hes, LL, N.Y.

HILLSIDE AVENUE VIC

$29,500
WALK TO SUBWAY
Large oil 00, transferred owner, Sell

heat, many other extras, Near huge

BUTTERLY

& GREEN
169-25 Hillside Avenue

JA 6-6300

Be A Blood Donor Donor
Call UN 1-7200

oy eee Florida ae

FLORIDA LIVING

Live the life at prices you can
attord 1s ighland Village = Mobile
Home Community. Choose from over
20 models with prices starting at
$7,950 Complete recreation program.

Writes
HIGHLAND VILLAGE, 275 N.E. 48th St.
POMPANO BEACH, FLORIOA 33064

JOBS
FLORIDA = J08S? Federal, State,
County, City, FLORIDA CiViL SERVICE
BULLETIN. Suscription $3 year. &
Issues.
0, Box 846 1b,
N. Miami, Fle, 33161,

VENICE, FLA, — INTERESTED?
SEE H, N. WIMMERS, REALTOR
ZIP CODE 33595

SAVE ON
YOUR MOVE
TO FLORIDA

Compare our cost per 4,000 Ibs. 10
St, Petersburg toom New York City,
$472; Philadelphia, $448; Albany,
$306, Hor an enimate to any denin,
ation in Plorkda

Write
SOUTHERN TRANSFER
and STORAGE CO., INC,

Tel (813) 822-4241

DEPT, C, BOX 10217
ST, PETERSBURG, FLORIDA, 23739

hanie Prokopiak, McKinley T
Brown, Antonio Ortiz, John F
Palmer, Konstantin Karagiannis,
Simon Erdtractor, Fred A Hoff-
man.

No. 861 — 95%

861 Vinnie Harris, Ronald L
Cromartic, Sylvester Robertson
3rd, David G Freeman, Ramon
A Diaz, Joseph T Payton, Viola
R Johnson, Alfred J Coiro, Mark
V Bledsoe, Alva C Thomas, Jose
L Torres, Clifford H Vanburen
Jr, Robert A Clark, Dean A Mor-
genstern, Anne Hom, Moses
Waters, Craig L Wright, Efrain
Montalvo, Gregory A Mingo,
Mary Tolman.

No, 881 — 95%

881 Thomas Montford, James
T Figueroa, William P Connolly,
Sean D Kenny, David L Wilker-
son, David M Poignant, Philip
E Roca, Anthony J Russo Jr,
Frank A Matoske, Timothy F
Hynes, Doris M Scaizo, Salvatore
Capuccio, Philip A Prince, Jack
Moshel, Harold Diamond, Joseph
P Meehan, Frank Scimecca,
Francis G Leesha, Luis V Lopez,
Raymond H West,

No, 901 — 95%

901 Calvin Fulford, Edward
Brumfield, Dickey B Williams,
James L Weldon, Thomas W
Saunders, Rodney McCoy Sr,
Robert Herben, George Baranin,
David J Mcleod, Merrill P
Brown, Edward Treilib, Jose D
Rodriguez, Robert T Jackson,
Roy A Loughlin, Benjamin D
Klein, Nathan Dolson, Bernard J

Green, Herman J Schwartz,
Mortimer J Hayes, Louis J
Isaacs,

No, 921 — 95%

921 George A Wilder Jr, Jos-
eph Bloom, Clifford H Hawkins,
Hallie White Jr, Alonzo Blake,
Lois A Horn, Emanuel Heppard,
Charles Kerekes, John J Kunder,
Vernon C Watson, Preston G
Barnes, Donald Mack, Marcus M
Briggs Jr, Ismael Lopez Jr, Leon
Steinberg, Dominick FP Prestiano,
Frank A Diaz, David L Barrow,
Elizabeth Staine, Michael A Ra-
guso.

No, 941 — 93.8%

941 Michael Rocco, Anthony E
Brescia, Vivienne Charalambous,
Abraham S Gross, Lioyd E Wil-
Mams, Dennis Petroccione, Don-
ald Strano, Lillie M Jacobs, Hel-
en B Sawed, Sarah B Cottman,
William H Merz, Alfred Simeone
Jr, Samuel I North, William
Fischetti Jr, Nathan Cantor,
Peter A Geiger, Robert D Sing-
er, John Lopez, Donald J Cas-
tore, Norma I Whitaker,

No. 961 —~ 93.8%

961 Harold Scher, Sidney
Reiss, Ruth Lisi Leon Willams
Jr, Richard Mason, Simon Frt-
rington, Barbara A Latham Pau!
€ Celentano, Evelyn Pisher, Lil-
Man M Quallis, Calvin Turner,
Edward Reese Jr, Eileen T
Smitherman, Joseph P Masseria,
Kenneth M Monahan, Jerome M
Loverdi, Narayan C Majumdar,
Noela Cotto, Armando Portalatin
Jr, Milton H Carter,

No, 981 — 93.8%

981 Irving Zambrofsky, Lester
S Johnson, Preston Brown,
Wayne Warren, John C Swinton,

Joseph Hestbeck, Michael P
Cummings, Queen © Cannon,
Solomon Williams, Harold A

Williams Jr, Robert A Laurita,
Sydney FP Saunders, Dominic D
Isla, Randolp Knowles, Robert A
Surigo, William Savilatz, John
Vorobok, Irving Greenbaum, Jos-
eph P Hoey, Ruth A Werner,
No, 1001 — 93.8%

1001 Annie J Hamilton, Gladys
Harden, Martin Gonzalez, Carol
M Gavin, Peter A Spinogatt,

MINORITY FIRM WINS CONTRACT — New York City Real
Estate Commissioner Ira Duchan, center, awards contract for reno-
vation of apartments to Governor Hendley, right, president of the
Viet Vets Development Corp. The Viet Vets Development Corp. is
the first minority firm to receive a general contracting award for
restoration of city-owned apartments under the Real Estate Depart-
ment’s jurisdiction. Earl Harris, left, vice-president of the organiza-

tion, watches presentation,

James D Ellis, Wilfredo Colon,
Gladys M Diaz, Serafino 8 Blan-
cato, Solomon Jaclowitz, Joyce
C Esposito, Doris J Sutton, Mic-
hael A Sereder, Jean M Quinn,
Delores Carter, Sylvia Lifschitz,
Mohamed A Fawzy, Jose A Ot-
ero, George W Alvelo, George J
Gerar.
No, 1021 — 93.8%

1021 Melvin Beverhoudt, Tho-
mas Hinton, Richard A Passan-
tino, Carmine Ferro, Michael
Forgione, Gary J Schreiber,
Frieda L Bracy, Florine Byers,
Gary L Decuir, John Suchodol-
sky, Marcellus Lewter, Stella V
Kopec, Charles T Swartz, John
E Harper Jr, Charlie M Shields,
Paulette Flowers, Vincent L Fal-
cone, Prank I Barnett, Samuel
Levine, Lottie W Herrenberg.

