LEADER
America’s Largest Newspaper for Public Employees
Vol, XXXIV,
10 Tuesday, June 5, 1973
Price 15 Cents
00000000 2-COMP-CUMP
PR CSEA
33 ELK ST
ALBANY
VY 12224
Retiree News
— See Page 9
FOR CHARITY — Civil Service Employees Assn. president
Theodore ©. Wenal, right, and Cortland State University chapter
president Robert Glazier, left, present check for $100 to chapter
member M. J. Nettleton, who bicycled 40 miles during the March
of Dimes Bike-a-Thon last month. (See story on Page 14.)
Thruway Aides Advised
To Ignore Directive On
Filing For Retirement
ALBANY — Employees of the New York State Thruway
Authority have been alerted by the Civil Service Employees
Assn, to ignore a recent directive from their employer urging
those eligible to file immediately for retirement to avoid
possible pension cutbacks should
the Legislature fail to extend cer-
tain benefits.
The Thruway memorandum,
dated May 23, warned employees
of retirement age to file their
applications no later than May
advance notice require-
n the event the present
pension benefits due to expire on
June 30 were not renewed.
A CSEA spokesman noted that
the Thruway warning did re-
mind employees that they could
change their mind and withdraw
their applications anytime dur-
ing the 30-day period, should
conditions change.
The spokesman said, however,
that the Thruway directive was
premature and uncalled for
and served only to confuse and
on?”
—_.
Repeat This!
73 Legislature A
Study In Smooth
Gov't. Operation
HILE the Republican
administration in
shington is mired in the
mud of Watergate, the Re-
publican administration in New
York gave ® contrasting demon-
stration of smooth and efficient
government operations. The Leg-
islature adjourned last week,
completing its work without ran-
cor and without ruffling too many
feathers,
(Continued on Page 6)
alarm a great number of em-
ployees, since there was no rea-
son at the time tm, conclude
that the Legislature would not
extend the pension benefits in
question."
CSEA, upon hearing of the
Thruway directive, immediately
called upon the agency to re-
seind it.
Okay Nassau
Pact By 5 to 1
MINEOLA — Settlement
terms for the Nassau chap-
ter, Civil Service Employees
Assn., were approved by a
five-to-one margin in a referen-
dum Friday.
The vote, with 90 percent
counted at Leader presstime,
49 to 1,017
Chapter president = Irving
Flaumenbaum said that the set-
tloment terms “were less than
we wanted on some things, at-
tractive on other things-and, on
balance, amounted to a reason-
able settlement.”
‘The settlement provides almost
14,000 members in the county
service with the 75 (1) retire-
ment plan, $20,000 death ben-
efit, pay boosts of five and one
half and six percent in each of
two years and 22 other economic
and fringe benefits
‘The CSEA stand throughout
the long negotiations led to pre-
servation of the graded salary
plan, the target of the major
thrust of the county's bargaining.
As a result, more than two-
thirds of the county workers will
continue to recelve annual inere-
(Continued on Page 14)
Rockefeller Signs Pay ;
Bill; Benefits Will Be
Retroactive To April 1
ALBANY — Governor Rockefeller has signed into law the bill that will enable some
130,000 state employees to collect pay raises and fringe benefits negotiated for them in the
recently ratified Civil Service Employees Assn. contract.
In addition to implementing the pay package for state workers, the legislation also
continued all pension benefits
presently in effect for incum-
bent state employees who are
members of the New York State
Employees Retriement System.
Temporary benefits have been
made permanent for present
state employees with the single
exception being death benefits,
which have been extended as a
temporary benefit for one year.
For the political subdivisions, the
legislation automatically extends
all temporary benefits for one
year,
to further study the pension re-
form question. The committee,
which is funded for a sum of
$75,000, is mandated to report
to the Governor and the Legis-
lature by July 15, 1973
Special Session Seen
‘The Governor has indicated in
press conferences that a special
legislative session will be call-
ed, on or after the committee's
July 15 reporting date, to take
another look at the question of
pension changes for all public
employee unions. Additional leg-
islation is expected to be sub-
mitted at that time to make
temporary benefits permanent for
the political subdivision mem-
bers of the New York State Em-
Ployees Retirement System.
The additional pension legis-
lation, which was signed at the
same time as CSEA’s benefit
package bill, affects other pub-
lic employee pension and retire-
ment systems. With the excep-
tion of the New York State Em-
ploye Retirement System, which
covers almost all CSEA mem-
bers, all other public pension
systems have been closed for new
employees as of June 30, 1973.
‘This means, according to pen-
sion experts, that there will be
no pension benefits in existence
for any public employee hired
after June 30 except those who
are members of the NYSERS.
Contract Signing
Arrangements are under way
to set a date for the official con-
tract signing between CSEA and
the state, Under the Taylor
Law, the pay raises and fringe
benefits, although retroactive to
April 1, 1973, cannot be imple-
mented until the agreement Is
aligned by both parties,
‘Theodore C. Wenzl, CSEA pres-
ident, commented on the rapidly
moving sequence of events lead-
ing up to the recently enacted
legislation, saying, “In my opin-
fon we stand in a highly favor-
able position despite the fact that
we must wait for the special
session of the legislature to get
temporary benefits made perm-
anent for local government em-
ployees. A simple comparison
of the fact that all employees
who enter other pension sys-
tems after June 30 are without
retirement benefits, and existing
benefits for encumbent employ-
ees in those system have been
extended only to Aug. 31, 1973,
gives CSEA a more stable pos!-
on to work from in this next
special session."
Pension Negotiations
Under the new legislation, ne-
wotiabllity of pensions has been
limited for all public employee
unions, For CSEA, participating
employers in the Employees Re-
Urement System may continue
to provide for their employees
al pension benefits which are
presently offered to them on an
optional basis. However, Taylor
Law negotiations for pension ben-
efits are suspended as of this
past April 1, 1973,
Negotiations that started be-
fore that date will be interpret-
ed to be valid and binding, and
may be continued and conclud-
ed, unaffected by the new law.
Judicial Pact OK'd
‘The contract negotiated for
the employees in the Judicial
Conference negotiating unit
has been overwhelmingly rati-
fled by Conference members of
the Civil Service Employees
Assn, It was announced late
last week.
Ms. Deighan Heads
SARANAC LAKE — The Col-
lege chapter of CSEA has elect-
ed a slate of officers for the year
‘The electees are: Joyce Deigh-
an, Lake Placid, president; San-
dra Pope, Saranac Lake, vice-
president; Winifred Loder, Har-
rietatown Road, secretary, and
Helen Felicl, Lake Clear, steward.
‘The chapter comprises nonpro-
fessional staff members of North
Country Community College ex-
tension centers at Saranac Lake,
Elizabethtown and Malone
Future negotiations in the poll-
tical subdivisions on movement
from one retirement plan to an-
other within the Employees Re-
tirement System may be limit-
ed. Negotiability under these
circumstances {s still subject to
further study and possible
changes as a result of the special
legislative session in July.
12% Bonus Pay
Due This Month
ALBANY — A 1% percent
productivity bonus due state
workers is expected to be in-
cluded in paychecks of June
27 and July 4, the Civil Service
Employees Assn. has been told
by the State Department of Audit
and Control.
Although a spokesman of the
agency cautioned that this should
not be interpreted as a flat guar-
antee, he said that the present
stage of processing indicated that
Payment will be made on those
dates.
The lump sum bonus of 1%
percent of basic annual salaries
earned during the fiscal year
1972-73 was negotiated by CSEA
for employees in the four state
negotiating units it represents as
part of a work contract covering
‘that period,
Payment of the bonus was con-
tingent on the bi-lateral estab-
Mshment of certain criteria for
measuring increased productivity
by a CSEA-State committee dur-
ing the life of the contract.
Agreement was achieved by the
presoribed Jan. 1, 1973 deadline,
guaranteeing the bonus to those
employees in the four negotiating
units who were on the payroll
during the first full payroll period
of the present fiscal year.
Unexpected delay was encount-
ered because of the need to com~-
pute the amounts involved on
an individual basis for each em-
ployee, According to Audit and
Control, this could not be ac-
complished until fiscal 1972-13
ended, since only basio annual
salary earned could be included
in the percentage tabulation,
‘Time off the payroll, earned over~
time and other factors had to be
discounted.
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Ti
uesday, June 5, 1973 '
A Pint Of Prevention ...
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Exclusively at 259 Broadway
{Opposite City Halt)
C.S.E.& R.A.
FROM CIVIL SERVICE EDUCATION AND RECREATION
ASSOCIATION YOR YOU AND MEMBERS OF YOUR FAMILY
SUMMER PROGRAM
LONDON er PARIS — ONE WEEK SPECIALS
K-4305 (7 Nets.) Lv, July 18, Ret. Jul
A LONDON. . $284
K-4306 (8 Nets) uv. ‘at 3, Ret, Aug. ‘f
© LONDON B) PI
$314
ARIS... . $325
4.4977/C (8 Neh ey Ly. Aug. 5, Ret, Aug. 14
PARIS (4 Nights) tonoba ie Nights)
Pius Taxes & Gratuities (On all above tours)
HOTELS: London: CENTRAL CITY
Paris: AMBASSADOR
Price Includes: Air transportation, Continental breakfast daily; Halt-
day sightseeing.
$359.00
$ 18.00
GREECE & AEGEAN ISLANOS = 13 Ly 4
K4117, June 25-July 9, 'K-4120, Aug. 27-Sept. 10
Athens plus 7-day Greek Isiand Cruise. .
K-4123 Leaving July 2, and returning July 16.
K-4126 Leaving Sept. 3 and returning Sept, 17
Athens—Classical Tour & 6 Days in Corfu,
Price includes: Air transportation Continental breakfast and dinner
daily (all meais on cruise for K-4117, K-4120); and sightseeing.
from $777.00
$724.00
$699.00
SPAIN. 14 Nights — MADRIO — CORDOBA — SEVILLE — GRANADA
COSTA DEL SOL
Leaving uy 3 3, 10, 17, 31; hag, 7 be
Budget $552. ' First Class: $574,
price inches. “hi transportation, Continental breakfast and
dinner daily, 3 lunches, fully escorted,
HAWAII, SAN FRANCISCO & LAS VEGAS’ — 14 Nights
K4419 — Leaving July 28th and returning Aug.
Hotels throughout
1ith at Deluxe
« ‘475.00
Taxes & Gratuities. 35.00
Price includes: Air transportation, transfers & sightseeing.
[WEEKLY DEPARTURES TO WEST END, GRAND BAHAMA
From July 15 and every Sunday thereafter through Sept. 2
(except Aug. 19)
At the GRAND BAHAMA HOTEL & COUNTRY CLUB
Taxes & Gratuities
Price includes: Air transportation, most meats, unlimited golf,
tennis, cocktail party.
Special Departure, Aug. 5-12, from Syracuse.
%-4315, to connect with departure from NYC
plus Additional Transportation $36.00
$189.00
Taxes. 18.00
ORLANDO, 3 Nights
NASSAU, 3 Nights
BARBARDOS, 7 Nights
Keaazz
Kanno
LABOR DAY TRIPS
$159 LAS VEGAS, 3 Nights
$149 BERMUDA, 3 Nights
$209 TOBAGO, «7 Nights
Plus Taxes
Details upon request,
ANNOUNCING OUR FALL SPECIAL...
The Exotic SOUTH PACIFIC — Oct. 27-Nev. 16
K-4422, Visiting Tahiti, New Zealand, Australia, Fiji Islands and
Los Angeles,.... $1698.00
Write to Tour Chairman for detalied flyer,
$219
$169
$299
For Clerk, Operator Jobs
Exams for the following
seven jobs are being offered
to the general public June
9 by Westchester County.
Eligible are those who have
been legal residents for four
months of Westchester,
Bronx, Dutchess, Rockland,
Bergen (NJ), or Fairfield
(Conn.) counties.
Applicants must obtain an ap-
plication and return it to the
Westchester County Personnel
Office, Room 700, County Office
Building, White Plains, New
York 10601, anytime before June
9. Eligible candidates will then
be notified where and when to
take the exam, and they will re-
ceive an official admittance card.
Entry to the exam is tmposslble
without the card.
‘The exams are listed here with
their exam numbers and mini-
mum qualifications. Salaries
vary according to location,
Custodian/Custedian Bus
Driver, Exam 71-177 — no for-
mal requirements, but applicant
must have driver's license.
Telephone Operator, Exam 71-
188 — must have six months’
experience as an operator of
switchboard.
Key Punch Operator (school
districts), Exam 71-189 — must
have high school diploma or
have completed grammar school
plus four years’ business experi-
ence.
Junior Computer Operator
(school itricts), Exam 71-183
—high school graduation or six
months’ clerical experience.
Control Clerk (school dis-
tricts), Exam 71-184 — same as
above.
Clerk (school districts), Exam
71-185 — same as above,
Library Clerk (school dis-
tricts), Exam 71-182 — same as
above.
Early Retirement
Annuity Bonus
With a big annuity bonus
(now of at least 5.4 percent) in
the works for July 1, Congress
is pushing to get the new “early
out” Jaw on the books by then.
(The “early out’ law would al-
jow federal workers in agencies
undergoing 4 major reduction-
in-forece (RIP) to retire any-
tme after 25 years of service or
at age 50 with 20 years of ser-
vice. A combination of the two,
the pension bonus offsetting the
“early out" annuity reduction,
could result in literally thous-
ands of workers quitting by June
30, Such a major retirement ex-
odus would ease the RIPs in
most agencies and open up hun-
dreds of higher grade job slots
for promotion-eligible workers.
TOUR CHAIRMAN:
Keays
~ MRS. MARY McCARTHY,
104 Furmingvos Dri
N.Y. 1309) Tek:
(HIS) ATSH4O9 Eve. (SIS) 487-168
~ MISS DELORAS G. FUSSELL, 111 Winthrop Ave, Albaay,
YY, 12203 (518) IV 2-3597 (Bvening)
— MR. IRVING FLAUMENBAUM,
Freeport, LL, N.Y, 11520 (516) 868-7715,
ALL OTHER TOURS: MR. SAM EMMETT, 1401 Broadway, Suite 711,
jew York, N.Y. 10036. Tel: (212) 868-295!
Available only 10 CSERRA members and their immediate Jamilier,
YOR DETAILED INFORMATION AND THE REVISED SUMMER
FLYER WHITE OR PHONE:
CSE&RA, BOX 772, TIMES SQUARE STATION
NEW YORK, N.Y, 10036
Tel: (212) 868-2959
INSULATE YOUR WINDOWS
CUT HEATING BILLS TO
SAVE THE NATION
wae MONROE
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VETERAN TRAINING -THL: 933-6700
115 EAST FORDHAM ROAD
BRONX 10468 933-6700
- FIRE
About a week ago, Ernest
Scott, 12, got into an ele-
vator in a project building
at 730 East 166th St, in The
Bronx, climbed up through
the trap door and rode the
elevator up and down stand-
ing outside and on top of the
roof of the elevator. Be-
tween floors at the fifth floor
level, he slipped from the
top of the car and his body
became jammed between
the car and the wall separ-
ating the elevator wells.
A call was put through to 911
and the Emergency Service Divi-
viston of the Police Department
‘a large van) responded. The
cops worked for two hours to
free the boy who suffered mul-
tiple fractures of the pelvis and
Jegs plus cuts and brulses,
Finally, after the police had
exhausted all the means at their
disposal and had evidently been
aware from the start that a
certain piece of equipment called
the Hurts tool was available
from FDNY, they called the
Bronx dispatcher to ask if Res-
cue Three had such a tool. Res-
cue Three didn't have the tool.
(They have not received the
equipment yet, but from what
they tell me, they certainly hope
it will be soon. For thelr sakes,
T hope it will be soon toot)
Anyway, they asked the dis-
patcher for permission to roll in
to the box (2544) to do what
they could while Rescue One was
coming up all the way from mid-
town with the tool.
When the kid saw the firemen,
in @ yoice that almost broke
thelr hearts, he asked: What
took you so long firemen?
In speaking with deputy chief
Frank J. Byrne, Division Six,
about the incident, he mentioned
that the cops had done a good
Job as far as they could, But
in a quiet manner, so he would
not be overheard, he asked “the
officer in command why he had
walted two hours to notify the
Fire Department. Actually, what
had to be done was to get a bite
on a steel girder, which 1s part
of the separation of the car
wells, and with the ten thousand
Pound thrust or push, which this
Hurts tool has, it actually dented
the steel wall of the car in such
® way that with about four
inches to work with, the lad was
lifted from his almost fata) en-
trapment,
Deputy chief Byrne said he
felt’ embarrassed and sorry for
the cops who, when leaving the
scene, were booed by the tenants
while the firemen were cheered,
‘Truthfully, everybody was sorry
that such a thing happened be-
cause nobody likes to see people
do their best and get jeers for
thelr trouble. However, this in-
cident does bring up something
which has been talked about for
years, What I have to say now
may not be liked in certain
quarters,
We all know, of course, that
polities is the life blood of the
administration of this city, and
will continue to be forever, most
probably.
