Civil Service Leader, 1969 August 5

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America’s Largest Weekly for Public loyees

Vol. XXX, No, 15 Tuesday, August 5, 1969 rice Ten Cents

CSEAWINS SWEEPING
VICTORY IN ELECTION

Wenz! Hails Triumph
That Crushed AFSCME

ALBANY—Theodore C, Wenzl, president of the Civil Serv-
ice Employees Assn., today promised “unceasing battle to
win unprecedented benefits for State employees” after CSEA
emerged victorious in elections to determine the bargaining
agent for State workers.

Friday’s victory in the Opera- Bendet was obviously referring
tional Services Unit climaxed a|to the strike against Mental Hy-
four-unit sweep for CSEA in-/|giene Dept. institutions by Coun-
volving 96 percent of State em-|cil 50, AFSCME, which the CSEA
ployees eligible to be represented |insisted was a failure but to which
in collective negotiations. CSEA/the Governor capitulated and
lost the smallest group of em-|called off negotiations with the
|ployees, the 6,000-member Security| Employees Association for over
Service Unit—tast Monday, but) four months.

s went on to win the other four, “Our fight,” said Wenzl, “was

AWAITING VICTORY —rea_ w. employee representation elections. More than 50/ including the hotly-contested In- | not against a small union but in-

5 enal, CSEA members and numerous staff joined other | stitutional Services group, by|stead was a gallant struggle

(SEA President, left, and John Mrocskowski, pres- interested parties at an Albany armory for the| overwhelming pluralitic, agaliatt an internmtiseainarnlines
ident of Mt. McGregor chapter, study the voting five-day tabulation which showed CSEA victorious

= Solomon Bendet, chairman of | of AFL-CIO. We can claim, with-
trend during last week's ballot count in the State in four out of five units. the CSEA salary committee, which | out reservation, that this was «

PF = had its first meeting last week,|far-reaching victory, national in
declared: “The CSEA now of-|scope. The other independent
2 KY ficially represents the vast ma-|unions across the country were

Jority of State employees, just looking closely at this election,

a 2 as it did before these unneces-|and now will look closely at CSEA,

or Statewi e ice icer Vote sary elections, and our broken- the organization which fashioned

down opposition represents even this significant victory against a

This week The Leader publishes, in alphabetical order, less People than the few mem-jcombination of seemingly power-
the unedited biographies of candidates for Statewide of- A Ui 8-25 bers they had before the election. /ful forces."
fice in the Civil Service Employees Assn. In future editions, Ig. Mr. Rockefeller had better re- Vex; Fopull

member this when he gets the “State employees ignored
cand) vi will ts *s ignored the
ndidates for departmental representative posts will be ALBANY —Ballots for |Wide range of Benefits my com-|money and manpower and idle
{ntroduced.
Sete Sa the election of Statewide |™ittee 1s preparing for our nego-| promises of our competitors for
JOHN HENNESSEY THEODORE C. WENZL officers and department- | ‘ting team and not cave in (Continued on Page 8)
Candidate for President Candidate for President al representatives of the | #2" kenitad threats from a Se es east ee

has-been outfi

Civil Service Employees

Assn, will be mailed to all 4
members of the CSEA on | Leaves August 10 Lon?
August 8, The Leader has ——
been informed. Last Call On

51 Y e
ednallots must be return- | Bahama Vacations Repea t This!
let aha essional bal- Only seven seats are available =
i yess de maaan on the Aug. 10 one-week gala| .

ast a5. vacation trip to the Grand Ba- P Fi

omibers who have not /hamas, available only to Civil rocaccino orces
received their ballots by Service Employees Assn. members Di id | B t
August 13 should contact |and their immediate families | IV eB 8 ween
their chapter officer, The trip leaves Aug. 10 from
CSEA headquarters, 3 | Butta and prices inciuce couna' DOVES And Hawks
Elk St., Albany or the |trip jet transportation directly
New York City office of |ft0m Buffalo, deluxe breakfast and sd Fay campaign headquar-
CSEA at 11 Park Place, Le age Baek rooms, ete. Total, 4 ters of Comptroller
New York City immedi_ |?*¢ $220. |Mario A. Procaccino is a

ately thereafter. For remaining space, write im-| house divided between hawks

x mediately to either Mrs. Mary and doves; between those who
‘The past two years under.the|, Election results will be Gormley, 1883 Seneca Ave. Buf. want to retaliate against Demo-

i Taylor Law have been the most] announced at the CSEA | fato, call (716) 342-4206 o Mrs leratic defectors to the Lindsay
* years. He was the president| trying times ever faced by the| annual meeting in New Grace Hillery, 6 Navaho Pkwy.,| standard and those who prefer te
(Continued on Page 3) (Continued om Page 3) York City on September $, |Butfalo, telephone (716) 823-3367. (Continued on Page 15)