No. 1041 — 93.8%

1041 Tommy J Glover, Delores
V King, Willie Abernathy Jr,
Gail P Goode, Raymond C
Moore, Thomas E Lewis, George
Perch, Arthur T Desola, Brenda
J Bell, Shirley Gorman, Michael
L Mannion, Robert L Merkel,
Donald L Domite, Robert T
Hannigan, William J Wittig,
Michael W Wittig, Denise Dick-
erson, Mary L Anderson, Carl
Toussaint, Arthur L McKnight,

No. 1061 — 93.8%

1061 Arthur Berger, Joseph
Brady, Ruth H Harris, Johnny
Green, Sandra Swift, Joseph C
Sheridan, Annabelle Clayborn,
Marjory A Smith, John N Nic-
holson, Alfred F Bernard, All
Abdulmani, Barbara Ferrell,
Carlos M Ortuno,

ario J Cannizzo, Thomas Cali-

mano, Robert E Fleur, Catherine

Springstead, Joseph P Boniel.
No. 1081 — 93.8%

1081 James E Fitzgerald, John
Easio Eadicicco, Tommy R Wil-
lams, Jasmin A Hoyt, Anthony
J Serrago, Eugene Ballestero,
Frederick Strada, Sidney Knep-
per, John M O'Connell, Edwin L
Griffith, James H Johnson,
Hugh A Richins, Calvin D Wil-
ams Jr, Ciaude W MocCoy,
Gertrude Baer, Ben I Kendler,
Manuel Koenig, John J Cardillo,
Alexander Smith, Carlos C
‘Moultries.

No. 1101 — 93.8%

1101 Claude Ramsey, Stuart A
Haring, Howard A Overton, Mic-
hael Baggese, Richard J Patrick,
Abraham Wieder, Edward A
Prokopiak, Edward J Spach, Ed-
ward Shired, Salvatore Azzaro,
Clarence C Jones, Clara M Abel,
James Alston, James H Robin-
son, Kenneth L MeTeer, Larry
P Miragiia, Pannie D Reid, Mor-

ris Brodsky, Raymond E Wade,
Eladio C Ruiz.
No. 1121 — 93.8%

1121 Philip N Matthew, Ralph
E Savadge, Lorraine Washington,
Hortense Morgan, Robert A
Manzione, Anthony Glambruno,
Emest Blackwell Jr, Harris Co-
met, Hyman Yudowitz, Irving
Kier, Rochelle L Bruh, George
A Braumbach, David Siederer,
Henry W Grey, Daniel Baldwin
Jr, Robert J Kelly, Louis Basch,
Ronald J Tucker, Anthony San-
toro, Gilbert Talkovsky.

No. 1141 — 92.5%

1141 Anthony A Aaron, Reg-
inald Heath, Jack Gitlin, Caro-
lyn L Melver, Phyllis Weingraff,
Anton Reid, Florrie Powell, Mary
A Williams, Dorothy Manning,
Ciara Kovner, Louise Debnam,
Leola G Raymond, William Rod-
riguez, Geraldine Damato, Ra-
mon H Alston, Martin Mills,
Teresa Mason, Carlos Greenniles,
Carl J Siragusa, Carol T Prin-
chotto,

No, 1161 — 92.5%

1161 William Johnson, Clif-
ford J Bernhard, Phylis Robin-
son, Gloria Meadows, Richard
Halloway, Nancy Aquilino, Vera
Shulman, Minnie Davis, Fay L
Weinberg, Robert L Felder, Bis-
enhower Coleman, Shirley A Pol-
lock, Gilbert R Hadjadj, Perry
D Murdaugh, Peter Gerondares,
Julia M Bostic, Irving Altman,
Anne M Cummins, Joseph Kra-
kower, Michael R Soviero,

No. 1181 — 92.5%

1181 Armando A Wynter,
Harry Jacobsen, Margie J Mack,
Dolores S Jemmott, Mavelyn T
Gaskin, Louis A Pagan, Tho-
mas W Crescl, Gloria L Miller,
Larnell Johnson, John R Huls-
woud, William Stanley Jr, Bes-
sie L Williams, Arthur Holder,
Kelvin J Wallace, Alejandro
Santiago, Randy R Ramsuer, Ar-
thur R Herris, Geraldine Wil-
Mams, Gloria A Victoria, Julius
J Heszlenyi.

No, 1201 — 92.5%

1201 Bobby Johnson, Barbara
E Randolph, Robert C Daye, Ed-
ward B Williams, Frank J Cuc-
caru, Douglas A Drax, Genevieve
Palomba, Robert W Graves, Wil-
Mam Bellber, Clifford Liverpool,
Anthony J Lamonica, Louls
Caruso, Jonathan E Field, Laur-
ence E Mynes, Emily P Mitchell,
Cynthia M Moore, Peter W Mar-
Unez, Arthur A Nealon, Lorenza
Jordan, Douglas M Collins.

No, 1221 — 92.5%

4221 Gloria Holland, Prank
Grana, Wilson T Acosta, James
W Deloatch, Delores J Reeves,

(Continued on Page 1)
rag

Eligibles

EXAM NO. 2088
GENERAL ENTRANCE SERIES
(Continued from Page 12)
Molly Udell, Vincent D Boccio,
‘Thomas R Pileury, Doris M
Giles, Paul J Zingler, Norman
Steeps, Charles D Coleman,
Eleanor Bienstock, Eric K Haw-
kins, Jean R Jones, Earl Davis,
Marva Y Weston, Daphne A
Poster, Marcel M Radu, Allen R

Cohen,
No. 1241 — 92.5%

1241 Michael Starace, Eugene
Rigores, Susan V Flood, David B
Goodman, Irving I Martzak,
Stanley M Podolsky, Patrick M
Byrnes, Darryl L Jackson, Mary
L Bell, Louise Harris, Adolph L
Marie, Michael L Jackson, Jos-
eph P Benenati, Edward Hers-
berg, Dorothy M Merritt. Aida M
Rodriguez, Edward Bias, Rey-
naldo FP Quijano, Lorraine D
Bailey, Joyce B Gallant.