However, many, many years
ago when the Emergency Service
Division of the Police Depart-
ment was formed, its main pur-
pose was to be available for
crowd control at fires (they
ea oe
FLIES -
automatically responded = on
second alarms at that time) and
to replace the old “reserves” plan
in operation up to that time
Gradually, more and more lee-
way was given to that unit as one
commander after another with
grandiose ideas and an entry to
the commissioner's office, came
in to do his stint. As a result,
today we have almost a complete
duplication of services between
the Fire Department and the
Police Emergency Service Divi-
sion.
With the exception of riot
control, crowd control, and
troops quickly available for
shootouts and civil disturbances,
the Emergency Service Division
is equipped almost identically to
perform the same services as the
Fire Department insofar as res-
cue operations are concerned
With a City administration so
hard-pressed for money that
they had to disband fire com-
panies and put fireboats out of
commission, how can it condone
a huge annual outlay of funds
for a duplicate service operated
by a City Department who's job
basically is law enforcement
rather than rescue?
I have spoken with hundreds
of company and chief officers on
the subject, seen telegraph dis-
patchers who are closer to the
heart of the matter than most
people would believe, and they
agree, without hesitation, that the
emergency rescue services now
being provided by the Police De-
partment, should never have
been assigned to that Depart-
ment in the first place and the
money to maintain such a ser-
vice is clearly a duplication and
wasted,
Every oxygen run, every call
for help of an emergency na-
ture, no matter how simple or
complicated, should be the job
of the Fire Department and no
other department or agency,
Some months ago I did a piece
here about the premature ar-
rival of radio patrol cars at fire
scenes. The matter was handed
to Assistant Chief Schneider for
an investigation, He completed
his report and sent it along to
the proper authority. It has been
bucked down the line to the in-
dividual who takes care of Mat-
son matters between fire and
Police departments. Obviously,
nothing much has come of it,
for the situation grows worse
by the day and quite a bit nas-
tler as well. I plan to pursue this
matter next week with the In-
tent of building a fire under
whomever may be in need of a
Uttle heat, to do something be-
fore & well-meaning, dedicated
cop, or perhaps a civilian gets
killed.
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
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il Warren St, NY, N.Y. 10007
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te
Utica Officers To Be
Installed At Chapter’s
25th Anniversary Dinner
UTICA — The 25th anniversary dinner and installation
of officers of the Utica chapter, Civil Service Employees
Assn., will take place June 14, in the Harts Hill Inn. The
Utica chapter membership is from state agencies.
There will be a social hour at
7, with dinner at 7:45.
New officers are: president,
Phillip J. Caruso, Commerce De-
partment; first vice-president,
Clara Boone, Department of
State; second vice-president,
Phillip P, Beno, Tax Department;
treasurer, Joseph Vanno, State
Labor Department; assistant
treasurer, Jean B, Treacy, Labor;
recording secretary Carol Alex-
ander, Labor; corresponding sec-
retary, Maryann Scarafile, Office
of General Services; delegates,
Phyllis Bowen, Department of
Motor Vehicles, and Patricia De-
Rosa, Labor; alternates Joelene
Hill, Motor Vehicles, and Russell
Allesenza, Labor.
Clara Boone is general chair-
man; Maryann Searafile is res-
ervations chairman; Marguerite
Curclo, tickets; Jean B. Treacy,
George Stocker and Lorraine
Vennaro, publicity; Ms. Phillip
Beno, hospitality; Mary LoGalbo,
decor; Marguerite Vaeth, pro-
grams; Florio Vitullo, cocktail
Non-Teaching
Aides Sign
2-Year Pact
(From Leader Correspondent)
BUFFALO — The 121 non-
teaching employees of the
suburban Iroquois Central
School System, members of
the Civil Gervice Employees
Assn., have agreed to a new two-
year contract that provides 6
percent pay raises in each year.
The pact also calls for an ad-
ditional personal leave day, an
additional week of yacation and
improved hospitalization pay-
ments, Also included were an tm-
proved retirement plan, addi-
tional accumulation of sick
leave from 165 to 180 days, an
auto and homeowners deduc-
tions, improved bus runs and
stipends for education courses.
Robert Young, CSEA field rep-
resentative, helped negotiate the
pact. Joanne Ripstein, unit pres-
ident, headed the bargaining
team.
hour; Joseph Vanno, door; Phyl-
lis Bowen, seating.
Tnvited guests include officers
of CSEA headquarters, area leg-
isiators, retired members and
friends; area CSEA chapter pres-
idents and the president of the
Central New York Regional Con-
ference.
Dr. Theodore C. Wenzl will be
guest speaker and installing offi-
cer.
Reservations deadline is June
8
Dutches, CSEA
Down To The Wire
On A New Contract
POUGHKEEPSIE — Elev-
enth-hour negotiations be-
tween the Civil Service Em-
ployees Assn. and Dutchess
County have ended in agreement
on the terms of 2 two-year con-
tract for county workers,
The package has been approved
by CSEA and the county board
of representatives.
The contract, which is retro-
active to January first, includes
* A 4 percent pay raise in 1973
and » 5.2 pereent pay raise In
1974.
* A 165-day conversion option
in the state retirement plan
(an employee .will be able to
apply up to 165 days of unused
sick leave to the computation
of pension benefits)
* Paid three-day bereavement
leave to allow an employee to
have time off when a mem-
ber of the immediate family
dies.
* Continuation of the 30-hour
summer work week.
CSEA had also sought to up-
srade the salaries of incoming
employees by one step but agreed
to give up this quest in order to
obtain the pension conversion and
bereavement leave
CSEA collective negotiating
specialist Emanuel Vitale stated,
“We feel great, We've really got.
ten Dutehess County workers a
worthwhile contract.”
Two Contracts Signed
By HamBurg Chapters
HAMBURG—<Agreement has been reached on contracts
for this Erie County village's highway department and
police employees,
Employees Assn.
The DPW was given a two-
year pact that provides 14 per-
cent over the life of the agree-
ment—6.7 percent the first year
5.7 percent the second year and
3.6 percent jump-sum payment
to compensate for wage deteri-
oration in the final year of the
previous contract
‘The highway unit, represent-
ing 50 Workers, also bargained
for improved vacations, » fourth
persona! leave day, an additional
holiday and an established
seniority system,
The police unit, representing
both represented by the Civil Service
20 men on the force, was award-
ed an 6 percent increase in the
first year of the contract, a 5
percent hike the second year and
1.5 percent in wages for longev-
ity.
‘The police contract also wid-
ened the residency requirement
to 12 miles of the village limits.
Under the former pact, police-
men were required to lve with-
in the village boundaries,
Also, police were given under
the new contract six additional
police ttems, including off-duty
pistols, boots, & blackjack and
various articles of clothing,
MEMBERSHIP COMMITTEE MEETS
iit
> . d
— Members of the Civil Service
membership committee meet at the Ambassador Restaurant In Albany to discuss plans for the special
membership drive, which is belng held to attract new members and thereby avoid a CSEA dues increase.
Pictured standing, from left, are Edward Diamond, CSEA director of education and membership re-
cruitment; James Van Auken, CSEA headquarters’ services manager; William M. Kempey, and Jon
Schermerhorn. Seated are James Mangano; Samuel Emmett, co-chairman; Howard Cropsey, co-chalr.
man; and Karen Herbst.
S261 ‘Ss eung ‘dupsony ‘YAGVAT ADIAWAS TAD
Some Guidelines On Charges
Of Abuse Demanded In Big
Rome State School Turnout
ROME — More than 800 Civil Service Employees Assn. members met in Rome State
School's Kelleher Building last week to discuss an emergency situation that suddenly sur-
faced in-the wake of charges filed against 25 of their co-workers for allegedly mistreating
residents.
The emergency meeting was
called by Raymond Pritehard,
president of the CSEA Rome
tion some written guidelines as
to what constitutes “patient
abuse.”
Many employees were concern-
ed as to thelr legal protection in
performing their daily duties,
They said they need “clear def-
inition as to what guidelines
can be used to maintain dis-
cipline or some kind of or-
der.”
According to the recently re-
codified mental hygiene law re-
straining a patient by holding
his arm or an attendant raising
his voice could constitute “psy-
chological or verbal abuse.” This
strict interpretation, 1f applied,
would have ‘a demoralizing effect
on all those who work directly
with the patients,” according to
Pritehard.
Pritehard's chapter underwrote
the $25 ball bond for each of
the employees charged. The 800
employees at the meeting express-
ed concern about the ar-
gency session and said, “CSEA
definitely is not overlooking the
seriousness of patient abuse as
a moral and legal question. But,
we will not sit back and allow
our members to be charged with-
out providing adequate defense
‘They are still innocent until prov-
en guilty despite the reports that
have appeared in the local media
improperly summarizing the tn-
cidents connected with the
charges,”
To Meet Miller
Guild, after
expressed concern over the situ-
ation and said he would meet
with Guild. The discussion date
is set for early this week.
“The new laws, which all the
department's therapy aides are
subject to concerning patient
wbuse, must be interpreted and
put in definitive terms that can
be readily understood by each
ployees. They will remain on bail
until they go to court. These are
the first criminal charges brought
against Rome State School em-
ployees in more than 15 years.
Wilton State School To Set
Up ‘Informational’ Picketing
To Air Their Grievances
WILTON — Informational pickets will line up this
week at Wilton State School to protest against the unfair
lebor tactics of the school's administration, according to
. “The school officials have
Some employees cited the use
of a “shock stick" by = specific
set for early next week. He sald,
“The administration has carried
don't intend to pus wp with it,” + &
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, June 5, 1973
\ —~ The national energy crisis thateveryone’s
talking about is here. Right here in your home.
Air conditioners account for about 40%
of the electricity used in peak summer hours.
It takes fuel to make all that electricity and,
as you know, the shortage of fuel is at the heart of
the energy crisis. Whether you already own an
air conditioner or plan to buy one, you can help
save energy...and save money, too.
Air conditioner buyers
You have to be an extra smart shopper
this summer. Keep in mind the fact that the most
efficient air conditioners will give you more
cool with less electricity.
So buy the most efficient air conditioner
you can find. Insist on knowing the Energy
Efficiency Rating of the model you're interested
in. If the rating number is not displayed and
if the salesman doesn’t
Efficient air conditioners save watts and saving
watts is essential to cope with the energy crisis.
Air conditioner owners
Air conditioners are the single greatest
users of electricity during peak summer hours.
So using them wisely is very important.
Here's an extreme case of misuse:
Suppose you ran one room-size air conditioner
night and day all summer long. You would be
using approximately 430 gallons of oil to provide
the necessary electricity compared to 130 gallons
needed for normal operation. In other words,
you could waste up to 300 gallons of oil, not to
mention $135.00 extra on your electric bill.
Your air conditioner has a direct impact
on the energy crisis. That’s why Con Edison
again urges you to use your air conditioner
wisely...and offers these watt-saving suggestions:
know it, compute it yourself,
Divide the watts into
tts
the BTU’s eo Ba = EER|
The resulting number should
be between 5 and 12. The
higher the number the better.
Of course, more
efficient models cost more.
But don’t be disheartened.
They cost much less to
operate. Suppose you spent
$45 more for an g
efficient 10,000 BTU a
room-size unit. You/could save the $45
on your electric /¥ bills in one summer
of normal use.*/fAnd continue saving money
summer after /f summer. (You'llalso save about
100 gallons of {foil that would have been
used by a less efficient air conditioner.) About
250,000 air {conditioners will be purchased
this summer in! \\e ‘on Edison’s service area.
* Money and oil savings vary with the size air conditioner and its ffwiency,
Don’t leave your air conditioner turned
on when no one is home. Avoid using the
coldest settings. Use shades and blinds to keep
out the hot sun.
It’s now national policy to conserve
energy. So Save-A-Watt. Save as many watts as
you can to help your country
and to save money, too. conserve
energy
.THE ENERGY CRISIS ‘*
STRIKES HOME
PLAN SEMINARS — Jack Gallagher, second from right,
treasurer of the Civil Service Employees Assn., goes over plans for
upcoming series of seminars for treasurers. Getting sneak preview
are, from left, Doris Campion, Binghamton State Hospital chapter
treasurer; Edward Diamond, CSEA director of education and re-
cruitment, and Arthur Marx, Hudson River State Hospital chapter
treasurer. Gallagher stated that one of the aims of the seminars will
be to assess feelings on revision of treasurers manual, with the idea
of updating it, The meetings will be open to all conference, chapter
and unit treasurers. Chapter treasurers are requested to include thelr
treasurers in the delegations to those general meetings at which the
seminars will be held, Gallagher has already met with Western
Conference treasurers. Seminars are also slated for the County Work-
shop, June 4; Central Conference, June 9, and Capital District Con-
ference, June 16,
Narcotics Add Members
ALBANY — The Governor has
nominated Joseph F. Periconi,
former Bronx Borough President
and former State Senator, to
the Narcotic Addiction Control
Commission for a term ending
Dec. 31, 1978.
At the same time, the Gover-
nor renominated Arthur J
Rogers and Santiago Grevi, both
of New York City, to terms end-
Goldman
ALBANY — Simon Goldman,
of Jamestown, has been reap-
pointed a trustee of Jamestown
Community College for a term
ending June 30, 1981. There is
no salary.
To Stony Brook Council
ALBANY — Peter J. Papdakos,
of St. James, has been reap-
pointed to the Council of the
ing Dec. 31, 1976 and 1977 re- State University at Stony Brook
spectively. Members are paid for a term ending July 1, 1981
$34,221 annually. There {s no salary.
SS —
De New lork_ Antiques Gare
ARTIQUES SHOW |
80 Dealers
Great Porcelains Show |
962 Third Avenue (Between 57th and 58th Streets)
Goday through —June 10
Open 10:30-6; Thurs.10:30 to 9; Sun. 1-6. |
Closed Fridays except May 11
spectacular exhibit
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Sackett Elected
Bridge Authority weatuer strir winpows
Chapter Leader
BEAR MOUNTAIN — The
New York State Bridge Au-
thority chapter of the Civil Ser-
vice Employees Assn. elected of-
ficers earlier this month, with
Charles Sackett emerging as
chapter president.
Also elected at a meeting at
the Mid-Hudson Bridge were M.
Duane Mickle, vice-president;
Dean Davis, secretary-treasurer,
and Stephen P. Doonan, dele-
gate
In addition, five second vice-
presidents were elected from
separate bridges: Elywn Carley,
Bear Mountain; William Kutner,
Newburgh-Beacon; Clarence Pet-
erson, Mid-Hudson; Barry
Shields, Kingston-Rhinecliff, and
Harold Niekamp, Rip Van Win-
kle.
Southern Conference second
vice-president Lee Connors swore
the officers in for two-year terms.
Negro Benev. Soc.
The Negro Benevolent Society
of the Dept. of Sanitation will
meet June 6 at 8 p.m. at 220-13
Merrick Blivd., Queens,
GUARDS
TO SHARE
6 p.m. - 10 a.m. shifts
Phone 233-6018
“Help "Wanted - M/F
FIRE SCIENCE INSTRUCTOR, Septem.
ber 1, 1975, Monroe Community Col-
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both ceaching and fire scinece. Excel-
lent salary ind fringe beneficn, Send
resume w John T. Maher, Chairman,
P.O. Box 9720, Rochester, N.Y. 14623
Help Wanted M/F
ATTENTION PARTY PLAN — Our
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HOUSING MANAGEMENT
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CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, June 5, 1973
Published every Tuesday by
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TUESDAY, JUNE 5, 1973
Guidelines Needed
CCORDING to the recently recodified State Mental
Hygiene law, restraining a patient by holding his arm
or an attendant raising his voice could constitute “psycho-
logical or verbal abuse.” While this newspaper and the
statewide Civil Service Employees Assn. share deep con-
cern for the welfare of institutionalized persons, it also
must be recognized that a too narrow interpretation of
that law raises some very serious problems.
be cad
In the case of 25 workers at Rome State School charged
with such abuse, we have every reason to suspect that these
arrests are the result of over-zealous interpretation of the
law. Twenty-five arrests in a single institution Is so ex-
traordinary that more than 800 members of the hospital's
“CSEA chapter met recently to demand that guidelines be
created as to what constitutes patient abuse.
We feel these employees have every right to be con-
cerned about their legal responsibilities in handling and
caring for people so unable to take care of themselves. Cer-
tainly, this section of the law should not be interpreted on
an institution-to-institution basis.
This week, an Employees Association official will meet
with Dr. Alan Miller, Mental Hygiene Commissioner, in an
effort to lay down these vitally needed guidelines, which
are as much of value to patients as to attendants, We feel
sure Dr, Miller will recognize the seriousness of this prob-
Jem and act accordingly,
Questions
and
Answers
Q. When I become 62 this year,
I want to retire and get social
seourity benefits, but I can't find
any document to prove my date
of birth. Now what can I do?