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, August 5, 1969

Executive Chapter i
Sets Annual Picnic

ALBANY—The Executive chap- i
ter of the Civil Service Employees
Assn. wil hold its annual pienic | £
at McKnown's Grove here on|#
Thursday, Aug 7 from 1 p.m. to
8 pm. x

Acting chapter president Leon |,
Kaplan and the picnic organizers
—social chairman Leo Dugan
from the Office for Local Gov-
ernment; Eileen Tanner of the
Division of Military and Naval
Affairs; and Joyce Bobowski of
the Civil Defense Commission—
have planned for swimming,
dancing and games and refresh-
ments.

Tickets may be obtained from
Executive chapter representatives.
Non-members are invited,

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A Kick In The Teeth

THIS COLUMN was among the first to discuss the om-
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and Great Britain, and how it might work in the United

system is designed to right wrongs
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THERE ARE variations of the
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Newspapers, radio and TV sta-
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Some call it ‘Mr. Fixit”, another
calls it ‘‘Action Line.” Primarily,
these efforts are supposed to be
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WHILE MOST of the efforts by
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AND TO OPEN its campaign of
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(Continued on Page 7)

SERVICE SEADER

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John Hennessey
(Continued from Page 1)

of the Buffalo chapter for four
years and served as an officer of
the Western Conference for four
years. He has been chairman of
several committees and very active
on all committees in the chapter,
Conference and State levels. He
has worked vigorously to obtain
penefits designed to secure equal
treatment for all Civil Service
Employees.

John, like many other men his
age, has seen military service.
He served approximately three
years In the U.S. Army, most of
which was in the European
‘yheatre. He made the Normandy
Invansion on D-Day.

Upon his return from service, he
proceeded to get an education by
attending the University of Buf-
falo and worked for the New York
state Department of Public Works
where he held the title of assistant
civil engineer, He has just been
appointed to the position of Canal
Section Superintendent at Lock-
port

It should be mentioned that
Jon's earlier career included the
job of theatre manager of the
Loew Chain, He ts the past prési-
dent of the Buffalo chapter of the
INew York State Association of
Highway Engineers and served as
the assistant treasurer for the
State Board of Directors for this
association. He has served as a
member of the board of directors
for the Western New York Blue
Shield,

Hennessey was the treasurer of
js local Rifle and Pistol Club, in-
structor of Hunter Safety, past of-
iticer of the American Legion, and
very active in recent charitable
fund drives.

John pledges to be a full-time
president working out of Albany
headquarters. He recognizes the

John sees the presidency of the
‘SHA in these changing times as
challenge. He plans to take a
resh new look at the whole CSEA
structure,

oe

.
Theodore Wenzl
(Continaed from Page 1)

vil Service Employees Assn, The
ctiod has seen CSEA buffeted
y¥ 4 constant succession of crises,
lacing unprecedented demands
n the organization's resources,
daptability and, certainly, its
leadership.

The essence of CSEA’s struggle

eLisi Declines
e-Nomination To
card of Directors

Jack M, Deliis!, Executive De-
ariment representative to the
FPourd of Directors of the Civil
ervice Employees Assn, has de-
lined nomination to run for an-
ther term, citing his forthcoming

i He will, however, remain active
EE CSEA affairs, he pointed out,

‘ing that he feels that a mem-
iB’ of the Board of Directors
\ild be a full-time working em-
vee, He had served on the
ard since 1955. In addition, he
N served for many years on the

BA resolutions committee.

Th hls letter of delination, De-

was in fighting to retain its posi-
tion as traditional representative
of public employees in New York
State. Having won the official
right to continue In this role for
State employees by the Governor's
recognition in November, 1967,
CSEA suddenly found itself on
the defensive to retain the right.
This fight has gone on through
two negotiating seasons, during
which time CSEA has neverthe-
less won for State workers more
than $1,200 in salary improve-
ments and guaranteed half-pay
retirement after 25 years of sery-
ice.