Ne, 1261 — 92.5%

1261 Helen Ligon, Rosalie o'-
ucelo, John T Lincoln, Leon B
Maynard, Ana Baez, Albert L
Davis, Catherine Waller, Olga M
McCormack, Mamie § Philip, Ar-
thur L Tolbert, Sheffield Kaai-
und, Katie M Walton, Donnel
Lawrence, Louise Brown, Sarah
Crawford, Nelson Baez, John A
Greer, Ronald Etheridge, Gwen-
dolyn Smith, Jackquelin Harrell

No, 1281 — 92.5%
1281 Allen A Buchanan, Isi-

LEGAL NOTICE
COC LIMITED PARTNERSHIP

and fled in the New York County
Gletk’s Office on February 20, 1973,
the substance of which is as follows’
‘The name and location of the partner-
ship is CCC Limited Parmership, 1345
Avenue of the Americas, New York,
New York 100019 (c/o Canle Capi

jon). The business is the

quisition of equipmeet for the purpose
of lensing it to creditworthy lessees;
the “purchase OF equipment already on
and the

lease tw creditworthy
performance of any
comptish the foregoi
place of residence of the general part-
ner is Castle Capital Corporation, 1345
Avenue of the Amer
New York 10019. The name, place of
residence and total amount of original

lessees;

partner
wit, 375
Riverdale, S

Sidney Liebo-
Henty Hudson Pari
jew York, $18,333.33;
|. 2 Pebble Lane, Hewlett
$18,333.33; and Louis
3208" Gi Concourse, Bronx,
York, $18,333,353. The term for which
the limited partnership is to exist is
uatil December 31, 1988 unless sooner
dimolved by operation of law, a) a
result of the bankruptcy of Castle Capi-
the gesecal partner, the

of filty per cent (50%)
in interest of the limited partners, or
the withdeawal of Castle Capital Cor
‘No addi:

Partnership and after payment of the
debts of the partnership and it liabili-
tiet, provisions for necemary debts and
feserve and repayment of advances by
Partners, Each limited partner, by reason
‘of his capital contribution, shall share
in Peokes and Jones of ‘the pariner-

ped
for exining imeresu, No

k
sf. a f
tf fe i
ie

dore Idoff, Joseph M Quagiler!,
‘Theresa P Joyce, Raymond J
Rossi, Allen M Forest, Thomas
J Walker, Robert FP Smythe,
John Marciante, Nilda Colon,
Jay Delasse, Robert A Craig,
Ronald G Wettenstein, Joseph
Franchina, Theodore E Bristow,
Lazarus D Sangirardi, James Bi-
tetto, James A Rutling, Roceo 8
Modaffer!, Isalah Rembert Jr.

No, 1301 — 92.5%

1301 Clarence Bowle, Lewis
Rubin, Giro A Castaldo, William
Desmond, Larry White, Ted A
Ruffio, Thomas E Montgomery,
Melvin Finkelstein, Gaetano D
Merolesi, Santiago Tolentino,
James R Bowick, Robert L Sax-
on, Hilliard Starke, Richard
Coleman, James Dargan, Harold
E Rhump, Tyrone D Danner,
Louis J Bell, Jask Reeves, Harold
Costrich,

1321 — 92.5%

1321 Jack Casella, Andre L
Gibbs, Leroy Greenslape, James
P Rogan, Hugh B Gilroy, Philip
Goldstein, Rosario V Sicignano,
Julius B Kronick, Irving 8 Brod-
er, Abraham Ostrow, Edgar H
Richardson, Raymond Scott, Vin-
cent J Manuella, Theodore Taft,
Lucy B Lioyd, Fouad A Soliman,
Viola M Borroto, Leon Smith,
Donald Rivers, Floyd J Bailey.

No. 1341 — 91.3%

1341 Margaret B Stern, Rich-
ard G Matarazzo, Antoinette
Haick, Jerry J Bell, James E
Starkey, Patrick Misciagno, Har-
old E Myers, Ruthven O Swan-
ston, Norma Hoyeski, Robert J
Giallombardo, Dorothy D Brady,
Helen V Lettieri, Nora M Tanai,
Blanche A Davids, Cyrill L Hunt,
Patrick McGarry, Steven Moody,
Andrew J Mastrocinque, Janet
Rembert.

No. 1361 — 91.3%

1361 Claudette Johnson, Lou-
is A Manners, Bettie J Pitt, Shir-
ley A Puglia, Alice M Stanback,
Marguerita Hurdle, Jerome D
Brooks, Malinda D Robbins, Mor-
ton Cohen, Anne F Brown, Car-
men L Perez, Francisco Cordero,
Patricia T Brown, Thelma Love,
Bob D Padmore, Calvin P White-
hurst, Denise Clark, Wilfredo
Gonzalez, Stella T Hneyda, Bar-

bara J Atwood.
No, 1381 — 91.3%

1381 Cecila A Laurence, Mario
R Marullo, Rose M Young, Ron-
ald T Becton, James F Mack,
Samuel W Lee, Christine Purdie,
Prank P DiBenedetto, Clarence
E Hobgood, George A Calvey,
Edith M White, Jay L Lenoble,
Oliie J Wilson, James A Fleming,
Rosetta R Woods, Joseph P
Small, Tommydee T Mitchell,
Rita E Hernandez, Martha He-
witt, Mitchell H Rosenstein.