A, Get in touch with any social
security office, and the people
there will be glad to help you.
Although you may not have a
copy of a birth or baptismal cer-
tiflcate, one of these may still
be shown on official records, If
not, there are other documents,
such as @ census record, & schoo)
record, or an insurance policy,
that can be used to establish
your age.
Q. My husband and I have
both worked for many years, and
we're nearing retirement age, My
sister recently told me I won't
be able to get social security
checks on my own record because
I'm living with my husband, She
can't be right, can she?
A. No, your sister is wrong. A
wife who has worked under so-
cial security has the same right
to monthly benefits as any other
worker. However, a wife can't
wet full benefits on her own work
record and on her husband's at
the same time. If a wife is elig-
ible for benefits on more than
one record, she will always get
the larger of the two payments,
Q. My brother, who's 49, can't
work because of a heart condi-
tion, He ets income every
month from a small apartment
he rents, and he claims he can't
get disability benefits from so-
clal security because of this
rental Income. Is he right?
A. No. Even though your
brother has rental income, he
can get monthly social security
disability payments if he is
found eligible for them. Have
your brother call, write, or visit
any social security office as soon
as possible to apply
Q, TU be 65 in August of this
year, In April 1972, when I ask-
ed about Medicare at the local
social security office, I was told
that the monthly premium for
medical insurance was $5.60. In
this still true?
A. No, the premium is now
$5.80, But on July 1, the premium
will be increased to $6.30,
The Legisiature's performance
was clearly stamped with the
leadership of Gov. Nelson A.
Rockefeller, aided by the Repub-
ican legislative leaders. Assem-
bly Speaker Perry B. Duryea,
Jr, managed to hold firm con-
trol over his occasionally rebel-
Nous contingent, even after his
Assemblymen
illness of several others,
Similarly, the Senate complet-
ed its work smoothly and effi-
ciently under its new leadership
team headed by Majority Leader
Warren M. Anderson, assisted by
Deputy Majority Leader William
T. Conklin, Finance Committee
Chairman John J. Marchi, and
Judiciary Committee Chairman
Bernard G. Gordon.
The basic framework of the
Legislature's actions followed like
@ blueprint the recommendations
and programs proposed by the
Governor in January in his State
of the State Message. Here and
there the Governor yielded to
compromise but never to princi-
ple as his programs emerged
through the legislative process.
In the beginning the Governor
made it clear that his first prior!-
ty was to put an end to public
fears of muggings, stabbings, and
burglaries by tough new laws
against narcotics pushers.
This recommendation of the
Governor's precipitated heated
opposition among district at-
torneys, police officials, and many
judges, However, it did not take
too long for the iegislators to
learn that his was precisely the
formula that the public demand-
ed. With some modifications the
bill was overwhelmingly approved
by the Legislature.
In addition, the Legislature
substantially followed the Goy-
ernor’s lead in taking steps to
improve the administration of the
criminal justice. This program
provides for improved methods
of selecting and disciplining
judges and for greater account-
ability to the public of judicial
performance, In order to elimin-
ate court delays and calendar
congestion, the Legislature also
approved the Governor's propo-
sal to create 105 additional
Judges. Most of these will be as-
signed to provide speedier court
action for persons indicted for
narcotics pushing.
From the taxpayer's point of
view, the Legislature approved
and the Governor signed into
jaw @ proposal to eliminate the
2% percent income tax surcharge.
This will provide some relief to
the taxpayer without impairing
the quality of government
services.
The only item of controversy
that was not resolved by the
Legislature is a matter of vital
significance to all civil service
employees — proposed changes
in the public pension structure
Proposals initially made to the
Governor and the Legisiature by
the so-called Kinzel Commission
turned out to be the hottest
potato in the legislative hopper
After weeks of behind the scenes
debates and intensive jobbying
by civil service organizwtiona, it
became evident that the Legis-
lative leaders and the Governor
could not arrive at a reasonable
accommodation, Instead it was
agreed to establish another com-
mittee, which Js required to come
Narcotic Control Aides
Victors In Grievances
LONG ISLAND CITY — Favorable decisions have been
handed down in two third-step grievances involving Civil
Service Employees Assn. members who are employees of the
State Narcotic Addiction Control Commission. The case of
Marsha Willner, narcotic parole
officer at the Cooper Commu-
nity Rehabilitation Center, was
presented by George Bisphan,
CSEA field representative; and
the grievance of Carl Feigen-
baum, narcotic parole officer at
the Pulton Community Rehabill-
tation Center, was presented by
Bart Brier, CSEA field repre-
sentative. Salvatore Anastasio,
principal agency labor relations
representative for NACC, render-
ed the decisions,
Ms, Willner grieved harass-
ment and improperly charged
leave without pay. Her major
contention concerned seven hours
pay which had been deducted for
Sept. 7, 1972, because her super
visor, John Keohane, alleged that
she had misrepresented the in-
formation on her itinerary sheets
for that day.
Ms. Willner agreed that the
information on the sheets did
not represent a full eight-hour
day but said that she had visited
a firm in her district to discuss
placement possibilities for par-
olees and had not included this
collateral visit on her sheets, A
‘sworn statement from the vice-
president of the firm in ques-
tion supported Ms. Willner’s con-
tention. Ms. Willner also stated
that it was not common prac-
tice for parole officers at her
Jocation to include collateral
visits on itinerary sheets,
A spokesman for the Commis-
sion, Richard Socher, stated that
all collateral visits should be
sted on itinerary sheets, al-
though he was uncertain whe-
ther these visits actually were
listed as a matter of practice.
He also did not accept or in-
clude the collateral visit alleged-
ly made by Ms, Willner in his
calculations.
Anastasio ruled that the seven
hours pay should be restored and
that a letter in Ms, Willner’s
personnel file should be removed.
Newman Heads New
Court CSEA Unit
MINEOLA—Irving Flaum-
enbaum, president of the
Nassau chapter, Civil Ser-
vice Employees Assn., an-
nounced that the court unit has
elected Jack Newman of Su-
preme Court as president,
Also elected were; Ira Sive of
County Court, first vice-presi-
dent; William Mauceri of County
Court, second vice-presdient;
Hyde Smith of Supreme Court,
secretary; Merle Sanford of
County Court, treasurer; Mar-
garet Mulrooney of Surrogate’s
Court, financial secretary; Jose-
Phine O'Connor of County Court,
corresponding secretary; Charles
Koster of Family Court, sergeant-
at-arms, and Oscar Rubin, Step-
hen Jackson and Philip Schneid-
er of District Court and Michael
Kennedy of Family Court, di-
rectors.
Retiring president Michael Gil-
bride said he would announce
shortly arrangement for the in-
stallation of the new officers.
up with recommendations by
July. This sets the stage for a
‘special seasion of the Legislature
in the summer, to complete ac-
tion on the one item remaining
not done at the regular session.
He based his decision on the
sworn statement of the vice-pres-
ident of the firm Ms, Willner al-
legedly visited.
Wins Leave Pay
In the second grievance, Car]
Feigenbaum asked for restoration
of monies lost by being charged
with leave without pay for pre-
viously approved vacation time.
He presented a copy of a vaca-
tion request form, approved by
his immediate supervisor, Addie
Dolby, at the time of his request
for vacation leave, as evidence.
He stated that, just prior to his
leaving for vacation, Ms, Dolby
returned from an absence and
informed him that he should not
take vacation time until he had
brought his work up to date, She
referred him to a previously cir-
culated memorandum that con-
tained a provision that approval
of a scheduled vacation would be
contingent upon whether or not
an employee's work was up to
date, Based on this memoran-
dum, Feigenbaum was given leave
without pay, even though his va-
cation request had been approved
by his immediate supervisor,
‘Ms, Dolby acknowledged that
she had signed the vacation re-
quest but painted out that she
had mistakenly given it to Felg-
enbaum instead of forwarding
it to the office of the assistant
director for his approval before
giving it to Feigenbaum, She
also stated that she was away
for some time immediately prior
to Feigenbaum's departure on his
vacation. She agreed that the
notice she gave Feigenbaum was
short, but she felt that he should
have been aware that his work
was not current and that, based
on the memorandum, there may
have been some question about
his taking vacation time.
In his decision, Anastasio rec-
ommended that the leave with
pay deduction be restored to
Feigenbaum, in view of the fact
that his immediate supervisor had
approved of the vacation time
on the leave form and that no
one had informed him that the
request had been disapproved
until immediately prior to the
date of his departure.
Most School Pacts
Gall For 5’2% Hike
Each Of Two Years
ALBANY — The Office of Lo-
cal Government Affairs of the
Civil Service Employees Assn. re-
ports that numerous CSEA schoo!
district unit contracts are being
finalized and filed with the office
85 an information source, These
contracts have been negotiated
by CSEA bargaining teams in
various school district jurisdic-
tions throughout the State.
Most of the contracts submit-
ted cover a two-year period and
are generally following the fed-
eral guideline of a 5.5 percent
wage increase per year.
Retirement benefit improve-
ments have been made in most
of the agreements, along with
additiona) improvements in holl-
day and job security areas
@
e
Letters To The Editor Eunice Fiorito To Head Nassau Chapter Recreation
Managers Can't
Pass The Buck
To The Editor:
Delegation of authority is
perhaps the hardest task
managerial personnel have
to learn, Some never do. They
insist on handling many de-
tails, and work themselves
into early graves.
Others pay lip service to the
idea, but actually run a one-
man shop, They give their as-
sistants mi responsibilities, but
little or no authority
Authority is the fuel that
makes the machine go when you
delegate work and responsibility
Tt poses «a question: to what
extent do you allow another per-
son to make decisions which in-
volve peoples’ lives and wel-
fare?
1 a manager or department
head is to be successful he must
delegate authority properly. How
much authortly is proper? You
ould delegate enough authori-
ty to get the job done, allow key
men to take initiative, and to
keep things going in the boss’
absence:
Delegation of responsibility
does not mean that you say to
your assistants, “Here boys, you
run the store.” ‘The man to whom
you delegate responsibility
authority must be competent in
the technical areas in which he
is accountable.
Technical competence, how-
ever, {5 not enough. In addition,
the person who fills a key man-
agement spot must either be a
manager, or be capable of be-
coming one, A manager's chief
job is to plan, direct, and coor-
dinate the work of others.
He should have initiative, in-
terest, imagination, and enough
self-drive to keep things moving
He should not have to be told
for example, to make sure his
employees start work on time.
Personality traits must also be
considered. A key man should be
strong-willed enough to overcome
opposition when necessary.
He should also have enough
ego to want to “look good” but
not so much that it antagonizes
others.
Human Resources Admin.
Policeman — Bronx
Take Family To Race Track:
Proceeds Aid Handicapped
Two afternoons at Roosevelt
Raceway for children and adults
are being planned by the Nas-
sau Community Health Services
Foundation. All proceeds will go
to the Foundation, which pro-
vides five ancillary therapeutic
services in the home for the dis-
abled and handicapped people of
Nassau and Suffolk counties
Post time is 1 p.m. on July 7
and 8 at Roosevelt, featuring ght
harness racing. Admission ts
$1.50 for adults, 75 cents for
children, Children under six will
be admitted free
Tickets and further inform-
may be obtained from An-
Costaido, Nassau Com-
munity Health Services Founda-
Hon, 1200 Stewart Ave, Garden
City, NY. 11630 (phone: 516-
333-9710)
Engineers Meet
Loca) 891 of the International
Un of Operating Engineers,
AFL-CIO, will hold a summons
meeting June T at 7 pm, at
Central Commercial High School,
214 East 42 St. Manhattan.
Office Of Handicapped
Eunice Fiorito was sworn
in as the first director of the
Office of the Handicapped
last week by Mayor Lindsay.
Fiorito, blind since age
16 when she lost 95 percent of
her sight over night from an
attack of dormant glaucoma, has
been acting director since the
Mayor established the Office in
December, 1972
The Office, at 250 Broadway.
runs a referral service which
provides handicapped citizens
with counselling on medical ser-
vices and employment oppor-
tunitles. An off-shoot of an ex-
ecutive order by the Mayor in
1968, concerning the employment
of the handicapped in city agen-
cles, the Office has been funded
on a sparse budget by the
Health Services Administration,
employing six civil servants and
a few volunteers.
Now that she has been appoint-
ed official director, Mrs. Fiorito
is In the process of obtaining a
more substantial budget from
HSA, the federal Department of
Health, Education and Welfare,
and from an allowance from
the new clty budget, which, she
says, “is stil) unclear.”
In presenting Mrs. Fiorito
with two certificates of appoint-
ment, one in print and the other
in braille, Lindsay said: “Eunice
Fiorito's leadership has been in-
strumental in New York City's
pnce-setting programs to bring
handicapped citizens into the
maintsream of urban life, Our
office is committed to securing
all handicapped New Yorkers
their constitutionally guaranteed
right to a fair chance at suc-
cess in our society. Mrs. Fiorito's
brilliant career is eloquent proof
that a physical handicap is no
bar to such success.”
Before her involvement in es-
tablishing the Office, Mrs. Fiorito
was a senfor psychiatric social
worker in: the children’s psychi-
atric social service and director
of social work and rehabilitation
services at Bellevue Medical Cen-
ter’s psychiatric division.
Hamilton Raps State Commission
For Nixing City’s Round Off’ kdea
Deputy Mayor Edward K
Hamilton has released the fol-
lowing statement concerning the
State Civil Service Commission's
recent decision to reject the City
Civil Service Commission's pro-
posal to round off the scores of
civil service exams to whole
numbers. Those scores are now
carried out to two decimal places,
“The State Civil Service Com-
mission has earned great respect
as a professional body which
stands above partisan politics.
Nevertheless, I believe that it
has committed a serious error of
Judgment in rejecting the rec-
ommendations of the City Civil
Service Commission that the
grading of clvil service examina-
tions for managerial positions be
modified to eliminate the absur-
dity of carrying the mark to two
decimal points.
“The State Commission has
chosen to put its weight behind
the forces of reaction and stag-
nation which
civil
so often frustrate
service reform, It is bad
that we must live with a
ndated system which
forces the City to make critical
managerial appointments by
rote, rigid examinations rather
than through informed assess-
ments of the particular skills,
energy, and experience of the
candidate. But it is a gross dis-
service to the taxpayer that the
State Commission has ruled in
favor of the ultimate insanity of
grading these examinations to
two decimal points.
“No objective observer would
maintain that the officers of
General Motors or of Xerox or
of the New York Times—men of
great experience asked to per-
form judgmental functions for
which effective examination
would be impossible—should be
chosen by classroom tests.
“In reconfirming that senior
municipal managers must con-
tinue’ to be chosen in this
fashion, the Commission has er-
red. In insisting that the tests
must be graded to totally bogus
levels of ‘accuracy,’ the Com-
mission has forfeited much of its
reputation for serious interest In
municipal personnel
ment.”
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Program Produces Winner
In Ladies’ Bowling Tourney
MINEOLA — With a come-from-behind finish in the
last frame of the last game, the Nassau Civil Service Em-
ployees Assn. chapter's team won the Long Island Industrial
Bowling League Women's Tournament.
The women snatched the
trophy from teams representing
Republic, Grumman, Sperry, Lib-
erty Mutual, General Instru-
ments, Long Island Lighting Co.,
Pan-American Alrways, National
Bank of North America, Oxford
Pendaflex, Doubleday, Airborne
Instruments, American Machine
& Foundry, Sched Mailing, News-
day, Pairchild-Hiller.
CSEA was represented by Mary
Albright of District Court, Jean
Bivone of District Court, Gloria
Blackwell of Assessments, Nancy
Durham of Soctal Services, Ethel
Frey of the Health Department,
Virginia Geyer of Probation,
Janet Golon of Social Services,
Eleanor Hammer! of Social Ser-
vices, Judy Niedtz of Social Ser-
vices, Donna Schimpe of Com-
munity College and Barbara Van-
velsor of District Court.
‘The CSEA entry was the result
of efforts by Dudley Kionsley,
chapter recreation chairman, and
Howard Quann, assistant chair-
man
Chapter president Irving
Fiaumenbaum said that 548
members had participated in
league bowling under the spon-
sorship of CSEA and all reflected
credit on the organization. The
recreation program has turned
to softball, golf and tennis for
the spring and summer seasons.
With trophy and tools of the trade are members of the
Nassau CSEA bowling league whose team won the Long
Island Industrial Bowling League Women’s Division crown,
to the evident satisfaction
of Nassau chapter president
Irving Flaumenbaum, Winners, from left, are Gloria Black-
well,
Ethel Frey.
Nancy Durham, Judy Niedz, Donna Schimpe and
RYAN @MBRAL
The Deectors Company prevents “FUNNY, TENDER.
MAKES
ONE
_/* LIGHT UP
>} WITHA
SMILE!”
—Kathleen Carroll,
» N.Y, Daily News
pete not maine
batter ted
“A BRILLIANT
SUSPENSE THRILLER!”