In its County Division, CSEA
also found its work greatly mul-
tiplied. Formal bargaining units
began taking shape in hundreds of
jurisdictions throughout the State
—counties, cities, towns, villages
and school districts. Not only did
CSEA’s local officers and field
staff have to cope with the com-
plex nature and amount of the
new work, they also had to block
the competitive inroads of rival
unions, making their first big
move in the municipalities under
the Taylor Law.

Sparked by its competent lead-
ership, CSEA has met the chal-
lenges of the past two years as
they have occurred, and has
emerged as a thriving, more
powerful organization. It has
changed its constitution to provide
greater flexibility. The traditional
no-strike clause is no longer there
—letting the world know that
CSEA can be as militant as the
situation demands. Its County
Division now operates with greater
freedom and autonomy. Its staff
of specialists has been greatly ex-
panded and given more direction.

The results have been as dra-
matic as the changes. In addition
to negotiating successfully for
State workers, CSEA has won rep-
resentation elections in a large
number of municipalities. It has
negotiated more than 300 con-
tracts for local government em-
ployees in one year alone. It won
the right to represent more than
2,000 employees in a highly pub-
licized election on the State Thru-
way and just recently concluded
a contract which included a land-
mark improvement. Earlier this
year, CSEA established its new
image of militancy by winning its
point with the State by threaten-
ing a Statewide job action of
State workers.

The success of CSEA over the

past two years is the official rec-
ord of the first administration of
President Theodore C. Wenzl. On
the basis of this record, Ted seeks
re-election this year.
RAYMOND G. CASTLE
Candidate for First Vice-President
Ray Castle is the present first
vice-president of the Association
and is a candidate for re-election.
He offers a record of leadership
and accomplishment to his fellow
workers in Civil Service. He joined
the CSEA on the same day he
became regional manager with the
Commerce Department and has

served on many chapter, confer-
ence and State committees. He
served four years as president of
Syracuse. chapter; two years as
president of Central New York
Conference; chaired the Special
Committee on the need for a New
York City Association Office; five
years as member of State Educa-
tion Committee (chairman two
years); as member of the Special
Committee to Study Nomination
and Election Procedures and
chairman of the Special Commit-
tee to Define Duties of Association
Committees. He was fourth vice-
president for two years; completed
two terms as second vice-president
and is currently first vice-presi-
dent. During this time, he was on
the Board of Directors’ committee
and he was State consultant to
the Constitution and By-Laws and
the Public Relations committees.
His current assignment as first
vice-presiden* 1s Co-ordinator of
Officer and Conference Affairs.
Active in Central New York
business and civic affairs, he has
served ten years as director of the
Syracuse Advertising and Sales

First In State

25-Year Retirement
Plan Won For Freeport

Employees By CSEA

(From Leader Correspondent)

MINEOLA—Scoring a key breakthrough, the Nassau
chapter of the Civil Service Employees Assn. last week gained
a 25-year retirement program in the Village of Freeport.

It was understood to be the first village to liberalize its
pension plan in conformance with the 1/50th retirement
plan adopted by the State this year. Nassau chapter presi-
dent Irving Flaumenbaum, who personally aided the talks,
saluted the conduct of unit president Willie Williams and
Mayor Robert Sweeney and his village board in reaching the

agreement.

The 25-year retirement at half pay is a key objective
of CSEA units in governmental subdivisions. “Freeport got

the ball rolling,” Plaumenbaum declared,

credit to them.”

“and it is\a

Club; president of the Syracuse
Council of Service Clubs and
founder of Syracuse Toastmasters
Club; International Director and
District Governor of all Toastmas-
ters Clubs in New York State for
Toastmasters International which
trains men interested in develop-
ing leadership in community af-
fairs; leader in Red Cross activ-
ities and State Division Chairman
in Community Chest for many
years. He was honored by a cita-
tion from the U.S. Treasury De-
partment for distinguished service
to the U.S. Savings Bonds Division
of Central New York.

Ray Castle has constantly
worked to establish civil service
employment as a dignified, desir-
able and useful career profession.
He has increasingly emphasized
integration of Conference and
chapter work into the Associa-
tion’s overall program and has
worked to achieve confidence and
good will between government
workers, officials and the general
public. Over the years, he has aid-
ed in starting the Central New
York Conference and nine upstate
County chapters.