No, 1401 — 91.3%

1401 Mark I Rosenthal, Albert
W Woodley, Ralph E Mitchell,
Sylvester Bell, Alfred F Depet-
rile, Edward Walston, Ivan L
Ayala, Richard C Knowles, Lou-
is J Randall, Virginia A Muniz,
Phil 8 Prudenti, Barbara A
Brown, Barry § Bryan, Catherine
Hoey, Edward J Timper, Patricia
A Woods, John M Berry, Clif-
ton L Hollingsworth Jr, Jeanne
L Booker, Oscar Irizarry,

No. 1421 — 91.3%

1421 Onaney Valencia, Charles
Cartledge Jr, Shwikar A Fawzy,
John F Gurry, Lena M Moore,
Rosie Zinamon, Cynthia M Sim-
monds, Janie Broadie, James K
Wolahan, Andre 8 Stokes, Edgar
K Jackson, Fred H Brauner,
Larry Brown, Alyce J French,
Vivian Watson, Joseph R Can-
field, Alice L Hyland, Eugenia J
Barclift, Leslie Varnay, John W
Rommel,

No. 1441 — 91.3%

1441 Robert E Ewers, Rich-
ard Watson, Joseph L Tusa, Glo-
ria 8 Finnie, Lioyd W Mullgrav,
Thomas Pistone, Vincent R Hog-
an, Raymond Codispoti, Sandra
L Glover, Mittie R Reeves, Henry
& Harris, Naomi C Carmichael,
Carolyn Y Sawyer, Belin Seus,
‘Victor A Fredericks, Paul A Poci-
us, Bertha J Smith, Andrew Lar-
reguil, Ann Milani, John J Ress-
ler.

No, 1461 — 91.3%

1461 Roger C Ericson, Willi-
am H Baskerville, Elaine J Ed-
wards, Carolyn A Andrews, Gil-
bert Vasquez, James Alvarez, Ric-
hard 8 Bell, Marie Lane, Vincent
A Jones, Grover Stewart; Jo-
seph L Davis, Violet Webb, Bev-

(Continued on Page 15)

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14

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, May 15, 1973

y ho pe

SUNYAB INSTALLATION — Theodore ©.
Wenzl, president of the Civil Service Employees Assn.,
was one of the speakers at the installation dinner of the
2,000-member State University of New York at Buffalo
chapter of the CSEA. State Senator John J. LaFalee,

left, was the principal speaker and Edward G. Dudek
was installed as president. Senator LaFalce gave his
views on the state pension system, declaring that the

Committee Sets Meeting
To Redraft Constitution
For Central Conference

perfect solution lies somewhere between the Kinzel
Cemmission report and the report of state municipal
unions. Not enough legislators know enough about the

pension system to produce needed reforms, he sald.
In the second photo are recently installed officers for
the SUNYAB chapter, Left to right, standing: Ralph
A. Beverman and Edgar T. Villa, technical represent-
atives; Dorothy H. Lewis, recording secretary; June W.

CSEA public relations di-

in number of items covered, in-

Boyle, treasurer; Virginia K. Moronski, administrative
representative; Barbara J. Kauffman, corresponding sec-
retary; Kay Massimi, clerical representative; Adrian L.
Bieler, administrative representative; Mary ©. McCar-
thy, clerical representative. Seated, left to right, William
T. Stoberl, fourth vice-president; Roger F. Frieday,
third vice-president; Edward G, Dudek, president; Ro-
bert C. Smith, first vice-president, and Dorethy T.
Haney, second vice-president.

State Officers Prominent At Central Meeting

(Continued from Page 9) ies,

BINGHAMTON—A meeting of
the Central Conference constitu-
tion and bylaws committee has
been called for May 19 in Syra-
euse by committee chairman
Charles Ecker, who is also im-
mediate past president of the
Conference.

The meeting {ts scheduled to
bring the Conference's constitu-
tion in line with new provisions
mandated by Civil Service Em-
ployees Assn. delegates in recent
statewide conventions.

After Oct. 1, 1973, the Central
Conference will be known as
Region V, with its own president
(who will also be @ vice-president
of the statewide Employees As-
sociation)

Other members of the commit-
tee are Leona Appel, Herb
Brown, Clara Boone, Raymond
Castle, Fred Klotz and Louls
Sunderhaft

Mental Hygiene Aides

(Continued from Page 3)
ent positions in the near future.

As the EEA employees become
permanent, Department officials
have the ability to back-fill the
open EBA items, but must notify
each new EEA employee that the
position is of a temporary na-
ture and will be abolished by
June 30, 1974

CSEA‘s labor-management
committee praised the depart-
ment for thelr action on the
EEA implementation saying,
"The decisions reached during
the recent talks went a jong
way in advancing and protect-
ing loyal employees who have
labored under very tenuous con-
ditions during their period of
EEA employment. This is a def-
inite step forward in proper staff-
ing and administration of our
wards and will pay off in great-
ly improved patient care.

to be that of Onondaga County
chapter. In ceremonies copied
after that of the Oscars/Emmys/
‘Tonys/Grammys, Rae Scharfeld
and Andrew Placito accepted the
award on behalf of their chapter
from the presenter, Association
president Wenz,

William O'Neill accepted the
second-place award for SUNY
at Syracuse chapter from pre-
senters Angelo Vallone and Leo
Weingartner, presidents of the
two host chapters.

Third-piace award went to
Binghamton chapter, and Mar-
waret Wareing accepted the
award from CSEA first vice-pres-
ident McDonough and Conference
first vice-president Louis Sun-
derhaft

Willard State Hospital chapter,
last year’s top winner, copped
fourth place this year, and Har
riet Casey accepted the trophy
from CSEA treasurer Gallagher
and Conference second vice-pres-
ident Dorothy Moses

Honorable mention went to
St, Lawrence County chapter for
its first entry in the competition
Edward Knight, chapter pres-
ident, made the acceptance, and
CSEA third vice-president Tar-
mey and Conference third vice-
president Patricla Crandall were
the presenters.

Helene Callahan, chairman of
the scrapbook contest, said the
officers had been asked to par-
ticlpate in the award giving as
an opportunity to demonstrate
how CSEA officers — whether
at state, conferemee, chapter,
unit or section level — give of
themselves to work for the bet-
terment of thelr fellow workers.

Other members of the com-
mittee were co-chairman Clara
Boone, Delbert Langstaff, Bev-
erly McDonald, Lois Minozai and
Boyd Van Tassel,

In the foreward to the pro-
gram for the scrapbook ceremon-

rector Joseph Roulier praised the
aims of the contest. "The more
that civil service workers par-
ticipate in civic and community
affairs,” he said, “the more the
public will come to know us as
people, understand the jobs we
perform, and appreciate our
problems and concerns.”