—Judith Crist, New York Mogaxine
LOEWS STATE 2 / LOEWS CIN
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CENTURY'S PARAMUS / UA
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SL6L “S aunt ‘Aepsony ‘YAGVAT ADLAUAS WALID
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, June 5, 1973
Sr. Account Clerk Eligi
SR ACCT CLK SR AUD CLK
34900,
Test held Sepe. 16, 1972
List Bx, March 14, 1973
1 M Butfalo 983
3 Feline M Albany 39
3 Puller
4 Males ® Ouen 96.5
5 Shimkus J 96.00
6 O'Hare P Skantley Fis 95.0
7 Ray A Oneida 94.7
8 Harnaare B Newark 944
9 Conway B Albany MA
10 Koha D_ Averill Pack 944
11 George I Albany 963
12 McCarthy J Island Park 943
13 Zmijewski F Buffalo 940
14 Barret W_ Albany 93.6
15 Hasings K | Lancawer 934
16 Midgley D Schenectady 934
17 Paolucci J Albany 933
19 be 932
30 Nisoa ‘W Hodwo 934
21 Gathrie J Latham 93.0
22 Roblin E Menands 27
23 Nadeau L Coboes 24
24 Carp D_ Mechanicvil 924
25 Decker R Germantown 923
26 Parry P Rensselaer 1
27 Bisaillon J Mexico 92.1
28 Moskowicx 1 Brooklyn 92.0
29 Brown M Cobos . 92.0
30 Basle L Troy 917
31 McCarthy M. Albany O17
32 Hendrickson M Jamestown 91.7
33 Bichuen § W Send Lake 91-4
35 Bultman J Jonerville 13
36 Adams A Walton 12
37 Allerti L Seaen Is ot
38 Didomenico F Troy od
39 Lehr A Albany 910
40 Delamarter R Poughquag m8
41 Howard P 904
Cleveland G 90.6
43 Sadowski C Schenectady 90.4
44 Veovrankea D Coboes 90.4
4s P Amsterdam 904
46 Koast C Jobaon City 90.
47 Forbach N 90.
48 Toppal F Troy 90,
49 Lasky R Amacerdam 90,
30 Pflieger J Albany 90,
31 Kirby J West Seneca 89:
€ Schenectad 89.
5 M Seaten Is 89.
54 Sweet $ Albuay 89.
35 H Silver Creek 89.
57 Jepson V Mechanicyil
58 Moschella M New York
SRRRERRS:
Memphis Ba
116 Melleoting § Tonawanda
117 Nicol V_ White Plains
118 Huaser Wi Ascori
119 White $ Hoceell
120 Stamboulis M Buffalo
Danarany
aa SSeS CIES
139 M Wikoo 1
40 b Woudade A
141 Curler G Ooeoats t
142 Gruber M Northport .. 1.0
143 Downey M Amsterdam 85.0
‘144 Palmer J Cadyville 9
145 Zalak R ‘
Pabl C
47 Nickles L Albany
| Batchelor
149 Bana J Deruycor
150 Rickard J
151 Behnke
152 Band J
153 Brody R
is Sisosy RE
15s
156 Kulzer L
157 Ziegler J
158 Debartbe
159 Lansing
160 Campoti
161 Winslow:
162 Spiegel L Albany
163 Danner B
164 Scomzo L
163 Graef R
166 ONeill D
167 Storey W
168 Durkin M-
169 Leman A
170 Andrews
171 Kane M
172 Fletcher
173 Anthony
174 Bryaot
173 Winch D #
176 Kirkham B 8:
177 Griesbeck 8
178 Cramer J Troy #
179 Everetts © Helmuth r
180 S Rensselaer 8
181 Fowler B Cortland &
192 Reite AN Babylon 83.
183 Wiles M ny 8
184 Dingley R Cohoes @.
185 Cronin M Albany &:
186 Higgitt He Wacerviiee 83.1
187 Par R Dansville 83.2
188 Beal 43.0
189 Wiley D Ravena 3.0
190 McKelvey J Rome 93.0
191 82.9
192 Bagnall P Poughkeepsie #2.
193 o 82.7
194 Coward R Freeport 82.7
195 Keenics 82.6
i Etma 82.6
197 Vantinda W Flora Park 82.6
198 ‘Treadway R Albany 82.5
199 Michinski L N Babylon
205 Winetz A Floral Park
206 Smith A Ease Nassau
207 Sitkowski W Islip
208 Gunther HN Syracuse
209 Moccia C Forest Hills
210 Plumadore § Mechanicvil
Rensselaer
Is
214 Weizenbofer C Albany
215 Newman W Albay
216 Kochan J Buttalo
217 Engert F Scotia
le R Nassau
219 Burke J Coeymans
220 Fairmaa C Dexter
225 Baran J Cohoes
234 Hensel M Waterviier
23$ Landry D Coboes
236 Vanravenswaay V Voorhoewil
D Delans aL
24
249 Bodner J Albany
250 Holtzman H New York
st RW
256 Lavelle
7 McGann
8 Galarocau P Warerford
259 Marchese M Troy 80.5
260 Sears P 80.5
261 Cahill B Averitt Park es
262 Chartier B Tupper ‘Lake 80.5
265 Schiffer J Brook! 4
264 Polubie M Levinowe m4
265 i 4
266 Heelan M Albany 804
267 Han C Ciecinnatus 80.4
268 Getrville 80.3
269 D Albsoy 203
270 Roth P Checktowags 80.3
‘271 Glick A Hicksville 80.3
272 Emanuele M Renselacr 00.5
275 Belascio H Albany 0.3
274 Bernardi E Queens Vill 60.9
275 Merrin K Ovwego 03
276 Pla R oy + 802
277 = L Nunde 90.2
278 ivy L Howes Cove 0.1
ried Parag G Rocheser OL
260, E Albany 80,1
281 Pecers J Tully 80.0
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284 Ray 00.0
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354 Williams RK Crovon
355 Pizza J Oneonta
360 Albrecht D Babylon
361 Dwire C Bay Shore
362 Westliog J Fredonia
363 Baugh A Middle Grove
364 Cullen P_ Massena
365 Akullian G Albany
366 Davie E Middictown
467 Moore N_ Oxford
368 Thomas G Delmar
369 Sheldon L Johnsonville
570 Manaseri C Syracuse
1 Maylor © ‘Troy
372 Lamora G Tupper Lake
373 Whitlock B Amscerdam
314 Corleon 1 Senten te
7 innet G Binghamcon
376 Mills M NY
377 Nasner $_ Setkirk
378 McBride K NY Mills
379 Burns A Cohoes
380 Grady W Johaston
389 Perrigo D Jamesville
390 Hamilton L Babylon
391 Pinter F NY.
392 Schubert E Albany
O'Connor M Green Island
Bower M_ Scony
395 Rainvitie L Amserdam
96 McKloski Mt
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403 Travis J Ballon Spa
4 K Boffalo
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424 Carter Mo Elmira
425 Sedor M _Binghameoa
426 Reinrma R_ Sayville
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490 Dixon B Waterloo
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515 Catuccl T Bay Shore
516 Johnioa L Bx
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461 Shank H Albany
562 Thier B Albany
563 Banta J Amsverdam
564 Haines F Rhinebeck
465 Geoske J Broton
367 Gromman B Alb
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373 Muueser M Loudoeville
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690 Goul G Groton
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709 Moore P Stillwater
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120 Martino @ Wings
721 Schmice J Nassau
722 Weiner G Babylon
725 Barth L Seaton Is
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28 Dedrick G Albany
729 Bonewest N Trop
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[The Talk Of Binghamton |
Sokolinsky Honored
By Hospital Chapter
The Binghamton State
Hospital chapter, Civil Ser-
vice Employees Assn., has
honored recent-retiree Mor-
ris Sokolinsky with a special
Plaque commemorating his more
than two decades of service to
the CSEA and to the Bingham-
ton State Hospital chapter.
Sokolinsky has been a well-
known and often outspoken
figure in CSEA affairs at all
levels during his lengthy state
career in which he rose from at-
tendant to staff supervisor at
the Binghamton State Hospital
at the time of his retirement late
last year.
During his affiliation with
SEA, Sokolinsky served as
President, executive secretary
and member of the executive
committee of the loca) chapter
with a period of office-holding at
the local level on an almost con-
tinuous basis.
Binghamton
State Hospital
Morris Sokolinsky, left, receives plaque from Thomas Mc-
Install Slate Of
CSEA Officers
The newly formed Bing-
hamton Retirees’ chapter,
Civil Service Employees
Assn, has installed its first
slate of permanent officers,
Hazel Abrams, State CSEA
fifth vice president, administer-
ed the formal oath of office May
21 during ceremonies at the
American Legion Post 80 hall in
downtown Binghamton.
Special guest speaker was
CSEA executive Joseph Lochner
who cited the formation of the
new retirees’ chapters through-
out the state as major assets for
the entire state CSEA organiza~
tion. Lochner added that he
hoped the remaining retirees’
chapters, would be formally or-
ganized within the not-too-dis-
tant future,
‘The new officers are president
Donald Buswell, first vice-presi-
dent Stanley Potter, second vice-
Gladys
president Butts, third
Donough, first vice-president, Binghamton State Hospital
chapter, CSEA. Sokolinsky, who retired last year, was hon-
ored for his more than 20 years of dedication to the CSEA
and the Binghamton State Hospital chapter.
chapter president Leo Weingart-
ner characterized Sokolinsky as
& man who was always there and
who could be depended on to
ket the job done.
At the state level Sokolinsky
has served as a member of the
Board of Directors, Membership
Committee, Nominating Com-
mittee, Paid President Commit-
tee, Special Committee on the
‘Nomination and Election Proced-
ures and as chairman of the
Statewide Grievance Committee.
Sokolinsky also served as @
delegate to the Central Confer-
ence since its creation and has
served on a wide variety of com-
mittees at that level, chairing
many of them, Sokolinsky was
the Central Conference's first
vice president in 1966-67, and
chairman of the Conference
Resolution committee in 1970-
u
Most recently Sokolinsky
served as executive secretary of
the Binghamton State Hospital
chapter, an organization he was
instrumental in forming into an
independent chapter in 1970.
Sokolinsky was presented with
the plaque in honor of his long
and devoted service to the state
and his co-employees by CSEA
first vice president Thomas Mc-
Donough, during ceremonies on
the oceasion of the Central Con-
ference Spring Meeting at the
Owego Treadway Inn in Owego,
New York.
dey
OFF THE BEAT —
Retiring Wellesley Island State
Park patrolman James = M.
Stage, who also served as Mayor
of Clayton, is honored by the
Thousand Island State Park
Commission. Stage has spent 36
years in public service,
to new officers of the Binghamton retirees’ chapter, CSEA. They are, from left, president
Donald Buswell, third vice-president Albert Dexheimer; executive secretary Robert A.
Sullivan, former acting president of the new chapter; secretary Florence Drew;
treas-
urer Gertrude Mason; corresponding secretary Alice Dundon and- historian Margaret
Wareing. Not pictured are vice-presidents Stanley Potter and Gladys Butts.
Jacobs Leaves SI Fund:
Joins CSEA PR Staff
vice-president Albert Dexheimer,
executive secretary Robert Sul-
livan, secretary Florence Drew,
corresponding secretary Alice
Dundon, treasurer Gertrude Ma-
son and historian Margaret
Wareing.
Superintendent Of
Warwick Retires
WARWICK — A. Alfred Cohen
will retire from his duties os
the Superintendent of the War-
wick School for Boys on June 7.
During his more than 27 years
of service Cohen dedicated his
work to improving methods of
treatment, education and the up-
grading of facilities for the many
underprivileged boys that have
been at the Warwick School. He
has innovated many practices
and methods that have gained
national recognition in the fleld
of juvenile treatment. Cohen has
always sought newer and better
methods of adapting the boys, at
Warwick, into our everchanging
soclety.
A retirement party at the
“Belles” in New Windsor, was
held May 31 for Cohen.
A special party for boys and
staff was held at the school on
May 23rd.
District Claims Manager
Retires After 36 Years
BUFFALO — Louis J, Maz-
zarella, district claims manager
for the State Insurance Fund,
has retired after 36 years in state
service, He joined the state Nov,
17, 1936, and has promised his
employees he will keep active
during his retirement,
Syosset Employee Leads
Last Hurrah, Retires
SYOSSET — Frank Bucalos,
head custodian in the Syosset
School District, represented the
Civil Service Employees Assn. in
& mediation session May 30.
What makes it news is that
Bucalos’ retirement 1s effective
June 1 and he continued 12 years
of vigorous work for his fel-
low employees right up to the
last day he could, according to
Syosset School District unit
president Ben Gumin.
Bucalos helped to organize the
CSEA unit in Syosset shortly
after he joined the district in
1961, served on the negotiating
team for 10 years and as chair-
man of the men’s division of the
unit since 1963,
The State Insurance
Fund chapter of the Civil
Service Employees Assn.
honored its former three-
time chapter president, Ran-
dolph V. Jacobs, last week on the
occasion of his retirement from
state service which included 25
years as an active member of
CSEA.
At a luncheon get-together at
Gasner's Restaurant in Manhat-
tan, Jacobs was presented with
& camera and a check for his
long service with the Civil Ser-
vice Employees Assn. Besides the
three terms he served as chapter
president of the Metropolitan
Conference, he stepped down
from that position only last
year , after having served for
@ longer period than any pre-
vious president. In addition,
Jacobs has been chairman of
ae
DOT Honors 5 Retirees
WESTPIELD—The State Dept.
of ‘Transportation last month
honored five of its employees
who were retiring after a com-
bined total of 92 years of service.
‘The Westfield dinner, sponsored
by the Chautauqua County chap-
ter, Civil Service Employees Assn.,
was given for George Hanley,
with 31 years of service; Earl
Blakely, 30 years; Lyle Wood-
ruff, 11 years; and Harold Rath.
burn, six years,
the statewide CSEA grievance
and resolutions committees, and,
most recently, the salary com-
mittee, a position he held until
the time of his retirement.
Jacobs, in his remarks, said
that although retirement is a
personal thing, it becomes &
memorable occasion and “one
that I will always treasure”
when so many friends, associates
and retirees gather to honor
someone who had touched their
lives in one way or another.
Jacobs is currently serving on
the CSEA public relations staff,
having recently been appointed
public relations representative for
New York City, Long Island and
Westchester and Rockland coun-
ties.
Seated at the dais during the
Presentation were Leon Elter-
man, deputy executive director
SI
Best wishes offered to Randalph Jacobs, left, by Vincent
Rubano, CSEA State Insurance Fund chapter president
of the State Insurance Fund;
Morris Kole, actuary; Arthur
Plotnick, director of the Ac-
counts and Finance Department;
Henry Hirschberg, head of the
Data and Systems Division and
Vincent Rubano, State Insurance
Pund chapter president. Jacobs’
wife, Elaine, and daughter,
Rhonda, were also seated with
him at the head table during
the presentation.
Members of the committee
were Victoria Chapman, Gue
Prost, Reverles Mann, Irma
Pena, Miriam Tannenbaum, Sy
‘Teitelbaum and James Wade,
10
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, June 5, 1973
Transit Patrolman Eligible List
peeubeaan, aw YORK
CITY TRANSIT POLICE
DEPARTMENT
‘This list of 6,222 eligibles was
made public May 23. Of the
22,845 candidates who filed dur-
ing Jan, for the Feb. 24 written
exam, all were called but only
10,931 appeared. Salary is $11,-
200,
(Continued From Previous Issue)
No, 201 — 92.50%
201 James M Murray, Ken~-
neth A Wegwelser, Patrick E
O'Grady, John A Urban, Joseph
R Errico, Kenneth J Cordo, Den-
nis K Aurtemma, Edward J
Looke, William K Jantzen, Al-
fred J Syertsen, Charles J Ros-
enberger, Richard J Deparis,
William H Crosby, Kevin J Car-
renter, Peter C Albrechtsen, Wil-
Mam P Grotheer, James H Blet-
dner, John T Plynn, Leonard W
Mayers Sr, John J Malorano.
No, 221 — 92.50%
221 Lawrence W Mann, Rus-
sell L Gates, Peter A Lathwood,
James E Deas, Martin J Iitzko-
wits, Louis J Hanner, John M
Kelly, Michael J Brunsoen, Jos-
eph R Feyjoo, Kenneth E Mul-
lin, Charles F Mower, William
Valie, Gregory F Whalen, Jos-
eph J Loptparo, John F Mills,
Brian M Dorney, Charles R Nel-
son Jr, Thomas W Backis, Wil-
Mam J Arkenau, Lawrence J
Kiceina.