Through his years of service, he
has become thoroughly familiar
with the problems and desires of
employees on the State and
County level and the adminis-
tration of the Association. At the
same time, he has carried on a
vigorous and dedicated campaign
for adequate and equal salaries;
effective grievance procedures;
better working conditions and a
program of improvement in ten-
ure, vested-rights and retirement
liberalization.

His record of hard work and
achievement {s a solid guarantee
of future service for the improved
well being and security of civil
service employees through increas-
ed employee benefits and better
working conditions. It is his earn-
est hope that he will continue
to merit your support.

IRVING FLAUMENBAUM
Candidate for First Vice-President

Irving Flaumenbaum Is a grad-
uate of Columbia University Col-
lege of Pharmacy and is employed
by the Nassau County Department
of Social Services.

He is currently president of the
17,000 member Nassau chapter,
CSEA and second vice-president
of the State CSEA. Has been
active member of CSEA for almost
20 years. Irving Flaumenbaum ha:
always supported State programs
in addition to County programs
for CSEA. For four years he was
chairman of the State Member-
ship Committee.

Flaumenbaum's proudest |
achievement is the growth of Nas-
sau chapter from less than 1,000
members to its present enrollment.

CSERA Seminar
At Concord Hotel

Applications are now being ac-
cepted for a seminar on public
employee promotions, retirement
plans and health insurance to be
held Oct 12 to 14 at the Concord
Hotel, Kiamesha Lake.

‘The seminar {s being sponsored
by the Civil Service Education
and Recreation Assn. for its mem-
bership. Rates are $44, including
rooms and all meals, including
breakfast on day of departure.

For reservations enclose $10 de-
posit per person and write to
CSERA conyention desk, Concord

Hotel, Kiamesha Lake, N.¥,

Candidates For CSEA Statewide Office

He has held the position of
chairman of Mental Health Fund
Drive of Nassau County; chairman
of the Boy Scout Fund Drive in
Baldwin; vice-chairman of the
Nassau County Cancer Drive;
vice-chairman Waldemar Cancer
Research Fund; member of the
Board of Central Island Mental
Health Center; member of the
Alumni Association of the Col-
umbia College of Pharmacy; board
member of the New York Mets
Booster Club; a member of the
Elks; and is actively involved in
many other charitable and civic
activities. He is currently chair-
man of the United Fund Drive
for Nassau and Suffolk Counties.
As present he is chairman of
the Committee to Study Union
Activities of CSEA; member of the
State Board of Directors, Board of
Directors Committee and Paid
Presidents Committee.
THOMAS McDONOUGH
Candidate for First Vice-President
Tom McDonough is a candidate
for the office of first vice-presi-
dent. A senior clerk, he has been
employed by the Department of
Motor Vehicles for the past 13
years. He is president of the Motor

Vehicle chapter of the CSEA, at
present in his sixth year in office.
Tom is extremely active in all
CSEA matters and is the first
(Continued on Page 9)

Pension Committee
To Meet August 6

ALBANY — There will be a
meeting of the Civil Service Em-
Ployees Assn,'s pension committee
on August 6, at 12:30 p.m. In the
DeWitt Clinton Hotel here

The purpose of this meeting is
to review resolutions referred to
the attention of the committee by
the resoltuions committee and to
formulate a committee report to
the delegates at the September
Annual Meeting. Robert Callahan
is chairman of the committee.

696 “s wndny ‘Sepsony YaqVAT AQIAWAS TIAIO
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, August 5, 1969

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RECREATION DIRECTOR

1 Charles B Stark, Nathalia H
Handler, Judith L Colligan, Eliza~
beth Mayers, Helen G Borstein,
Alma R Schieren, Ann F Szabo,
William P Fehder, Claire D Tan-
kel, Booker T Hutchinson, Bar-
bara E Schwartz, Richard W Cut-
ler, Clare P Glazer, Bernard Car-
neol, Bernard H Silverstein, Mar-
tin L Sarner, Linda C Neshamkin,
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Eloise L Hirsch, Clare P Kaplan,
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Vermandois, Gail R Levine, Louise
Malsin Jr, John C Weckesser,
Harold Taubman, Angelo Melito,
Philip Melito, Lauree McMahon,
Lester A Bocchicchio, Gail M
Kong, Martin Silver, Nicholas T
Long, Martin L Seidner, Dorothy
K Chin, Susan M Eddy, Gwen-
dolyn Bergen, Roby A Story, Sus-
an Shapiro, Joyce A Baraban,
Mare A Berger, George Vikos,
Kathleen M Barry, Thomas P Me-
dich, Nicholas W Mikijanic, Joan
C Daniels, John Bensen, Ingrid
M Sacknowitz, Andrew T Reid,
Trudy M Cader, Charlene V Perry,
Norman Rothleder, James E Fitz-
patrick, Diane S Wolkstein, Ruth
Greenfield, Shulamith Chernick.