Various other speakers parti-
cipated in the weekend meeting
at the Treadway Inn in Owego.
CSEA director of local govern-
ment affairs Joseph Dolan ex-
plained changes in Civil Service
Law pertaining to employees
Jaid off on or after Oct. 1,
1972

Arthur Rosencrans, assistant
vice-president for Group Health
Inc., was on hand to detall some

new provisions of the GHI den-
tal plan for state employees, He
explained that effective July 1,

the GHI medical rate will go
down; dental deductible will be
revised from the current $150
per family to $50 per person,
and that, retroactive to Jan. 1,
1973, there will be an increase

cluding orthodenture.

County affairs committee
chairman Thomas Elhage, of
Oswego County chapter, en-
couraged local government em-
ployees to pursue the agency
shop concept, “Don't let this be
swept under the carpet,” he
warned.

Conference president Floyd
Peashey, commenting on Uni-
versity committee chairman
Eleanor Korchak's report, fair-
ly sizgled as he warned that
“We are going after the State
University system on grievances.”
He pointed out that after the
first three steps, grievances at
step 4 get bogged down in ad-
ministrative red tape.

Dinner speaker Patrick D.
Monserrat, District Attorney for
Broome County, pointed out the
difficulties which public employ-
ees must face, He urged them to
keep trying to show the public
that “we are dedicated public
servants in spite of skeptic-
ism by many members of the
public.

7

Floyd Peashey, Central Conference president, talks over
some of the Conference's accomplishments at meeting with

guests, from

left, Pauline McDonough;

Richard Tarmey,

CSEA third vice-president, and Thomas McDonough, CSEA

first vice-president

Arthur Rosencrans, assistant
vice-president of Group
Health Inc., explains some of
the benefits of expanded
dental coverage now being
offered

One major event at the meet-
ing not reported on here is the
designation of candidates to run
for regional offices this fall. In
order to avoid confusion and to
be fair to all candidates, The
Leader ts awaiting official word
to clear up discrepancies in the
number of offices for which the
Central Conference nominated
candidates, but which number ts
different than current interpre-
tations of the restructured CSEA
have mandated. Former Confer-
ence president Charles Ecker,
who served as a member of the
restructuring committee, ts re-
ported to be working with other
officials of CSEA to resolve the
conflict

Special Group Life

ALBANY Enrollment in a special low-cost
group life insurance plan, which does not re-
quire a medical examination in most cases, is
available to State employees who are members
of the Civil Service Employees Assn. during the
month of May 1973 only,

Applications should be sent to the Insurance
Department, CSEA Headquarters, 33 Elk St,, Al-
bany 12207 on or before May 31, 1973.

CSEA members who are under 50 years of age
or who have not completed five years in state
service are eligible for the plan without medical

Insurance Plan Available During May

examination. Members who are over $0 years of
age or who have completed over five years of state
service must take examinations,

The plan offers 10 percent additional insur-
ance, guaranteed until November 1, 1973, with-
out additional charge, which provides that prem-
jums are walved if a member becomes perman-
ently disabled before age 60, and double indem-
nity In the case of accidental death is guaran-
teed,

The cost of the insurance is 10 cents biweekly
per $1,000 worth of coverage for members 29 years

old or younger. Older members may obtain this
insurance at lower than normal rates,

Members can elect to pay their insurance
premiums through the automatic payroll deduc-
tion plan.

Literature explaining the group life insurance
plan and necessary application forms can be ob-
tained from local CSEA chapters or chapter rep-
resentatives or from CSEA headquarters,

CSEA members are local government em~-
ployees will be offered this same special plan
during the month of June 1973,

e,
Eligibles

erley J Simpson, Rose Lopez,
Harold K White, Shair Abdullah,
Steven J Walker, Charles S Fiem-
ai Rae oe cdc

No. 1481 — 91.3%
1481 Michael R Hicks, Gar-

James A Rogers, Donato F San-
to, John Pisano, Robert Riz-
2, Diane T O’Brien, Frances R
Whittet, Rose D Rubinstein, An-
thony P Canlone, Walter V O’-
Brien, Robert H Douglass, David
A Sumner.
No, 1501 — 91.3%

1501 Samuel G Brown, Michael
C Poerio, Salvatore Scola, Wil-
bert. I Wilson, Theodore Aviles,

WHERE TO APPLY
FOR PUBLIC JOBS

NEW YORK CITY — Persons
seeking jobs with the City
should file at the Department of
Personnel, 49 Thomas St. New
York 10013, open weekdays be-
tween 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Special
hours for Thursdays are 8:30
a.m, to 5:30 pm.

‘Those requesting applications
by mail must include a stamped,
self-addressed envelope, to be
received by the Department at
Teast five days before the dead-
line. Announcements are avail-
able only during the filing period.

By subway, applicants can
reach the filing office via the
IND (Chambers St.); BMT (City
Hall); Lexington IRT (Brooklyn
Bridge). For advance informa-
on on titles, call 566-8700.

Several City agencies do their
own recruiting and hiring, They
include: Board of Education
(teachers only), 65 Court St,
Brooklyn 11201, phone: 596-
8060; NYC Transit Authority,
370 Jay St, Brooklyn 11201
phone: 852-5000.

The Board of Higher Educa-
tian advises teaching staff ap-
Plicants to contact the Individ-
ual schools; non-faculty jobs are
filled through the Personnel De-
partment directly.

STATE — Regional offices of
the Department of Civil Serv-
ice are located at; 1350 Ave. of
Americas, New York 10019;
(phone: 765-9790 or 765-9791);
State Office Campus, Albany,
12226; Suite 750, 1 W. Genessee
St, Buffalo 14202, Applicants
may obtain announcements
either in person or by sending
@ stamped, self-addressed envel-
ope with their request,

Various State Employment
Service offices can provide ap-
plications in person, but not by
mail,

Judicial Conference jobs are
filled at 270 Broadway, New
York, 10007, phone: 488-4141
Port Authority jobseekers should
contact their offices at 111
Eighth Ave, New York, phone:
620-7000.

FEDERAL—The U.S. Civil
Service Commission, New York
Region, runs a Job Information
Center at 26 Federal Plaza, New
York 10007, Its hours are 8:30
am. to 5 p.m, weekdays only.
Telephone 264-0422.