No. 241 — 92.50%
241 John J Naughton, Thomas
P Curtin, Peter M Chernay,
Michael J Bartolotta, Daniel E
Prince, Maurice P Poisson, John
H Lupfer Jr, William F McClos-
key, Gary Penna, Mark Lipira,
Craig E Keeley, Michael P Say-
age, Ronald J Aurtenna, John
C Gelosi, Bernard D Loizzo, Rob-
ert L Moss, William J Ward, An-
thony J Continanzi, Steven P
Reinking, Pau) L Lano.
No, 261 — 92.50%
261 Spencer Barber 3rd, Pree-
land H Mohr, James F Witcher,
William = Duignan, Barry H
Schaffer, Ronald Griffin, Robert
Peger, Stanley Curtis, William
A Kinscherf, Robert K Hanley,
Raymond 8 Birndrum, Glenn R
Payne, Warren L Hoffner, Law-
rence Tripptree, Christopher
Murphy, Edward P Muckler,
John K Grauer, Nicholas J Pinz-
za, Chester P Klyn, John J Cud-
dihy Jr,
No. 281 — 92.50%
281 Albert G Poster, Richard J
Coles, Richard T Egan, Robert
J Hill, Donald L Barrieri, Robert
§S Giaudel, Daniel Kelly, Jose A
Montalvo, John Palma, Thomas
J Nigro, Ralph M Esemplare,
David A Hector, Ernest G Thi-
fault, Pred M Panaro, John J
Pretler, Robert F Diubaldo, Mic-
hael J McFadden, William J
Herlihy, Joseph A Doss!, Curtis
E Collier
No. 301 — 91.30%
301 Michael F Edge, Ernest
S Moore, James J O'Donnell,
John J Lenihan, Andrew G O'-
Brien, Paul W Galvin, Charles J
Augone, James J McKay, Ste-
ven C Rincer, Bernard Smith
John G Flynn, Daniel L Cavan-
augh, Frank J Bianco, George P
Anaipakos, Lewis Glazer, Dennis
V MeNell, Warren C Ward, Mic-
hael A Asserson, Walter F Hein-
emainn, Frank X Smith
No. 321 — 91.30%
321 Stephan FP Bender, James
F Tirney Jr, Kenneth W Reilly,
James J Kiernan, John F Cron-
in, James A Semon, Frank Ne-
mec, Roy R Velsor, Martin S
Lawless, Louis Palsett!, Joseph
E Schneider Jr, Gerard J Mur-
ray, John J Gray, William Cana-
van, Keith J Mazzarello, Richard
J Colgan, Thomas E Sokolowski,
Francis T Cunningham, John W
Kavanagh Jr, Vincent P Digtlio
No. 341 — 91.30%
341 Thomas J Bersoh, Edward
H Nelson, Robert J Turrisi, Mic-
hael D O'Brien, Peter J Dermin,
Richard J Aiello, Frederick
Wussow, James G Hansen, Bar-
ry Bistrelch, Robert J Tozzi
Louls A Merrill, Sheriff Ali, Vin-
cent A Lauarone, George S Sch-
neider, Mark Froimowitz, Robert
A Jagt, James J Burke, James
Webber, Michael F Doherty. Ro-
bert T Deloose.
No. 361 — 91.30%
361 John J Noonan, Enrique
V Perezwilliams, Phillip J Cata-
pano, Peter F Branecato, Joseph
J Sede, Stephen P Garlo, Rich-
ard Ravella, Fred Frigel Jr,
Francis J Molloy, Michael
Adams, Wilfred Loperena, Ken-
neth R Vickers, Levoyne Bethea,
Lawrence M Otk, Richard M
Kennnedy, Richard L Chazen,
John H Faublon, James O Jor-
dan, James B Lynch, Henry
Ferrer,
No, 381 — 91.30%
381 Howard F Finn Jr
Richard C Maltszewski, Bruce O
Murphy, Alan A Wulff, Harry W
Hofmann, Henry R Reifenheiser,
Joseph F Guglielmo, Schuyler
Larsen, Charles E Herman, Ed-
ward J Dagostino, William M
Sheridan, Kevin P Finucane, Jo-
seph A Moore, Chester A Bec-
zak, Richard A Olin, Louls W
Walker Jr, Pranklin E Ogaard,
Thomas Docu, John H Parris,
Robert W Greene
No. 401 — 91.30%
401 Thomas J Lortgan,
R Sino, Ronald Leibler, Law-
rence T Maguire, Michael A
Ross, John M Doran, Carl L
Grannon, Peter G Wadas, Ster-
ling B Hosten, Allen W Davis,
James A Galvin Jr, Richard M
Corrola, James L Olive, Alfred
Guy
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O MASTER CHARGE
() AMEMICAN CxPRESS
3S ae nS
M Yanone Jr, Salvatore Russo,
William T Virgilio, Robert L
Stewart Jr, Dennis Rosario,
Marvin Dancey, Gerald C All-
well.
No, 421 — 91.30%
421 Richard J Sparacia, Willi-
am E Baum, Jobn A Rennee, An-
drew 8 Camputaro, Ronald N
Bailey, Henry Menzie, ‘Thomas
A Kirnan, Richard A Newbauer,
Jesus M Yamac, Kevin T Bros-
nan, Kevin J Lixfleld, Richard L
Nayman, James J Larkin, Ken-
neth T Garabrant, Willam 8
Dunn, Neil I Presser, Howard J
Cottrell, Steven R Fisher, John
L Demaria, Michael H Bioom.
No. 441 — 90.0%
441 Israel Rivera, Charles T
Lovejoy, Gregory V McEvoy, Os-
car E Williams Jr, Scott D Grab-
in, Brian G McMullen, Robert F
Militello, Vito Santangelo, An-
thony Martino, Philip M Hannon,
Randall J Donadio, Earl L Cost,
Francis A Sabstino, Joseph F
Regan, John R Barbato, Thom-
as J Rice, Anthony L Liquort,
James T Bergen, Noel Gregor-
wich, John A Crisci
No. 461 — 90.0%
461 Donald Woodford, Louls M
Croce Jr, Timothy K Fox, Ro-
rt J Furlan, Michael K Mc-
Hale, Luigi G Iocco, Patrick J
Zacchim, Peter J Lanzaro, Ken-
neth T Anderson, David A Wel-
lisch, Michael C Sherman, Chris-
tophe McKeon, Thomas A Pal-
mer, Frank P Petrella, John For-
tunato, Francis J MecGrace,
Eugene J Hennigan, Lawrence J
Rossetti, Steven R Ahmed, Ro-
bert F Wasp.
No. 481 — 90.0%
481 Philip J Mastrelli, Step-
hen W Rosendale, James B Ne-
meth, Kenneth M MacGregor,
Robert T Darin, Paul E Simp-
son, Clifford R Day, Peter K
Jenik, Wilfred Melendez, James
M Goblet, Dennis lL McDonald,
John L Pitula, Sidney Way, Ric-
hard R Pinto, Frank Manfredo,
Richard R Brusa, Peter 8 Cilione,
John R Bamickle, Charles K
Smith, Joseph P Sullivan.
No. 501 — 90.0%
501 Daniel R Sheridan, Gerald
J Cereghino, Jeffrey R Gold-
farb, Richard K Brown, John A
Cunningham, Prank K Edwards,
Joseph M Cino, Christophe Ma-
inleri, Nicholas C DiPiazza, Mat-
thew Oreilly, Peter D McNamara,
Bruno J Seliste, Paul A Ragusa,
Charles T Perry, Ronald Grege,
Alfred J King, John W Lavelle,
Gerard P Beirne, Gregory W
Ganel, Michael C Clinch.
No, 521 — 90.0%
$21 Russell T Wallace, Ken-
neth P McLeod, James P O'Con-
nor, Brian G Perry, Everett
Oliver, Joseph W Janik, Kenneth
F Conover, Charles P Scahill,
Joseph A Casatelli, Thomas J
Belilni, Roberto Martinez, Norm-
an Phillips. Daniel K Emsworth.
Hector M Burgos, Roluardo J
Amaral, Daniel J Carroll, Chris-
tophe Kalage, Robert L Edmonds,
Kennedy Rosario, Donald Ritzer
No, S41 — 90.0%
541 Edward J Brown, Wiliam
J Bubloski, Dominick J Travola.
Prank A McGillicuddy, Jeffrey T
Eastby, Jason Braunstein, Robert
A Rosen, Cesar A Hernandez,
William T Braun, Norman Fir-
senbaum, Lawrence J Rinaldo,
William Shea, Gregory M Shel-
ton, Patrick T Collins, Raymond
K Dufresne, Charles J Kelly, Karl
R Hertel, Summer W Lovelace
Jr, Kenneth E Favero, Brian E
Merlob
No. 561 — 90.0%
561 Richard E Placelia, Philip
8 Anzalone, Thomas J Hender.
son, Richard A Schur Jr, Doug-
las C Willis, Salvatore Perrone,
Charles P Saperna, Vincent A
Nizza, Angelo V Mintchiello, Ray-
mond J Postawa, Horst D Muell-
er, Richard § Mallazzo, Louis 8
Shanley, Brian R Kennedy,
Claude F Birong, Wilbur J Hert-
lein, Martin J Murphy, Wayne
G Carney, William J Flore, Na-
thaniel Hagood.
No, 581 — 90.0%
581 Kelth E Harris, Vincent
M Sarro, Albert E Maxwell,
Laurence P Everett, Michael J
Fenlon, Charles J Plagainos, Ric-
hard Astacio, Raymond Sweeney,
Donald J Donahue, Thomas H
Forbes, Willlam Pritchard, Thom-
as P McNamara, Robert J Trme-
blay, Edmond M Nugent, Step-
hen D Madoaloni, Raymond J
Strickoff, Norman D Allen, John
A MoGrath, Vincent J Miller,
James P Kregler.
No, 601 — 90.0%
601 John S Tarangelo, Ken-
neth A Blischke, Philip Gomez,
Joseph E Fleming, Michael D
Jackson, Gary L Johnson, Ped-
ro A Montalvo Jr, John D Don-
nelly, Louis F Sang, Carlos E
(Continued on Page 11)
@ Longwood Gardens @
Tan neeod Saratoga
fashington @ Long
tsland @ Penn Dutch @
© Cape Cod@Ms America
Valley
Ni
4, 5&6 DAY TOURS
@ Washington @ Penn
Dutch @ Shenandoah
@ Williamsburg @
Includes Transportation « Accommodations
Srrsonalyy Ciscorled
SEND NOW FOR FREE BEAUTIFUL 40 PAGE BOOK!
VACATION TOURS
1 WEEK TO 1 MONTH
@Haine @ Niagara Falls
@Nova Scotia @ Gas
MOTORCOACH TOURS
* Sightseeing and Admissions
125
fame
Parker Tours
jest 431d Street, New York 10036
Adgrans
la Parker Tours
State tp
i
Transit Patrolman
(Continued from Page 10)
Beckford, Vernon W Christian,
Joseph A Hart, Gloria A Smith,
Anthony F Mirabile, Charles J
Cervint Jr, Willie L Harris, Kev-
in H Hurley, William M Piner,
Stuart D Friedman, Lionel R
Miller,
No. 621 — 88.80%
621 Robert M Byrnes, James
M Flood, Carl G Ringwald, Kev-
in J Carr, Manuel J Aguilar,
George G Gunther, James M
Nicks, Philip A Oliva, John W
Houlahan, Thomas P Foley,
Philip G Lubow, John W Holt-
han, Nicholas Pandolfelli Jr,
Daniel W Murphy, Frank M Sehi-
nella, James R Vigliotti, Robert
L Todd, Robert Kelly, Kenneth
Seebach, Allan Weinblatt.
No, 641 — 88.80%
641 Lee R Lowery, Thomas R
Sullivan, Augie J Repetto, Ron-
ald G Alexis, Sandy A Ritzer,
‘Thomas W Woods, Norman J Ar-
senault Jr, Dominic F Ciclo, Law-
rence N Berwitz, Kevin Brown,
Raymond J McKeough, Vernard
McBeth, Renaldo J Bostos, Tim-
othy E O'Leary, William J Ger-
rity, Michael Santangelo, Henry
Lee, Michael P Muscatello, Mat-
thew F arron, Domenick J Ro-
meo,
No, 661 — 88.80%
661 David Casale, Walter Jac-
obsen, Alaster Williams, Lawrence
R Garnes, Robert D Smith, Step-
hen L Delisle, William T Robin-
son, Hector Nevarez, Eugene
Buckley, Andrew V Stephens,
Alan E Gage, Lawrence J Wenz,
Michael B Novak, Edward M
Manning, Enoc Esteves Jr, Gen-
naro V Vitacco, Prank P Kab-
abik, Thomas J Zachman, An-
thony F Paolino, John J Garone.
No. 681 — 88.80%
681 Arthur F Cronin, Edward
H Davis, Ronald A Onorato, Wil-
Mam J Schmidt, John P Spina,
Robert P Cervone, William To-
mecek, John B Gifkins, Michael
K Melican, Robert T Evans, Ro-
bert J Dunne, Richard L Ashley
Jr, Andrew Capozzi, James J
Whitton, Douglas C Cuddeback,
Michael J Donahue, Peter PF
Campbell, Cecilia A Hart, Mar-
ron Hopkins, James E Kuthy.
No. 701 — 88.80%
701 Kenneth Raehse, Ronald
J Reilly, Edward J Platt, John
D Ford, Reginald W Allen, Stan-
Jey J Burstein, William P Maack,
Stephen R Dirlenzo, Harry W
Scott, Gerald B Nelson, William
A Rodriguez, Kenneth R Hettler,
Edward H Holmes Jr, Sandy N
Psonas, James P Savarese Jr,
Daniel P Higgins, Michael B
Danford, Edward Goodwin, Pet-
er R Ellis, Michael! Tereshko,
No, 721 — 88.80%
721 Daniel L Rainero, Anthony
P Guareello, Alan R Rossin, Wil-
liam J Watson, Dale K Dewey,
Charles J Schmidt, Harry E
Childs 3rd, Robert Dewaters, An-
thony Flores, Roberto E Torrens,
Dennis J Vickery, Eric I Hard-
ing, Enrique Acevedo Jr, Bruce
A Foglia, William T Dougherty
Jr, Ralph E Faison, Donald R
Lyver, Mitchell Land, Edward 8
Siegel, James A Kelly.
No, 741 — 88.80%
741 David F Podesta, Ray-
mond Valentin, Steven B Hop-
kins, Charles Glover, Sebastian
Grasso, Thomas C George, James
M Russell, Charles L Maestri,
Michael J Daw, Larry H Jack-
son, Donald V Lovell, Walter L
Richardson, Randolph Schim-
menti, John P Darcy Jr, Patrick
J Guarino Jr, Michael Caburis,
Ralph Napolitano, James H Dar-
den, James W Buell, Jose M
Rodriguez.
No, 761 — 88.80%
761 Daniel T KHmek, Gary T
Cohen, Michael W McKeever,
James R Gallo, Steven Azzoli,
Gregori Brozski, David A Rod-
riguez, William J Shelton, James
P O'Connell, Robert W Kirchner,
Frank J Newton. Thomas J
Lally, John Morris, John Mor-
tis, John M Sullivan, Robert E
Celentano, John V Noselll, Mic-
hael J Condon, Peter 5 Marsala,
James W Sullivan, Wayne I
Matthews.
No. 781 — 88.80%
781 James R Moran Jr, Keith
L Savage, Robert H Kermon Jr,
Kimon Steeanidis, Bernard J
MeNellis, Gerald Dunleavy, Wil-
am F Bernius Jr, Culery J Jet-
fries Jr, John A Connelly, Rich-
ard T Jordan Jr, Manuel A
Aviles, Henry P Miller, Robert
Woodberry 3rd, Leonard P Gia-
calone, James J Hartford Jr,
Ludwig Spengler Jr, Patrick R
McVey, John J Barrett, Robert 8
Wilhelmsen, Lawrence J Reilly.
No, 801 — 88.80%
801 Robert G Perline, James
& Ryan, Archie V Jackson, Er-
ee eee NTT U MLL LLM Lo LLL
GOURMET’S GUIDE
MANHATTAN
ITALIAN
FELIX’S 154 WEST 13TH ST. CH 39767. Super Luncheons — Dinners —
Music. Musical memoir . . . Congenial atmosphere Felix, son
of the late famed opera star Felix Felice De Gregorio, host Sing along with
Felix, — Lobster Dinner — Closed Sunday.
221 EAST SOTH ST. PL 2-1696. Unexcelied italian food.
Handsome decor, Gracious service. A place of distin
tion, John Scarcella, Managing Director
PERSIAN — ITALIAN
TEHERAN
45 WEST 44TH ST. MU 2-6588, No, 1 Cocktail place for tree
hors d'oeuvres. Howard Hillmar
@ top authority in New Gui
Book Inside N.Y. Famed for Seafood — Steaks — Persian and Italian speciaities.
Curtain time dinner,
Cocktails — Dinner
After theatre cocktails, Parties of 400.
— luncheon —
BROOKLYN
SEAFOOD
BAY RIDGE SEA FOOD GENTER $)'573335 {i ,, "M¢
Deep Bive to you.”