84 Richard C Harris, Sharon
M Weinstein, Solomon Shapiro,
Howard L Roslow, Joseph P O’-
Hara, Jane P Cleaver, Judith A
Nowak, Robert J Pultorak, James
L Hayes, Joyce L Nozkowski,
Sheila J Williams, Rose H Cas-
tillo, Lucia M Norton, Alan I Ar-
onson, Arthur J Bernfeld, Maurice
M Abrahams, Owen A Thompson
Rosemarie Gardella, dna H Zamft,
Daniel Miller, John L Banks, Lin-
da P Dockeray, Alan Nisselson,
Ronald T Johnson, Harry J Han-
ley, Joann K Sarner, Nicholas J
Marion, James A Burruss, Vincent
N Steers, Jeremiah P Heneghan,
James P Carosello, Rebecca Han-
num, Ernest P Cruz, Sheila Hersh-
kowitz, Anthony R Jannelli, An-
thony F Martin, Sharon S Gilbert,
John Wiest Jr, Steven R Elk, An-
thony E Mazza, Howard Parker,
Pamela H Kieffer.

126 Susan M. Gordon, James
Talty, Anne Waldman, Hannelore
Hahn, Beverly J Savage, Gary R
‘Tenenbaum, Howard M Pressman,
Gregory R Bristo, August E Reiss-
man, Karin S Hess, Virginia T
Napolitano, Francine A Brodie,
Joyce A Kee, Anne T Conniff, Ed-
ward J Mallen, Wayne Johnson,
Jane B Hibbert, Andrew M Kar-
miol, Wilma J Hilliaro, Josephine
Daugalis.

PARKING ENFORCEMENT
AGENT

1 Frank J Campbell, Edgar M
Ellson, Frank J Newton, Issac
Dow, Charles F Michel, Gerald
V McDonald, Murray L Linker,
Phillip Zabinsky, George H Reiss,
Paul B Ettelson, Leroy N Ladson,
Michael J Gust, James Farrar,
Jerry Wexler, John H Keesey,
Michael H Schreiber, Neville G
Georges, John Tarrago, Gerald
Lefcourt, Ben Silver, Rose J Val-
enti, Peter Stern, Patrick Rodri-
guez, Robert E Brown, Daniel
Giannini, Robert N  Hutkin,
Richard J Marcinanis, Frank N
Hines, Emile W Francis, James P
Voorhees, Stanley W Kopacz, June
M Crowley, Anthony J Simonetti,
Herbert Klein, James B Cum-
mings Jr, Virginia L Broddie, Os-
borne Boykin, Joseph T Saypack,
Carson S Woods, Clyde R Jervis,
Mildred T Young.

42 Lamont Johnson, William E
Cordon, Carmine Lupo, Andrew
G MeNulty, Sylvia M Robinson,
Conway E Waldron, John R aCth-
erall, Dorothy J Murray, Gilbert
Williams, Beatrice N Leslie, Don-
ali S Tremblay, Jorge Torres,
Sarah S Moore, Diane E McCul-
lough, Eugene C Allen, Helen Le-
yanos, Robert Corter, Jonathan C
Vario, Stanley Goldstein, Albert L
Anderson Jr, Charles E Frye, Ed-
ward G Jenentt, George Sanmig-
uel, Anthony L Lento, Doris L
Cloud, Mae B Bynums, Glenda E
McDaniel, Geraldine Pompa, An-
thony R Donato, Hyman Cohen,
Winston L Davenport, Willie J
Wilson, Joseph M Traina Jr, Ron-
ald R Godby, Julio E Pacheco,
Adolph C Lange, Anna L Strong,
James G Skau, Edwina L God-
dard, William H Coard, Joyce P
Crews, Anna Clemons.

(Continued on Page 12)

Where to Apply
For Public Jobs

‘The following directions tcy
where to apply for public jot,
and how te reach destinations ty
New York City om the transi
system.