Federal entrants living upstate
(North of Dutchess County)
should contact the Syracuse Area
Office, 301 Erle Blvd, West,
Syracuse 13203, Toll-free calls
may be made to (800) 522-7407
Federal titles have no deadline
unless otherwise indicated

No. 1541 — 90%

1541 James Vigliarolo, Gerald
Pfeffer, Jay Rakoff, Joseph A
Marrero, Harry Clark, Gregory F
Woods, Leonard Santoro, Mel-
vin Kahn, Victor A Castro, Ray-
mond H Nazer, James N Thomp-
son, Yvonne C Gellineau, Eliza-
beth Passfi Jean A Lane, Ray-
mond M Oneill, Vernon N Gel-
lineau, Ronald E Brown, Ron-
ald R Walker, Christophe Musco,
Mable McCullough,

No. 1561 — 90%

1561 Esther Bussey, Ramona
Parnell, Jerald L Pittman, Mar-
garita Garcia, Malonie A Joseph,
Forrest L Gamble, Norman W
Gainey, William M Burke, Katie
R Williams, Ruby Bartley, Bruce
G Matarese, Angelina Urso, Eva
L Washington, Joan Alexander,
Diane Roos, Sally M Christian,
Johnny L Kersey Jr, Iole Simon-
son, Neil K Ende, Carl J Wal-
ston

No, 1581 — 90%

1581 Deloise Kirksey, Ozie
Bradford, Celestine Wynne, Joe
T Klusko, Kenneth C Jarrell, Ro-
bert G Fitzroy, Maryann M
Czvekus, Laverene M Beckles,
Patricia A Jefferson, Peggy L
Edwards, Robert L Hill, Myrtle
M Miles, Harold J O’Brien,
Thomas Giorgio, Claude Hughes,
Pairy B Nelson, Elkanah U Rod-
gers, Richard D Picaro, Viola L
Ford.

No. 1601 — 90%

1601 Milagros D Fernandez,
Michael Devine, Jean Russell,
Sarah A Konak, Beverly A
Wright, Jerry Fox, Santiago Ro-
man, John D McLaughlin, Rose
Serrano, George Block, Michae!
H Kapor, Joyce M Cox, Ramon
L Perez, Jose M Torres, Richard
L Difaico, Juan J Cuadrado, Mat-
tie Holland, Michael D Stieg-
litz, Annie Y Peterson, Elsa 1
DeJesus.

No, 1621 — 90%

1621 Paul L Carney, Lawrence
W Dwyer, Kenneth K Henry, Do-
ris Bennin, Oswald T Constant,
Sheila E Henry, Frank Fenty,
Edith B Burrows, Robert L
Holmes, Paul A Hutchinson, Jer-
ome P Bethea, Steven Fedorack,
Lee Beckley, Peter Colom, Mar-
garet A Simmons, Dorothea V
Feaster, Angelo Pardi, Rudolph
Berenger, Theresa Duncan, Daisy
Matias.

No, 1641 — 90%

1641 William Calero, Herman
Menasse, Cleo E Magnezid, Car-
olyn ¥ Jones, Brenda A Lyons,
Lula Hale, Rosetta Phillips, Les-
ter W Bryant Jr, Gloria D Ruiz,
Maureen Carter, Bertha Hersko-
vits, Keith 8 Perrin, Frank J
Albanese, Virginia R Johnson,
George R Hughes, Warren Wald~
man, Anthony Wright, Ann Wal-
lace, Edward W Berger, Frances
Patrick.

No, 1661 — 90%

1661 Nilda Martinez, Richard
B Kalman, Lawrence R Furia,
Marian D Anderson, Bernard
Goodman, Jean M Williams, Cyn-
thia D Cousins, Rita J Small,

An Unarmed Court Officer's Funeral

Two hundred and fifty
court officers led by
Chief Administrative Judge
David Ross for management
and president William Mc-
Donnell of the Conference of
Court Officers and Bernard
Sheingold of the Uniformed
Court Officers Union, a Lo-

Robert P Markman, Edward F
Owoning, Mattie Bynoe, Joseph
D Forlenza, Bobbie J Johnson,
Mary E James, Joseph Freiman,
Ann E Mullen, Walter K Allen,
Rachel Manso, Richard W Was-
zak, Raymond M Mack.

No, 1681 — 90%

1681 Barbara A Newsome, Lav-
erne Mathis, Rafael Andrade,
Vincent Mignone, Edith H Spa-
danuda, Joseph N Baust, Devera
D Smith, Beethoven Mitchell,
Jeffrey C Smith, Zellene E Gor-
donon, Aida Pereira, William E
Meaney, Philip L Clark, Eddie
M Ayler, Stanley Diugolicki Jr,
Edwin Velazquez, Charlotte
Graves, Michael E Pereira, Pat-
rela D Hall, Powell James.

No. 1701 — 90%

1701 John C Barnes, Frances
Storey, David Schultz, Margie M
Brightman, Edwin Suarez, Pear!
White, Albertha M Meggett, Nic-
holas D Paris, Adrienne Saun-
ders, Donald L Bloiso, Freddie
Gainey, Yvonne J Cohen, Eugene
A Peterson, David Johnson,
Maureen E Rhodes, Cherie Mas-
on, Gilbert Capestany, Donald
A Smith, Alfred Puller, George
T Aadamick.

No. 1721 — 90%

1721 Paulene E Richburg, Wil-
lie B Dunton, Marcella Wooten,
Alexander Thornley, Robert E
Armstrong, Edward C Backlund,
Steven § Curiale, Kevin P Walsh,
Bernice E Manning, Marion E
Susino, Eustace O'Brien, Ricardo
Sierra, Ellis L Behmoiram, Leo-
nard J Capra, Joel S Schein-
wald, Earnest Prazier, Tommy L
Leonard, Irving Butensky, Wayne
P Beuf, Louis Hurewitz.

No. 1741 — 90%

1741 Felipe Marrero, Emelle
Kelley, Frederick Brommer, Irv-
ing Silverstein, Leroy Talley,
Harold L Roland, Alonzo Myers,
Robert I Dinerstein, Richard P
Casey, Eugene L Jones, Edward P
Garrick, Jose R Alvelo, Jose &
Rivera, Louls Smith, Anthony C
Trongone, Seymour W Rabino-
witz, Mario W Lopes, Edward
Dieffenbach, Simon Weinberg,
Alfred J Castagna.