Famous for Sea Foood Luncheons and Dinners. Also take-home
inner, Open all year. This two-inone sea food establishment features all varieties
‘of sea food from steamed finnan haddie to lobster. Also featur
Luncheons from $2.75 to $3, Dinners rom 3 P.M. to 9 PLM. Daily,
served to 1} PM. Sunday dinners from 12 Noon to 9 PM, —
Also A la Carte.
sea food store.
turday dinners
to $7
1980 FLATBUSH
AVE, OFF KINGS
aoe, B'KLYN, 377-7674. George and John Panagakos of “The Famed Jimmy's.”
7 days. Luncheon Dinner
— Supper. Free parking.
Ryall,
Richard J McCabe, Patrick J
Lindsay, Jonathan I Boags, Wil-
Ham A Rowan 3rd, Patrick D
Flatley, Robert E McKenna,
Bruce P Swiss, Michael A Reyes
Jr, Shaun R Ryan,
No, 821 — 87.50%
821 Robert Rosado, Stephen
© Stewart, Reuel A Rhymer,
Michael J Woods, Joseph M
Flanagan, Hadrian M Santiago,
Daniel A Pyne, Salvatore Cico-
one, James J Moloney, William
D Hausler, William Acevedo,
Donald T Cubitt, John N Lawlor,
Mark B Miller, Gordon L Oliver,
Joseph M Casola, Joseph J Mil-
ler, Peter M Pietrowski, Robert
D Hodgens, Louis 8 Chiacchert
No, 841 — 87.50%
841 Austin G Trabulsy, John
T Willams, Leroy E Betts Jr,
Dennis P Calabro, Michael J
Gaynor, Harry A Waltgenbach,
Edward A Warfield, Roy Arigo,
George P Mironovich, Ronald J
Manzione, Steven L Tenzer, Ter-
ence B O'Brien, Prank Iluzzi,
Steven P Cross, William J Bayer,
Richard T Prankel, John T Fer-
tito, Thomas W Raffanello, Ed-
ward C Burke.
No. 861 — 87.50%
861 David Liebov, John W
Palette, Walter J Jaworski,
Charles F Cipriani, Harvey J
Friedman, Michael] Oregon,
George L Ramtrez, Dennis Mo-
jica, Vincent Labarbera, Sidney
A Burns, Daniel Flynn, Sean V
Meehan, Stephen J Favor, Paul
W Harris, Arthur J Smith, Bruce
Damtoo, Joseph A Dambra,
Grafton E Beckles, Robert T
Dedely, Jerry Matthews,
No. 881 — 87.50%
881 John Cerio, Stephen A
Marcus, Shaun M Reen, Edward
J Fitzgerald, John P Buschhorn,
David R Donlon, Walter K
‘Spence, James J Madson, Ronald
B Poole, Joseph E Jurgens Jr,
John M Erbis, John R Roche Jr.
John F Mills, Paul H Schwartz,
Daniel D Sendroff, Eugene T
O'Sullivan, Joseph W Corr, Lee
R Johnson, Thomas Murphy,
Glenn 8 Diers.
No, 901 — 87.50%
901 Patrick M_ Broderick,
George C Blanchard, Kenneth J
O'Neil, Edward T White, Michael
8 Suzuki, Kevin M Grice, Wil-
liam C Cozolino, John W
Brookshire, Fred J Cline, Leon-
ard W Shumsey, Robert A Bal-
samo, Gordon L Thorne, William
Massey Jr, Donald P Lee Jr, Pat-
rick J Doyle, Charles C Metel,
James T Healy, John P Mc-
Nally, Gerhard J Senkiw, Rob-
ert S Debourg.
No. 921 — 87.50%
921 Danny R Little, Kenneth
J Vankleef, Vincent P McCaf-
frey, Gregory L Earl, Alex Tor-
res, Timothy J Ryan, Michael
L Dibartolo, William Pearce,
John A Gargiulo, Donald F De-
lano, Stephen M Cherepany,
Richard J Safonte, Gerard M
Murtha, John J McCormack Jr,
James C Cereghino, John P
Hunt, John M Wrenn, Bernard
D Koster, William A Bell, Daniel
R Lynaugh.
No, 941 — 87.50%
941 Steven P Myers, Carmine
S Glambrone, John V Sheehan,
Anthony J Catania, Stewart P
Holmes, Michael L Silvestro,
Robert A Macleod, James M Sul-
livan, John J Carey, Sal A Vi~
tale, Raymond E Gonsowski,
Anthony J Pagano, Howard I
Borofsky, Ronald F Dino, Brian
R Strasser, Arthur’ H Runnions,
Douglas A Kowalski, Reginald
Washington, ‘Timothy Cum-
mings, Joseph 8 Garvetta
No. 981 — 87.50%
981 Richard T Mangini, Pat-
rick O'Toole, Michael R Louis,
Dennis G Raffa, Louis M Brooks,
Appleton A Powlett, James P
Fox, Walter G Drain, Fred B
‘Smalls, Frank M Laudati, Walter
‘W Schneider, Salvatore Gargiulo,
William R Guarneri, Edward J
Pymm, Philip R Barresi, Patrick
J Murtagh, Joseph F Parisi,
Thomas E Stagg, Jeffrey A
Hardman, John P Hnat,
No, 1001 — 87.50%
1001 Ronald E Walthe, Walter
Mercer Jr, Marvin D Bacote,
John W McNulty, Donald Perry,
Stephen W Kobetitsch, Anthony
F Douglas, Richard P Rabaglia,
Michael J Goltszeski, John H
‘Taylor, Robert M Mitchell, Rich-
arfd K MoCready, Robert A
Specht, Alfred N Bland, Lionel
C Alexandre, Austin M Single-
ton, George R Cherpock Jr, Ron-
ald W Seaman, Dennis P Dough-
erty, Joseph A Addiego.
No, 1021 — 87.50%
1021 Peter A Deloioppo, Rich-
ard J Seidler, Joseph A Torelli,
Keith E Brinkmann, Edward A
Risener Jr, Hugh P Biddick,
Charles A Murphy, Angelo A Co-
iro, Michael A Brancato, Rich-
ard J Davis, Gregory J Moore,
Vincent C Adams, David L Sail-
or, Ronald V Cain, Sidney V Mc-
Nell, John Schiavo, Arthur J
Devlin, Walter J Liszewski, Gary
D Hughes, Bernard D Farkas.
No, 1041 — 87.50%
1041 George L Torres, Prank
Delrio, Hector M Jimenez, Hay-
wood L Vines, James T Ryan,
Angelo Rivera, George Kand-
rach, Richard J Hodges, Dave A
Williams, Barry L Timmons,
Emilio Mesa Jr, Presley H Can-
nady, Gary S Fishman, David G
Weekes, Joseph A Gerry, John L
Aradi, Leon Means, Gregory P
Denman, Anthony M Sehifano,
David G Lavin.
No, 1061 — 87.50%
1061 Gary E Grandstaff, Wil-
liam M Hyland, Ralph FP Sgro,
Richard A Pranconerl, Michael
G Cooke, Thomas Calta Jr, Mic-
hael F Calkins, Victor G Vio-
hotka, Richard Bily, Michael P
Davie, Robert J Ballard Jr,
Charles J Stychek, John A Col-
ucco, Warren L Brown, Victor N
Petrocelli, Jimmy V Dicostanzo,
(Continued on Page 12)
Terry Dawson
Is Re-elected
At Creedmoor
Terry Dawson has been re-
elected president of Creed-
moor chapter, Civil Service
Employees Assn.
Other officers elected were first
vice-president Dorothy King; sec-
John Della~
cona, John Lipinsky (Operation-
al), Yolanda Lavalle (PS&T).
Ms, Dawson, entering her
third term as president, express-
ed her pleasure at the confidence
shown through overwhelming
votes by the membership in re-
turning her to the leadership of
‘the chapter, She said that plans
for an installation dinner-dance
scheduled for June 15 are now
in progress and that details will
be announced later.
Westchester Unit
Sets June 11 Meeting
WHITE PLAINS — Westches-
ter unit of the Civil Service Em-
ployees Assn. has scheduled .
meeting June 11, according to
unit president Michael Morella.
The meeting will be at 8 pm.
in the Health Building at 85
Court St. here.
Morelia also specified that the
unit 18 awaiting fact-finder's
recommendations. When these
are received, he said, a special
meeting will be called to present
recommendations to the mem-
bership.
HIGH SCHOOL
EQUIVALENCY
DIPLOMA
= 5 WEEK COURSE $75 |
Oe Bere om ne a State
HS, EQUIVALENCY DIPLOMA
Gems te clas or Home Study, g
Master Charge accepted, it
Jpooxter ~
I PL 7-0300 i
ROBERTS SCHOOLS
1 517 West 57eh Street
New York, N.Y, 10019
a ee ek
INSPECTOR
FILE JUNE 2.26 FOR
AUG, 25 WRITTEN EXAM
Now Enrolling Students
FOR NEW CLASSES
Approved for Veterans Training
CALL 855-5603
DAYS or EVES
H BERK TRADE SCHOOL
MIMEOS ADDRESS:
STENOTYPES
STENOGRAPH for sale
and rent, 1,000 others.
Low-Low Prices
ALL LANGUAGES
TYPEWRITER CO., Inc.
119 W. 23 St. (W, of 6th Ave.)
N.Y. MY, CHelsec 3-6006
vnmi-zems<4
SCHOOL DIRECTORY
SN ee
MONROE INSTITUTE — IBM COURSES “ympute: Programming
ARATION. iC
Neer ker
re
115 EAST. FORDHAM ROAD, BRONX — aah
Approved or Vets and Foreign Students. Accrad. N.Y.
+300,
‘es Slichboa
RE Pstee
6700
+ State Devs. of Education
£261 ‘Ss oune bos as ‘HaGVaT FOIANAS TAD
y
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, June 5, 1973
REAL ESTATE VALUES
Cottages To Rent
Putnam Valley, N.Y.
3 & 4ROOM COTTAGES, all facilities,
swimming
LAKEFRONT
bedrms, Newly
decor, Move right in,
CAMBRIA HTS $31,990
3 BR CAPE plus INCOME
Det mod brk cape 6 Ig rms, patio,
basme apt. Te see ic is to boy it.
ROSEDALE VIC $43,500
LEGAL 2-FAMILY
Det Spanith succo on ige garden
Fg le oe Pg mite
for owner plus ige 3-rm apt
Wee income, A coal buy
Many other 1 & 2 fam Homes
ms Homes OL 8-7510
170-43 Hillside Ave, Jamaica
Property For Sale
Pocone Mts.
POCONO MT, LAKE ESTATES; beau-
tiful corner tot, $ min from ige man-
made lake, 2 beaches, marina, bosting,
fishing, bunting orca, ski area with
ski lifts, $7,500.00, Tel. 914-949-5115,
Farms, Country Homes
New York State
log of ote of Real
ing Catal
Escate & Business Bargains, All sypes
grt peices, Debt Reser, Coble:
STAPLETON (Staten island)
Minutes to Feery & Bridge
PARKHILL-FAIRVIEW APTS
Hlagetsi
Open Evenings-Free Parking
3
Bs
eee tes
tz
fi
Unfurnished Apts - For Rent
WEST BRONX, 3 & 4 room. Renion-
able, Call PE 6.6642.
House For Sale - N.Y. State
BRICK RAISED RANCH, 5 yrs old,
32° x 60", 4 bedrms, 1 bath, 15° x 26°
living room, End wall all brick w/ FP.
Kitchen same size, avacado appliances,
Polt cellar, Approx 40 acres (approx
gu NS
CAMBRIA HTS
$32,990
DUPLEX
Beautiful home ia desizable ares
‘oven, Washing machine aod many
other extras, Oversized garage.
Low down payment terms can
be arranged.
HILLSIDE AVE Vic
| $29,500
WALK TO SUBWAY
Large oil co transferred owner,
Selling below market price. 6
wall ‘carpeting, oll hear, many
other extras, Near huge shopping
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No. 1101 — 86.30%
1101 Thomas M MeGuri, John
J Sullivan, James A More, Jose
L Hernandez, Michael J O'Con-
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Liso, Peter Creanza, Theodore C
Francis, Victor Sosa, John R
Scott, Stephen J Maguire, Ray-
mond F Cizynski, John Rody,
Michae] I Rothschild, James S
Jairaffo, Charles T Tamburo.
No. 1121 — 86.30%
1121 Donald F Mannino, Jos-
eph G Koppie, John J Conway,
Miguel A Sostreivera, Danny
Pampinella, David F Bonaparte,
Jeffrey H Cohen, Philip J Val-
enti, Flavio Lorenzoni, Dominick
A Bruzzese, Steven B Adams,
Gasper C Damico, Kenneth N
Gill, Cristobal Degracia, Jeffrey
A Aiello, Myles P MoKenna,
Timothy Murray, Dennis J Dris-
coll, John L Bell Jr, Carl Nitti,
No. 1141 — 86.20%
1141 Christopher Rhoads,
Donald J Burrus, George C
Ajami, Martin J Costello, Char-
les C Firneno, Standish A Ben-
ton, Alfred S Preund, Mark J
Sumar, Edgar G Sloan, Martin
M Karoll, Josph R Hewson,
Clyde G Purdue, Larry C Graves,
Ferdinand Isvarone, Francis J
Murnane, Eliston Overton, Ar-
thur R Herrmann, Kenneth E
Massaria, Louis W Fleury Jr,
Michael J Pizzi.
No, 1161 — 86.30%
1161 Louls M Randolfi, James
F Sullivan, Eugene P Moscicki,
Paul R Williams, John G Cahill,
Richard W Lynch, Owen P Reit-
er, James P Boz, James E Kelty,
James H Gorman, Daniel J
Hunt, Stephen W Reardon,
Richard J Sichler, Robert J
Burton, Carl J Bisaccio, Richard
J Locke, Gregory Watts, Vincent
V Loiacono, John E Southard,
Raymond P Stanczuk.
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P Layin, Michael J Mazzone, Al-
lan 8 Loewenthal.
No, 1201 — 86.30%
1201 William J Basdavanos,
Kevin P Morrow, Stephen J
Chano, Stephen Hekimian Jr,
Robert J Davino, Steven E Gug-
Helmo, Frederick Waldorf, Ste-
phen J Shurley, Ernest E Blount,
Obed Bosch, Peter J Espino, Ed-
ward J Wynne, James R Mantle,
Prancis J Carroll, Howard C
Holman, Joseph Mansonet, Rob-
ert J Smith, Joseph 8 Rivera,
Joseph R Taylor, Roger J Flynn.
No. 1221 — 86.30%
1221 Denis P Brown, Michael
C Becker, Christopher Grode-
wald, Lawrence M Danziger,
Mark H Wittich, Edward L Sear-
son, Norman H McQuade, Peter
E Kelaher, Robert J Leisz, Vin-
cent Devitta Jr, Michael Fagan,
George R Cobane, Kevin J Me-
Goldrick, James L Delk, Ronald
L Wheeler, Laurence D Powell,
Thomas P Paccione, Gary L
Brettweg, Elizabeth Smith, Char-
les Martinez.
No. 1241 — 86.30%
1241 Randolph J Cresci, Ro-
bert D Rice, Lancelot L Con-
nolly, Salvatore Castellano, Ken-
neth J Ford, Paul M Kornbrekke,
Roy M Moren, Robert J Della-
tori, Angelo M Parente, Daniel
J Perez, Denis J Kearney, Don-
ald R Sabo, Thomas M Burke,
Gregory E McGrail, Charles P
Rogan, Joel A Bridgewater, Jos-
eph W Collins, Michael J Shan-
ley, James R Lynch, Dominick
Dellegrazie.
No, 1261 — 86.30%
1261 James F Brenneisen, Wil-
liam E Winder, Brian J McDon-
ald, Joseph A Rosati Jr, Scott
Carten, Kenneth P Thomas,
John B Rooney, Thomas Per-
rone, Gerardo Duchesne Jr,
Charles W Barlow, Israel Rob-
les, Carlos E Marinez, Edward J
Torres, Remo Obertello, Daniel
© Rivera, Vincent C Walker Jr,
Patrick W Dunne, Peter T Mc~-
Naughton Jr, Andres Ortiz Jr,
Peter Kozack.