CITY

NEW ORK C1ITY—The appli.
cations Section of the New York

City Department of Personnel ty
located at 49 Thomas St. New
York, N.Y. 10013. It is threg
blocks north of City Hall, ong
block west of Broadway.

Applications: Filing Perlod —
Applications issued and received
Monday through Friday from §
am, te 5 p.m, except Thursday
oom 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., and
Seturday from 9 a.m. to 12 noon,

Application blanks are obtain.
able free either by the applicant
in person or by his representative
at the Application Section of the
Department of Personnel at 49
Thomas Street, New York, N.Y,
10013. Telephone 566-8720.

Mailed requests for application
blanks must include a stamped,
self-addressed business-size en.
velope and must be received by
the Personnel Department at least
five days before the closing date
tor the filing of applications.

Completed application forms
which are filed by mail must be
sent to the Personnel Department
and must be postmarked no later
than the last day of filing or as
stated ctherwise in the exam-
ination announcement.

The Applications Section of
the Personnel Department is near
the Chambers Street stop of the
main subway lines that go through
the area. These are the IRT 7th
Avenue Line and the IND 8th
Avenue Line. The IRT Lexington
Avenue Line stop to use is the
Brooklyn Bridge stop and the BMT
QT and RR local’s stop 1s City Hall
Both lines have exits to Duane
Street, a short walk from the Per-
sonnel Department.

STATE

STATE—Department of Civil
Service, 1350 Ave of the Americas,
N.¥., 10036, phone 765-3811; Gov.
Alfred E. Smith State Office Build.
ing and the State Office Campus,
Albany 12226; Suite 750, 1 West
Genessee St., Buffalo 14202; State
Office Bldg., Syracuse, 13202; 500
Midtown Tower, Rochester, 14604
(Wednesdays only).

After 5 p.m. telephone, (212)
765-3811, give»the job title in
which you are interested, plus
your name and address.

Candidates may obtain applica-
tions for State Jobs from local
offices of the New York State
Employment Service.

FEDERAL

FEDERAL — New York Region,
USS, Civil Service Commission, Fed-
eral Plaza at Duane and Lafayette
Sts, New York, N.Y. 10007. Take
the IRT Lexington Aye, Line to
Worth St, and walk two blocks
north, or any other train to Chanr
bers St. or City Hall stop.

Monday through Friday hours
are 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m., and offices
stay open Saturdays, 9 a.m, to !
p.m, The telephone is (212) 26+
0422.

Applicationy are also obtain-
able at main post officer except
the New York, N.¥., Post Office
Boards of examiners at the par!
ticular Installations offering thé
tests also may be applied to {of
further information and applica
tion forms. No return envelope#
are required with mailed request!

for application forma. 4

BUY U.S. BONDS

TO HELP YOU PASS

GET THE ARCO STUDY BOOK

HOOKS
Accountant Auditor
it

Mechanic

4.00
4.00
4.00
4.00
4.00
Sayer Purchasing Agent 4.00
Captaln Fire Dept. 6.90
Captain P.D, 4.00
City Planner tee

Civil Engineer _ —5.l
Civil Service Arith, & Vocabulary — 3.00
Civil Service Handbook 1.00
Clerk N.Y. Ci 4.00
‘euid 1.00
4.00
4.00
5.00

Dietitian
Electrician
Electrical Engineer
Engineering Aide
Federal Entrance Exam
Fingerprint Technician
Fireman, FD.
Fireman In All States
Foreman
General Test Pract. for 92 U.S. Jobs

Homestudy
How to qet
Hi

Investigator-Inspector
Janitor Custodian
Laboratory Aide
Lt. Fire Dept,
Lt, Police Dept.
Ubrarian

jurisdiction.

Under present law, the legis-
lator noted, benefits of the Fed-
eral Employees Compensation
Act extend to police officers in-
jured in the line of duty, if that
duty Involves enforcement of
Federal law. Present benefits are
reduced by amounts received from
local government.

Ottinger’s bill extends these
benefits to any policemen and
firemen killed or totally disabled
in the line of duty, whether or
not a specife federal criminal
law was violated.

“We are a nation of travelers,”
he noted, “and the criminal who
shoots a policeman or sets a fire
that injures a fireman in Yonk-
ers of Peekskill might have just
arrived from New York City or
the mid-west. On the other hand,
the would-be victim who Is pro-
tected by our local police and
firemen may just be passing
through Westchester or Putnam.”