No, 1761 — 90%

1761 Ronald Silverberg, Thom-
as A Boone, Ferman Lyons,
Charles Talley, Joseph A Meg-
lino, Andrew R Axelrad, Joa-
quin Rosario, Richard P Woito-
witz, Eula M Royster, Susie San-
ford, Mabel Jones, Arthur T
Daniels, Larry R Phillips, An-
thony P Desimone, Ivan Cortes,
Susie A Pendleton, Louls P Haick,
dr, Harvey Kowalsky, Michael J
Farr, Michael A Clarke.

(Te Be Continued)

cal 832 affiliate, for labor,
attended the funeral Thurs-
day morning, May 10, of
young criminal court officer
Francis Carroll, 27, in the
Inwood section of Manhat-
tan. Carroll was shot and
killed last week when he in-
terrupted a robbery in the
Hotel Evans on West 38th
Street in Manhattan at
about 6 p.m. Carroll had
been a criminal court officer
for only a month-and-a-
half when he was killed,
Walking into the hotel lobby,
he saw a gunman standing be-
hind the front desk and another
demanding money from the ho-
tel clerk. When Carroll, who was
unarmed, tried to stop the rob-
ber in front of the counter by
wrestling with him, the ° other
bandit jumped over the counter
and hit him over the head with
his revolver and then shot him

to death, The two robbers
fied with only $50 taken
from the hotel till.

President Sheingold, repre-

senting Local 832 at the funeral,
said that the assemblage of so
large a group of court officers
from the Supreme courts of the
five boroughs, the Criminal,
Family and Civil courts, was a
fitting tribute to a uniformed
court officer, who gave his life
in the protection of the public

Court Officers Conference
president William McDonnell
said that “the combined court

officers assembled at this sol-
emn moment demonstrates that
all court officers in all of the
city’s courts and the Supreme
courts should be in one labor or-
wanization, Local 832,"

Executive members of Local
832 who attended the funeral in
addition to McDonnell and
Sheingold, were Charles Viscon-
tl, Dennis O'Leary, Steven
Crane, George Jordan, Gerard

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16

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, May 15, 1973

Monroe Chapter Asks Arbitration

Personal Leave ‘Not For Open
Discussion,’ Koenig Challenges

(From Leader Correspondent)

ROCHESTER — The first arbitration case ever requested by the CSEA'’s Monroe
County chapter, which involves the taking of personal leave, is expected to be decided in

about six weeks.

And two more arbitration hearings, requested by Monroe chapter because of alleged

contract violations by the coun-
ty administration, were scheduled
for May 8 and 15.

The personal-leave-taking
complaint arose when County
Manager Lucien A. Morin claim-
ed that some employees were
abusing the “privilege.” He or-
dered employees to give a rea-
son with their request for leave
and, he said, if the reason wasn't
good enough, department heads
could deny the request.

Martin Koenig, CSEA chap-
ter president, said employees
should defy Morin’s order and
take the leave whether the de-
partment head approves or not
because the contract mentions no
such requirement.

Signs posted by the chapter
on bulletin boards in county

xe
Nominations Rules
(Continued from Page 3)
selections in sufficient time to
forward their candidates before
the June 24 deadline,” according
to CSEA’s Schmahl,
Independent Nominations

Independent nominations for
statewide officer positions may be
made by petition, signed by not
less than 5 percent of the mem-
bers of the association, They
must be filed with the CSEA sec-
retary by July 28, 1973. Execu-
tive committee independent nom-
dations must also be filed by
that date and require the sig-
natures of at least 10 percent
of the members in a given state
department.

A candidate must withdraw
(if he desires) by written notice
to the CSEA secretary before
the 70th day preceding the an-
nual meeting or July 8, 1973. In
the event of a withdrawal, the
nominating committee shall file
with the secretary a substitute
nomination not later than July
28, 1973.

An outside, impartial elec-
tion agency selected by the
Board will conduct the elections
in accordance with CSEA’s Con-
stitution and By-Laws, The
agency, yet to be selected, will
police and make determination
on the validity of nominating
petitions, counting of ballots,
and have general responsibility
for supervision of the election.

On Sept. 13, 1973, all candi-
dates will be notified, on a per-
sonal and confidential basis, of
results of the elections. Ballots
must be in the hands of com-
mittee members by Aug, 27. They
then must be forwarded to the
impartial election agency by
Sept, 6, 1973, either by mail or
delivered in person.

‘The listing of election candi-
dates shall be in alphabetical or-
der and only the candidates’
names, thelr departments, and
thelr conference shall be shown
on the ballot

Each state department is en-
titled to at least one represen-
tative on the union's State Ex-
ecutive Committee. In addition,
those departments with more
than 3,000 members as of June
1, 1072, will be voting on one
additional representative on the
committee for each additional
3,000 members or major fraction.

buildings say: “You do not have
to give reasons why you are re-
questing personal leave because
the reason you are requesting
the time off is not for open dis-
cussion.

“Tt is not to be subject to
a supervisor's decision as to whe-
ther your reasons for request-
ing personal leave are ‘good
enough’ to warrant the time off."

The signs tnstruct employees
to report to chapter stewards
any inquiries into why the leave
is needed or any denials of the
leave.

Koenlg said employees are en-
titled to five days of personal
leave each year for religious ob-
servances, funerals, legal pur-
poses, extreme emergencies or
pressing personal obligations. The
leave is guaranteed in the CS-
EA’s contract with the County,
he said.

“Having to give a reason is
an invasion of privacy,” he said.
“For example, a woman going
to see a lawyer about a divorce
doesn’t want her supervisor to
know about it."

Tt went to arbitration May 1

Set for arbitration May 8 by
an arbitrator from Lemoyne Col-
lege is the County's attempt to
impose a charge for employee
parking at the community hos-
pital and health and social ser-
vices complex on Westfall Road.

The County Legislature pass-
ed legislation imposing a 50-cent
daily parking fee and a $10
monthly fee for the 1,800 em-

ployees who work at the hospital
and health-social services com-
plex starting June 15.

“Tt's an unfair labor practice
and a violation of the contract
because it’s never been negoti-
ated," Koenig said.

Koenig said he hopes for a de-
cision in about two weeks after
the hearing “to avoid any un-
pleasantness.” He said he was
optimistic because there are two

precedent cases in the state
which found in favor of em-
ployees.