No, 1281 — 86.30%
1281 Dan M Bianco, Arthur F
Smith, Peter G Reynolds, John
T Ferguson, Angelo Vergara,
David Scott, Bert O Goddard,
Robert T Small Jr, Anthony J
Dimino, Joseph A Butler, Harold
A McKoy, Eugene Gorman, John
T Decario, Roger E Gilligan,
Pasquale Aversano, Joseph Lo-
monaco Jr, Frank J Seatoni,
Jerry Green, Irvin S Faust,
Claude D Jules,
No, 1301 — 86.30%
1301 Otis M Hunt, Stanley I
Kessel, Ronald M Hellen Jr,
Mark Mirallh, David J Durkin,
Richard R Burke, John J Casi-
mates, Maurice J Chartoff, Har-
old L Lauegraben, Richard T
Conry, James R Burns, Wayne R
Parker, Thomas J Keeley, Prank
P Gibbons, Joseph T Hayes,
John M Devitt, Robert J Gra-
ham, Alton Rogers Jr, Peter P
Lockwood, Solomon Blackshear
Jr,
No, 1321 — 86.30%
1321 William P Hutchison,
Preston L Gatewood, Kenneth A
Arthur Jr, Prank D Filacchione,
Michael P Katras, Van B Gaff-
ney, Larry § Jennings, James P
Davis, Patrick J Gillen, William
™M Day, John C Harling, Carlos A
Torres, Ronald W White, War:
ren V Holden, Lawrence Walker,
M Hughes, Raymond P Melen-
No, 1361 — 85.0%
1361 Thomas P McDonough,
Michael J Mahoney, Thomas D
Kossomedes, Ralph Stuart, Bart
M Pannone, Raymond B Cole,
Christopher Prescott, Orlando
Rodriguez, Lawrence T Nevins,
Richard J Loehmann, Thomas
Vasti, Brendan Hogan, Fred-
erie J Infelice, Jerome A Dono-
Raul Silva,
Mario J Casatelli.
No. 1381 — 85.0%
1381 Eric G Brickner, Silas J
Jackson, Carlton E Hudson, Noel
Negron, Salvatore Conte, Richard
F Monorief, Brian F Ryan, Den-
nis J Kenahan, Ttanley M Rubin,
Robert P Corsaro, Thomas F
Kelly, Thomas A Langone, Greg-
ory H Glover, Lindsay E Eason,
Robert P Klunk, Abdullah M
Hassen, Richard Lee, John E
Romano, Michael L Schmitt, Jo-
seph T Birro.
No, 1401 — 85.0%
1401 Charles J Pertto, Eisen-
hower Coleman, John K Ambro-
sino, Irvin A Tabickman, Ro-
bert K Quigley, Ronald L Ser-
ota, Floyd C Berry Jr, Kenneth
C Wenzel, Gustave H Preuss,
James M Jacobsen, Robert Edge-
worth, Joseph A Iommarini, Jo-
seph N Abbate, Caverio J Cata-
lano, Stephen F Murphy, Gary
B Tepperman, Dennis A Jones,
Bernard J Purdy, Dennis L Tep-
perman, Peter Wolowacz.
No. 1421 — 85.0%
1421 Donald Lipari, Robert F
Schurott, Edward M Fuseyamore,
Edward R McHulski, Deniel H
Daniel N Harris, James J Say-
astano Jr, Vincent Benincasa,
John F Zukowski, Michael T
Duffy, Stephen V Tellone, Pet-
er B Bourke, Richard T Cald-
well, Orlando Roman, Mark ¥
Asher, David P Reisender, Jere-
mish Quinlan, James G Mc-
Queen, Thomas P Murray, Ernest
§ Shelton, Robert J Sortano,
No, 1441 — 85.0%
1441 Michael L Miller, Joseph
Livatino, David J Davenport Jr,
Peter D McLaughlin, John Gen-
carelli, Edmund G Pinte Jr, An-
thony F Cinao, Timothy K Finn,
Robert 8 Hyman, Gerard J Cor-
coran, Kevin J Boylan, Beaver J
Ladson, Leroy W Lewis, Law-
rence J Modafferi, Mare N Pouch,
Alan C Flor, Alan E Schwartz,
James P Murphy, David A Leon-
andi, Michael L Frayne,
No, 1461 — 85.0%
1461 Raymond V_ Eisenberg,
Joseph F Lacourte, Edward Coro-
ina, Kevin T McCusker, Timo-
thy A Krysouk, Gerard Boglioli,
Gerald F Beyber, Donald J Britt-
ner, John M Dunn, John Kaim,
Daniel Barra, William J Harap,
Henry A Glover, Santo M Cas-
sarino, Dennis J Fitzpatrick, Ed-
ward A Lettieri, William H Clo-
onan, John J Phillips, Kenneth T
Pelug, Ray Millan,
No, 1481 — 85,0%
1481 Ronald Marzlock, Danie)
J Fitapatrick, James N John-
ston, Richard A Pagano, Frank
D Engel, Milton T Harris, Roger
Te
——— a,
Transit Patrolman
(Continued from Page 12)
F Lynch, Michael P Gowan, Luis
Alvarez 3rd, Stanley Heitel, James
No. 1501 — 85.0%
1501 Michael D Muckley, Ro-
N Halisky, Gerard M Dict, Wil-
Mam D Cooney, Thomas W Ret-
manski, Roderick M_ Vick.
No, 1521 — 85.0%
1521 Kevin Walsh, John Wise-
U Mulrain, John J Williams,
Norman J White Jr, James C
Sullivan, Robert T Hannigan,
Edward T Watts, Henry A Howe,
‘Thomas K McCarren, Kevin J
O'Keefe, Dean Rastnya, James
W Zima, John C O’Brien, Ray-
mond Barkley, Victor J Mole,
Robert J Gilbertt.
(To Be Continued)
Real Estate Mgrs.
Sought By City
New York City Real Estate
Commissioner Ira Duchan reports
his agency is seeking to fill sev-
eral Real Estate Manager posi-
tions. The jobs pay $9,250.
To qualify, candidates must
meet one of the following
(1) possess three years of sat~
isfactory, full time, paid experi-
ence in the active management
of residential, commercial or in-
dustrial real estate properties,
including both renting and oper-
ating, or in a responsible po-
sition in site management or
tenant relocation activities in
connection with housing or other
construction projects; or (2)
possess a baccalaureate degree
and have two years of experience
as described above; or (3) possess
& satisfactory equivalent com-
bination of training and experi-
ence. In addition, all candidates
must possess & high school di-
ploma or an equivalency certifi-
cate.
gin interviews with 400 potice ad-
ministrative aide eligibles this
week, Called for medicals and in-
vestigations are 400 candidates
between numbers 1201 and 1600
on the 2,026-name list result-
ing from open competitive exam
2026, established March 21, 1973,
A Police Dept. spokesman told
The Leader they hoped to hire
“at least 200” aides July 2, but
that they may be calling more
eligibles for interviews and so
could possibly “end up appoint-
ing 400" aldes by that date.
So far about 770 aides have
been hired in the Mayor's “civill-
anization” program of having
civilians replace police officers at
desk jobs, The civilian aides un-
dergo two weeks of training and
start at a salary of $7,925,
HALF TIME — wits Reed (center) poses with Glenn Nugent,
11, one of three sons of a police officer slain in the fine of duty who
will be sponsored by the Knicks’ most valuable player at the Willis
Reed Basketball Camp this summer. From left are Glenn's mother
Mrs. Patrick Nugent, Reed, Chief of Operations Hugo Masini, Direc-
tor of the Training Division Chief James Sullivan, and Police Officer
Dennis Fitzgerald who runs the “shoot-out” contest from which
boys are selected to go to the summer camp. (See the March 20
Leader for more on the contest.) Reed confided to The Leader that
the Westsiders, a team of professional and college players who
were playing against the Police Dept, Olympic Team on the court,
would win “easy.” They did, 113-71.
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4
CIVIL SERVICE Co ‘Tuesday, June 5, 1973
CSEA first vice-president Thomas McDonough, Cortland
State chapter president Roger Glazier and CSEA president
Theodore C, Wenzl share a few words before the dinner-
dance at VFW Hall in Cortland.
Cortland SUNY Participates
In March Of Dimes Drive
CORTLAND — Some 250 persons turned out May 19 for
the annual dinner-dance given by the Cortland State Uni-
versity chapter, Civil Service Employees Assn., at the VFW
Hall in downtown Cortland.
Highlight of the evening's
formalities were remarks by CS-
EA president Theodore Wenzl,
first vice-president Thomas Me-
Donough and State University
representative Edward Dudek
The chapter later presented a
check for $100 to the Cortland
County chapter of the March of
Dimes as a result of efforts on
behalf of chapter member M. J
Nettleton, who bicyeled a dis-
tance of 40 miles during the
charity's Bike-A-Thon May 6.
The Cortland State Untversity
chapter had sponsored Ms. Net-
Heton in the event at the rate
of $2.50 per mile covered.
Dignitaries at the head table
included: Father Hillary Paesek;
chapter president and Ms. Roger
Glazier; Mr. and Ms. James Cas-
terline, Dr. Theodore Wenz}; Mr.
and Ms. Thomas McDonough;
Charles Ecker, representing the
Central Conference; and Mr. and
Ms. Edward Dudek.
Cortland State University’s di-
rector of personnel, John Patter-
son, served as master of cere-
monies for the evening.
Other special guests included
Irene Carr, president of the One-
onta chapter, CSEA; Helene Cal-
lahan and Joanne Weed, repre~
senting the Syracuse State School
and Richard Cleary, president
of Syracuse chapter, CSEA.
Dinner-dance comittee organt-
vers were Sally Casterline and
Karen Salomone.
© CSEA calendar °
Information for the Calendar may be submitted directly
to THE LEADER. It should include the date, time, place,
address and city for the function.
June
5—Statewide Board of Directors meeting: Friar Tuck Inn, Cairo,
6—Statewide nominating committee meeting: Friar Tuck Inn,
Cairo.
7—Long Island Armory Employees chapter meating: 12 noon, River-
head Armory, Riverhead, L.I.
8—Rochester Area Retirees chapter meeting: 12:30 p.m. executive
meeting), Van de Mark Hall, State Hospital, 1600 South Ave.,
Rochester.
8-10—Central Conference meeting: Edgewood Motel,
81, Alexandria Bay, Jefferson County.
9—Central Islip State Hospital installation dinner-dance: 8 p.m.
Robbins Hall on Hospital Grounds, Central Islip, LI.
11—Westchester unit meeting: 8 p.m., Health Building, 85 Court
St., White Plains.
\4—Dutchess County Educational Employees chapter mi
p.m., Adlington Junior High School.
\4—Utica chapter installation: 7 p.m. Harts Hill inn, Whitesboro,
15—Employees Retirement System chapter clambake: 12 noon,
Saratoga State Park.
15—Transportation Region 2 chapter annual dinner-dance in honor
of retirees: 6:30 pum., Harts Hill Inn, Whitesboro.
15—Creedmoor State Hospital instellation: 8 p.m. Platdeutsche
Restourant, 1132 Hempstead Tumpike, Franklin Square, L.,
15-17—Capitel District Conference meeting: Hidden Valley; Lake
Lucerne.
16—SUNY at Albany chapter: |-9 p.m., Picard’s Grove, New Salem
16—Testimonial for George Koch: Towne House, Huntington, Lt.
16—Broome County chapter clambake: 1-7 p.m., Glendale Park.
Endicott
16—SUNY at Albany annual outing
Salem,
17-19—Southern Conference Workshop: Grossinger's, Liberty.
off Route
g: 7:30
1-9 p.m., Picard’s Grove, New
18—Westchester unit annual picnic: 5:30 p.m., Ridge Road Picnic
Area No, 2.
19—Hudson River State Hospital chapter meeting: Otto House,
Poughkeepsie.
22—Deadline for nominees for regional officers to be submitted to
CSEA Nominating Commitee
22—Buffalo chapter installation:
107 Deleware Ave., Buffalo
7:30. p.m, Statler-rilton Hotel,
Grossfield Elected To
Fifth Term As Leader
Of Rochester Chapter
(From Leader Correspondent)
ROCHESTER — Samuel Grossfield, installed for the fifth time as president of the
Rochester CSEA chapter, urged an all-out drive against pension restrictions if they aren't
also imposed on state workers represented by non-CSEA unions.
“If legislation reducing
after Governor Rockefeller re-
convenes the Legislature in July,
we'll have to take a good, hard
look at the situation,” he said
James Powers, supervisor of
field officers in western New
York, installed Grossfield and
these other officers at a chapter
meeting at the Holiday Inn-
Downtown last Thursday night:
Joseph Polvino of the State
Division of Parole, first vice-
president; Cathy O'Brien of
Unemployment Insurance, sec-
ond vice-president; Irene Raines
of Workmen's Compensation,
secretary; Maurice Brusdshl of
Pied Audit, treasurer, and John
Garvey of Tax and Finance,
Larry Cohn of Workmen's Com-
pensation and Helen Bynum of
State Insurance Fund, all dele-
gates
A. Vietor Costa, state’ second
vice-president, briefed members
on the Intest efforts in restrue~
turing and in legislative matters.
Statewide president Theodore
Wenzl was unable to attend be-
cause of meetings with legisiat-
ors about pension action.
Regional Office Opening
Grossfield told members that
the new Buffalo regions) office
Probably will open ‘by July in
second-floor {ncilities at 4122
Union Road, Cheektowaga. The
remodeled quarters are above of-
fices used by Buffalo area chap-
ters and will house the offices of
the Western Conference presi-
dent, field representative super-
visor and labor market analyst
He said a search ts under way
for a satellite office in Roches-
ter, The search committee is
made up of these chapter presi-
dents: Martin Koenig, Monroe
County; Pat Timiner!, Rochester
Buffalo To Install
BUFFALO—Installation of of-
ficers for Buffalo chapter of the
Civil Service Employees Assn.
will be June 22 at the Hotel
Statler here. Frederick Huber
will be reinstalled as chapter
president at the 7:30 p.m. event.
guy
us.
BONDS!
retirement benefits isn't enacted for other labor unions
State Hospital; Bud Saunders, before being elected to his fourth
Department of Transportation;
Margaret Mishic, SUNY Gene-
seo; Charles Peritore, Craig
School; Carmen Farruggia, State
Agricultural and Industrial
School at Industry; Thomas
Gartley, SUNY Brockport, and
Grossfleld, Rochester.
‘The site committee which lo-
cated the Buffalo office was
made up of Robert Stelley, prest-
dent of the Roswell Park chap-
ter, and Sam Mogavero, co-
chairmen, and Sarah DaRe, Al
Sibilio, Lee Andrews and William
Doyle.
Grossfield served the Roches-
ter chapter as president for three
two-year terms and then had
elght years of interrupted service
Eligibles
(Continued from Page 8)
734 Kelly E Baldwin
753 Leitgeb E Troy
736 Weiss B Baffalo
737 Wiles J Albany
738 Young M Buffalo
bia
750 Gresg F Albany
731 Smith E Binghameon
752 Terrillion M_ Carthage
753 Articola T Latham
754 Eckert F Almany
755 Wensrom P Albany
756 Randall M Wallkill
757 Surgick M Albany
758 Cavalier L_NY Mills
749 Lebed 1 Woodbourne
D_ Rensseluer
760 Zobre
two-year term two years ago.
The new term is his fifth.
Nassau Pact
(Continued from Page 1)
ments averaging five percent
The vote was strongly in favor
of the settlement in all depart-
ments at the Nassau County Med-
ical Center, where the tally was
incomplete. The vote was run-
ning 359 to 147 at presstime. At
the Franklin Square Road Gar-
age, the tally was 199 to 43
‘The Department of Social Ser-
vice polling place reported 666
to 103, Supreme Court went in
favor by 169 to 67 and County
Court was 301 to 85.
‘The terms had been issued by
® fact-finding panel after long
negotiations, which featured a
series of near-breakdowns, mem-
bership rejection of the county's
final offer, impasse and fact-
finding.
Flaumenbaum said the gains
could be attributed to the nego-
tating team and the evidence of
a vigorous membership standing
behind them.
A special lump-sum payment
for retroactive pay dating back
to January 1 will be arranged
shortly, Flaumenbaum sald.
273 Attend Fulton Co.
Chapter’s Dinner-Dance
JOHNSTOWN — The Fulton
County chapter of the Civil Ser-
vice Employees Assn. held its an-
nual dinner-dance recently, at
the Cirele Inn in Mayfield.
Tt was attended by 273 mem-
bers and their guests. Music was
provided by the Johnny Cole
Trio,
‘The chapter was honored by
the attendance of Glenn Harris,
State Assemblyman, and Richard
Tarmey, CSEA third vice-prest-
dent who enlightened the group
‘on the proposed pension plan and
its effect on both old and new
employees.
Also present were Aaron Wag-
ner, CSEA field representative
and master of ceremonies, and
Carrol Walsh, Surrogate Judge,
Fulton County.
Special Group Life Insurance Available
To Local Government Employees In June
ALBANY — Enrollment In # special low-cost
group life insurance plan, which does not require
medical examination in most cases, {s available to
jocal government employees who are members of
the Civil Service Employees Assn. during the month
of June 1973 only.
Applications should be sent to the Insurance
Department, CSEA Headquarters, 33 Elk &.,
Albany 12207 on or before June 30, 1973,
dental death.
guaranteed until Nov. 1,
charge, which provides that premiums are waived
if a member becomes permanently disabled before
age 60, and double indemnity in the case of acci-
1978, without additional
‘The cost of the insurance ts 10 cents biweekly
plan,
per $1,000 worth of coverage for members 29 years
old or younger. Older members may obtain this
insurance at lower than normal rates.