The county's attempt to change
conditions under which employ-
ees are to receive increments
is set for arbitration May 15,
Koenig said, The arbitrator will
be from Rochester Institute of
Technology.

“The increments have been in
effect since Jan. 1,” he said.
“They're a fringe benefit and a
right employees previously en-
joyed.”

Increments are a sum paid
an employee each year if he per-
forms at least average work on
his job. Koenig said County Man-
ager Morin’s plan would award a
Passing grade “only to those who
perform significantly better than
the other employees in the de-
partment.”

The rating by the supervisor
must be 75 percent instead of
50, as in the past, he said. "I
also feel that it’s a violation that
an employee now will be com-
pared to other employees in the
same department.”

Koch Steps Down
As President Of
LI Conference

SMITHTOWN — George Koch, president of the 50,000-
member Long Island Conference of the Civil Service Em-
ployees Assn. for the last five years, resigned last week

because of his retirement,

He was automatically succeed~-
ed by David Silberman, who had
been first vice-president.

Koch and his wife, Eleanor,
have purchased a retiremeni
home north of Fort Lauderdale,
Fla.

Silberman, a member of the
Nassau chapter of the Civil Ser-
vice Employees Assn, for more
than 20 years and an officer for
more than 15 of them, is head
of the Plainview School District
unit, He lives in West Islip, He
has been active also on state
and conference committees.

The board accepted Koch's
resignation with thanks for his
work

Silberman announced a imit-
¢d-seating testimonial dinner for
Koch will be held by the Con-
ference June 16 at the Hunting-
ton Towne House, Tickets, at
$15, may be seoured from Willi-
am Kempey, c/o State Armory,
216 Washington St., Hempstead,
N.Y. 11550,

Graig State Meeting

MT. MORRIS. Craig State
chapter of the Civil Service Em-
ployees Assn. will hold its gener-
al meeting here May 22 at 8 p.m.
at the Mt. Morris Vet's Club,
according to chapter president
Charles Peritore.

MANY HAPPY RETURNS — John Daley, left, re-elected
president of the State Department of Taxation and Finance chapter
of the Civil Service Employees Assn. by a landslide vote, accepts
congratulations from John Dougherty, Tax departmental represen-
tative to the CSEA Board of Directors and Daley's predecessor as
chapter president,

Food Service Career
Ladder Improvements

Submitted By CSEA

ALBANY — The Ciyil Service Employees Assn.'s food
service career ladder committee announced late last week
that proposals have been submitted to the State which will,
if accepted, provide a substantially improved progression

series for food service workers
throughout the state.

The proposals, resulting from
a series of give-and-take dis-
cussions between CSEA’s com-
mittee and the State, represent
the first step in a series of sub-
missions that each bi-laterally

negotiated career ladder must
undergo,
CSEA’s recently negotiatei

1973-76 contract calls for implv-
mentation of the food service
tareer ladder by March 30,
1974. Robert Guild, CSEA collec-
tive negotiating specialist said,
“Significant progress is being
made on the ladder and we sin-
cercly believe that it will be work-
ed out well in advance of th:
contract deadline date.”

As submitted, the CSEA pro-
posal calls for in-line and lateral
progression in the cook, food ser-
vice and dietitian promotional
series. The food service aides
would be in line for an immedi-
ate upgrading and with proper
qualifications could enter the
career ladder as an apprentice
cook, assistant dining room man-
ager or dietitian trainee.

Tn all cases, in the CSEA sub-
mission, current titles in the
three promotional series would
fall in @ logical promotional pat
tern, and many of the ti
would be of a higher grade tha:
currently existing titles.

CSEA members on the

food

service career ladder commit-
tee are: Barney Littlefield, Ed-
ward Cygan, Harry Letlough,
Stanley Ostraski, Lorraine Scott,
Dorothy Burghardt, William Ka-
slow, Zenchia Jackson and Lil-
Man Davey.

Bendet Re-elected
By Gity Chapter

Solomon Bendet has been re-
elected president of the New
York City chapter of the Civil
Service Employees Assn. It will
be his tenth term in the post,

Others named to office were
Martha Owens, first vice-pres-
ident; Benjamin Lipkin, second
vice-president; Arthur Lakritz,
third vice-president; Seymour
Shapiro, treasurer; Norman
Blattberg, financial secretary;
Minna Weckstein, recording sec-
retary, and Mirlam Levy, cor-
responding secretary.

The officers will be installed
by Thomas McDonough, state-
wide first vice-president of the
Employees Association on May
28 at the Concord Hotel.

Bendet announced the retire-
ment of Frieda Heldman as
manager of the chapter's New
York City office, She will be
succeeded by James J. Chiara-
valle.

Officers Elected For Jefferson Units

(From Leader Correspondent)

WATERTOWN — Officers
of the County, City and So-
cial Services units of Jef-
ferson chapter, Civil Service
Employees Assn., have been se-
lected on the basis of member-
ship balloting in separate annual
elections completed May 1, ac-
cording to chapter president
Eleanor Percy.

The slate for the County unit
includes Peter G. Grieco, presi-
dent; Eugene G. Piddock, vice-
president; Elane Duffany, sec-
retary Sandra G. Coleman,

treasurer; Janice C. Cameron,
Marsha J. Coppola, Kathleen
Keegan, Arnold J. Higgins, and
Donald W. King, members of
the exeoutive council

OMicers of the City unit are
Richard J, Grieco, president;
William A, Murray, vice-preai-
dent; Eleanor M, Howland, sec-
retary; Angeline N. Dusckas,
treasurer; Thomas G. Pfister, Eli-
zabeth B. Gartland, Richard P.
Brown, and Ivan FP. French,
members of the executive coun-
ell.

In @ contest for every office

in the Social Services unit, the
winners are: Donna R. Podvin,
president; Pauline H. Scofield,
vice-president; Judy M, VanPat~
ten, recording secretary; Grace
H. Londraville, treasurer; Nancy
C, DeThomas, Mary K. Doyle,
and David Humphrey, members
of the executive council, Retir-
ing president Dawson J. Dick be-
comes a member of the council.

The newly elected officers of
each unit will be installed by A.
Victor Costa, second vice-presi-
dent of CSEA, at the chapter
dinner meeting May 18

cA

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Date Uploaded:
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