Members can elect to pay their insurance prem-
tums through the automatic payroll deduction
Literature explaining the group life insurance
Latest State And
Lise Ext. eFB. 14,” 1973
(Continued from Last Week)
410 a S Unodilia
1
79
79.5
795
79.4
‘94
194
794
793
79.3
3
a
ze
79.
79:
79:
79.
79.
79.
428 Alschuler M Valarie
429 Omden G Syracuse
430 Braham L Schenectady
431 Audino M Albany
432 Smay M Pomona
433 Loucks A Schenectady
434 Hill M Albany
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 p.m.
‘Those requestiyg applications
by mail must include a stamped,
H-addressed envelope, to be
recelved by the Department at
least 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-
tion on titles, call 566-8700.
Several City agencies do their
own recruiting and hiring, They
include: Board of Education
(teachers only), 65 Court St.
Brooklyn 11201, phone: 596-
8060; N¥C Transit Authority,
370 Jay St, Brooklyn 11201
phone: 852-5000.
The Board of Higher Educa-
tion advises teaching staff ap-
plicants to contact the individ-
ual schools; non-faculty jobs are
filled through the Personnel De-
partment directly.
STATE — Regional offices of
the Department of Civil Serv-
jee are located at; 1350 Ave. of
Americas, New York 10019;
(phone: 765-9790 or 765-9791);
State Office Campus, Albany,
12226; Suite 750, 1 W. Genessee
St, Buffalo 14202. Applicants
may obtain announcements
either in person or by sending
a stamped, self-addressed envel-
ope with their request.
Various State Employment
Service offices can provide ap-
plications In person, but not by
mail,
Judicial Conference jobs are
filled at 270 Broadway, New
York, 10007, phone: 488-4141.
Port Authority jobseekers should
contact their offices at 111
Eighth Ave, New York, phone:
620-7000,
FEDERAL—The U.S. Civil
Service Commission, New York
Region, runs ® 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 Uving upstate
(North of Dutchess County)
should contact the Syracuse Area
Office, 301 Erle Blvd. West,
Syracuse 19202, Toll-free calls
may be made to (800) 622-7407,
Federal titles have no deadline
Unless otherwise indicated
laeport
469 Schlabig J N Tonawanda
470 Hall W Chatenugay
471 Bell D Albany
472 Franco P Buffalo
473 Rutkowski A Albany
474 DiGrace § Buffalo
475 Andrews V Leicester
476 Nutle J Haverscraw
477 Forant © Cohoes
478 Mabin § Voorheesvil
479 Haha K Albany
480 Harter L Albany
481 Tarantetta G Recsof
482 Gale $ Sloan
483 Davis D Lede Falls
484 Barnard $ Rocheser
485 George A Uric
486 Guyan E Oswego
487 Samenscheid L Setauket
496 Davis G Spring Val
497 Bennett D Syracuse
498 Levine F Bhiyn
499 Lapointe J Schenectady
$00 Klicker M Cheektowaga
501 Exan D Loudonville
502 Murtagh J Endicott
$03 Brown 1 Albany
504 Manin M Babylon
$05 Young A Albany
506 Dunbar E Cortland
507 White M Hoosick fis
508 Zubal P Hodley
309 Srawiord § Albany
510 Lever M Kast Islip
S11 Schneible K Guilkerland
312 Broak DM Pe Jefferson
313 Chaplia N Whitesboro
316 Zimbardl M Precysbers
S17 Suefer C
S18 McLeur M Tupper Lake
519 Gamble J Bx
520 Mall D Rochester
521 Hodgetts C Syracuse
522 Thomas P Fe Johasa
523 O'Leary K Amoria
524 Defeo D Middletown
525 ‘Thomas V Bx
526 Beay Ro Newark
52? Thompson C Bkiyn
52H Barlow J Howes Cave
329 Chandler E Albany
530 Jermain M Cohoes
$31 Weedmark D Albany
532 Zell M_ Fredonia
533 Farrell B Tonawanda
534 Agan M Albany
533 Romdalvik A Lk Ronkonkme
$36 Cuccaro EE Northport
337 Verlotte V Scotia
538 Rafeel C Seatea Is
539 Pret C Albany
$ Coma
540 Smith
541 Bennen P Liverpool
342 Geine Farmingdale
$43 Kwiatkowski M Solvay
S44 Seiara E Cul Islip
545 Theilemann K Schuyleevil
Poduebka 1
S47 McGarry M Albany
348 Yanarella B Albany
549 Sacco E Endwell
555 Febling A Woodhaven
$56 Weasack © Troy
$57 Smith L Bedford Hills
al
$70 Kucamarski M Buffalo
571 Wehrle B Usicw
$72 Loveles E Lyons
$73 Rache Ro Syracuse
S74 Moole $ Amsterdam
975 L Albany
576 Wimbush M_ Albany
577 Rue J Albany
78 Wilson D Bklya
579 Seiler L Usicw
5.
5.
SUN
County Eligible | Lists
Griggs M Albany
608 Delvecchio D Athens
609 Bank N Schenectady
610 Marrone J Hudson
611 Dickman $ Bkiyn
612 Johmion B Wingdule
613 Harmon N Homer
614 Lamiry M Troy
G15, Gibbon C_ Bklys
616 Galle M Troy
17 Reith $ Albany
G18 Huninik C Syracuse
619 Tafes B Waterford
619A Escobar € Bx
620 Campbell B_ Johasoovitte
621 Moretti J Lockawana
$36 Walh 1 Johason Cy
67 Mow V Albany
638 Buros J Nassau
639 Campbell C Schenectady
640 Brown V_ Cincinnsrus
641 Hoblock E Albany
642 Pine § Little Nock
616 Funk $ Tivol
O47 Brady B Dannemora
AB Miga A Doakick
649 Curthoys D Keamore
630 Parker M Albany
651 Gabe A Albany
652 Laneon C Albany
635 Ernenwein D Holland Pent
634 Doney $ Clayton
633 Villa. S Schuylervil
656 Merkle E Attica
637 Loo H_ Staten
ose Fry J Wingdale
9 G_Oncon
$00 ee C Stuyvsot Fie
661 Carroll D Hornell
662 Graq BK Bkiyo
663 Maxterton C Mechanicrid
664 Washington K Millbrook
663 Oles E Utica
666 Ironmoceasin 1. Elmhurve
607 Taft VS
664 Dangelo } Schenectady
669 Smith K Clayville
670 Coll J Kings Pk
671 McClendon MLE Gicy
672 Senick P Wes Seneca
673 Kam V Pc Jffrin Se
674 Hall L_ Rochester
G75 Schultz P Voorheesvil
676 Simonton C Dover Plains
ben
679 Rowe) Maryland
680 Woidyla C Rome
6B Conine $ Plartaburgh
682 Tierney K Albany
683 Bepler J. Albany
OM4 Snyder L Syracuse
Tae
445 Seoley F Elmira m4
346 Frias’ R_ Coxsackie 724
347 Burns T Ownsco 23
He eters, Cantse 323
9 ibion
BN re Rema oo Eh JR) 339 Bowes § mira
303 Crisafulli G Loudonville mi Hh Deke oe
704 Wuerdeman T Troy 70.0 Fishive ) Artica
70$ Philbrook D Albany 70.0 Secnur G Auburn
CORRECTION SERGEANT (MALE) ed eae
eats sence Recor R West Chary
Tee Held Ove. 14, $972 Blakeman W Aubuto
Lise Em, March 15, 1973 Somacr 3} Saces
(Continued From Last Week) C Swan Lake
286 King G Catyville a! Pitkin J Schroon Lake
od Kelly E Hopewell Jct ¥ R Falls
88 Fition G Rouses Pr
292 Dragoon Ko Wew Chary 737 Rebidenu_$ Cadyville
293 Peters R Swan Lake 73.7 368 Cooper G Cayu
294 Rafferty J Batavin 73.7 369 Wallack A Spring Glee
295 Washington L Bkiyo 73.6 370 Pre W Parksville
Neagle A Auburn 736 471 Dobbs D Artica
297 Walsh R_Varysbits 736 372 Cook D Middletown
lurley Alden 36
299 Boulerice W Champlain 86 (To Be Continued)
300 Doolittle J Pine Bush 73.6
301 Malone J Fishkill 736
302 Mend L Giens Falls 73.6 MEET YOUR CSEA FRIENDS
303 Hynes J, Conmchie 7S
lamel C Saranac +5
305 Heymoar L Morrisonvt a3 Ambassador
306 Hulshof Ro Alexander ne)
307 None ” . 27 ELK ST. — ALBANY
308 Mercoy, J Poughquag 734 LUNCHES - DINNERS - PARTIES
4309 Giammichete J Elmira TA
M10 Wippel F Pine Bush 733
Sit Stoll Lb Bimire m3
312 Prenya Lo Peru 33
M13 Graves T Chester 3
M14 Romert W Onelie 733 R
315 Racerte D Cardyvitle 333
316 Murray B Varribu 33
7 Weaver N Pine City 32 “ |
318 Potchadlo J Horschends a2 | “Famous for German = |
319 Mitchell D Plartsburgh 732 |!) American Food & Fun"
320 Morrisey © Montgomery 32 Home of the '
me Aubure mB I
322 Mille $-sfopewell Jet 73 |) German Alps Festival
fenahan D Auburn 1
326 Serleder W. Pleasantvit 231 | AUG 17 to AUG 26
$25 Rennison J Grahamsville 73.1 |
326 Fitsgeraid T Glens Falls 73.0 DELUXE RESORT HOTEL i
327 Wilhelm W Napanoch 73.0 [| 110 ACRES of RECREATION —
jone
329 Over B Fp 729 |) overlooking our own lake
esong via 2.9 —
331 Fields P Pavilion no pg te ether ya
332 Padlitla L Accord 728 professional enter-
333 Healy E ae 72,7
334 Borko 72.7 |
es eiong ; $ ne i
incoln 2.6
337 Jordon C Hudson Falls 26 i hick heal
338 Bickford J Hudson Falis 726 COLORFUL BROCHURE
339 Marks Ro Horebeads 726 WITH RATES & SAMPLE MENU
540 Lemora B Plausbargh 72.6 sf
341 Ruschak R Aubura 726 Dial 518-622-3261 i)
ys en J “noe 2.5 Bil & Johanna Baver—Ho:
43 Becen ns
344 Wa c Pituburgh 725 Purling 8, NY. ap 12470
ALBANY
FR loge nes a5) RATE
A PINE HOTEL IN
A NETWORK TRADITION
SINGLE 00
STATE on 1 #
~
=
TER
ot Op
FOR RESERVATIONS — CALL
230 WESTERN AVENUE
ALBANY = 489-4423
Opposite State Campuses
SV ORTE
HOTEL
Welling ton
DRIVE-IN pe ak
GOVERNORS?
MOTOR INN ;
; =e
RESTAURANT — COCKTAIL convenience, tool
5 LOUNGE OPEN DAILY FOR % pis andes Cocktail lounge.
nee aaa Ha 136 STATE ermagr
OPPOSITE STATE CAPITOL
SEATS UP TO 175 DINERS
‘AND BUFFETS SERVED. Sen eer Orbe for na
FINEST FOOD ALWAYS.
EFFICIE! INCY INCY APTS.
DANCING TO A FINE TRIO
FRIDAY — SATURDAY NITES
9:20-1:30
FOR RESERVATIONS
CALL 456-3131
4 Miles West of ALBANY Rt. 20
Box 387, Guilderland, N.Y.
SEAeee eee eee eee
SPECIAL WEEKLY RATES
FOR EXTENDED STAYS
ALBANY
BRANCH OFFICE
FOR INFORMATION regarding adver
teement. pBacredh Ce er calh:
eeLLew
303 30, ay “taining BLYD.
621 RIVER STREET, TROY
SPRING SPORT COAT & TROUSER SALE NOW
OPEN TUES, THURS. & PRL NITES UNTIL 9 » CLOSED MONDAYS
ALBANY Phone IV 2-5474
TROY'S FAMOUS ARCO
FACTORY STORE CIVIL SERIVE BOOKS
- and all tests
PLAZA BOOK SHOP
Men's & Young M
Fine Clothes 380 Broadway
Albany, N.Y.
Mail & Phone Orders Filled
MAYFLOWER-ROYAL COURT APARTMENTS.
Furnished, Unfurnished, and Rooms.
aes Phone ME 41984 (Albany).
Tel. AS 2-2022
st
f261 ‘Ss aunt i “YAGVaT ADIAYAS TAD
16
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, June 5, T973
‘City
tF
New York
KIAMESHA LAKE — “The
Kinzel Report is dead. CSEA
killed Kinzel. This is a real
accomplishment for CSEA,”
Civil Service Employees Assn.
president Theodore C. Wenz told
‘fan estimated 300 participants at
annual workshop sponsored by
New York City chapter.
The Kinzel Report, which
would have drastically reduced
pension benefits for all public
employees, had stirred up a hor-
net's nest of protest from union
leaders throughout the state
when publicized earlier this year
Consequently, the plan was drop-
ped in favor of modified pension
reform as agreed to by CSEA's
negotiating team. As a result, all
pension benefits presently en-
Joyed by state employees will
remain in full effect for current
employees.
During discuswion of the sub-
ject at the workshop, delegates
from local governmental chap-
ters angrily denounced the Legis-
lature for changing contract pro-
visions relating to their pension
benefits. Many of the county
delegates demanded that steps be
taken to rectify the situation.
In other action, CSEA first
vice-president Thomas McDon-
ough installed newly elected
chapter officers, calling on them
to continue their dedicated ser-
vice on behalf of the member-
ship.
Chapter president Solomon
Bendet singled out CSEA second
vice-president A, Victor Costa as
a “politician who kept his
promise” as chairman of the
committee to restructure CSEA
‘The committee was honored at
a testimonial banquet.
|
Directors personnel committee chairman Irving Flaumenbaum, back to
camera, center, leads discussion during joint meeting with restructuring
committee to clarify specifications of several new positions mandated by
delegates. Clockwise from Flaumenbaum are James Weich, Ronald Fried-
man, Ellis Adams, Harold DeGrafj, John Adamski (partially hidden), A
Victor Costa, S. Samuel Borelly, Nicholas Puzztferri, Charles Ecker, Jack
Wetsz, George Koch, Salvatore Mogavero, Howard Cropsey, Ernest Wagner,
Harold Ryan, Anna Bessette, Julia Duffy and Vito Dandreano.
Manhattan State Hospital chapter treasurer Thelma Ramsey, right, rises to speak during
seminar, while chapter first vice-president Cleo Ransom, center, and chapter second vice-
president Eugenia Chester confer with Leader executive editor Marvin Bazley.
(Leader phowos by Ted Kaplan)
C hapter
Members of the committee to restructure CSEA were hon-
ored with a testimonial dinner and presented individual
plaques by New York City chapter. From left are S. Samuel
Borelly; Howard Cropsey; Jack Weisz; committee chairman
A. Victor Costa (front); Charles Ecker (rear); CSEA presi-
CSEA first vice-president Thomas McDonough, right, administers oath of office to NYC
chapter leaders, from left, financial secretary Norman Blattberg, treasurer Seymour Sha-
piro, third vice-president Arthur Lakritz, second vice-president
vice-president Martha Owens, president Solomon
Miriam Levy. Missing from picture is recording secretary Minna Weckstein.
Workshop
*
by
dent Theodore C. Wenzl, who appointed the committee;
NYC chapter president Solomon Bendet, whose chapter
initiated the move toward restructuring; John Adamskt;
Salvatore Mogavero; George Koch; Ronald Friedman; Ernest
Wagner, and Nicholas Puzziferri
Retiring NYC chapter office
manager Frieda Heidman
receives hug from Martha
Owens after Ms. Owens had
presented her a chapter gift
Benjamin Lipkin, first
Bendet and corresponding secretary
Representatives from various insurance and health companies serving CSEA
comprised panel to explain benefits and answer questions of services. From
left are Ronald Lacey, Ter Bush & Powell; Frank Forbes, Travelers Insur-
ance; James McDonald, MONY; R. S. Muller, Metropolitan Life; T. Mc-
Cracken, New York State Department of Civil Service; Thomas McDonough,
CSEA first vice-president; Seymour Shapiro, moderator; Joseph Ferlauto,
State Retirement Systems; Marvin Freeman, Medi-Screen; Thomas Garvey,
HIP; James Cuddy, Blue Cross/Blue Shield, and L. Pizer, GHI.
Victor Pesci, right, NYC chapter member and Banking de-
partmental representative to CSEA Board of Directors, wel-
comes some of the out-of-town participants jn workshop
from left, Audit and Control chapter president and Board
member Harold Ryan, A&C chapter representative Grace
Fitsmaurice and Education chapter representative Mary
Hart