The Congressman noted that
between 1962 and 1967, 559 police-
men in the United States died in
the line of duty, and between
1961 and 1967, 239 firemen died
in the line of duty.

Eighteen states and the Dis-
trict of Columbia provide no spe-

Machinists Helper
Maintenance Man
Maintainer Helper A & ©
Maintainer Helper Group B
Maintainer Helper Group D
Maintainer Helper Group E
Management & Administration Qulzer —

Mechanical Engineer 4on
Motor Vehicle License Examiner — 5.00
Motor Vehicle Operator 4.00
Notary Public 2.50
Nurse (Practleal & Public Health) 4.00

Parking Meter Attendant (Meter Maid) —_________3.00
Parole Officer

Coyne Heads Staff

ALBANY — Edward J. Coyne,
who joined the State Health De-
partment staff as a tabulating
machine operator in 1927, is the
new director of the department's
Office of Fiscal Management. He
succeeds John Coffey, who retired.

R. Kenneth Esolen of Castleton
has succeeded Coyne as assistant
director.

Patrolman (Police Dept. Trainee) —_.
Personnel Assistant
Pharmacists License Test

Playground Director — Recreation Leader
Policewomon
Postmaster
Post Office Clerk Carrler
Post Office Motor Vehicle Operator

Preliminary Practice for the H.S, Equivalency Diploma Test — 4.00
Principal Clerk-Steno _... ae
Parole Officer 4.00
Professional Career Tests W.YS. 4.00
Professional Trainee Admin, Aide 5.00
Public Health Sanitarian 5.00
Real Estate Manager 4.00
Sanitation Man hee
School Secretary 4.90
Sergeant P.D. 5.00
Senior Clerical Series — 5.00
Social Ca: forker 5.00
Staff Attendant & Sr. Attendant 4.00
Stationary Eng, & Fireman 4.00
Storekeeper Stockman 4.00

Contains Previous Questions and Answers and
Other Suitable Study Material for Coming Exams

ORDER DIRECT — MAIL COUPON -—

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(Special to The Leader)

Ottinger Measure Would Extend

Federal Pensions To Policemen,
Firemen, Killed Or Hurt On Job

WASHINGTON, D.C.—A Federal government pension will be paid to disabled police-
men and firemen or to survivors of those killed in the line of duty if a measure introduced
by a group of Congressmen, led by Richard L. Ottinger (D-Westchester and Putnam) passes.

The payment would be over and above any payments received from the employing

cific benefits for the survivors of
Policemen and firemen killed in
the line of duty.

Ottinger’s bill provides that a
widow would receive 45 percent
of her husband’s monthly wage
rate until she remarries. The wid-
ow with dependents would receive
40 percent and each child under

18 would get 15 percent, up to a
maximum of 75 percent of the
monthly salary.

In cases of disability without
dependents, the benefits would be
two-thirds of the monthly salary.
With dependents, benefits would
come to three-fourths of the
monthly salary.

prepare at

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OPENING DELEHANTY LECTURE
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The DELEHANTY INSTITUTE

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CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, August 5, 1969

Ciwil S °

LEADER

America’s Largest Weekly for Public Employees
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations

Publishea every Tuesday by
LEADER PUBLICATIONS, INC.

11 Worren Street, New York, N.Y. 10007
Bronx Office: 406 East 149th Street

Jerry Finkelstein, Publisher
Joe Deasy, Jr, City Editor

Ron Linden & Barry L. Coyne, Assistant Editors
N. H. Mager, Business Manager

Advertising Representatives:
ALBANY — Joseph T. Bellew — 308 So. Manning Blvd., IV 2-5474
KINGSTON, N.Y. — Charles Andrews — 239 Wall Street, FEderal 8-835@

1c per copy. Subscription Price $3.00 to members of the Civil
Service Employees Association, $5.00 to non-members,

TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1969

A Great Measure

ONGRESSMAN Richard Ottinger, realizing the inequi-
ties faced by survivors of municipal police and firemen

killed in the line-of- duty, has introduced legislation in Wash-
ington which would pay pensions to survivors from a Federal
fund to be administered by the Labor Department.

In addition, those men disabled in the line-of-duty
would also receive a similar pension.

The Westchester-Putnam lawmaker is to be congrat-
ulated for his actions in the cause of justice.

‘We urge the Congress to give serious consideration to
Rep. Ottinger’s bill. Justice demands its passage.

The Meaning Of Victory

ITH its overwhelming victory in the election among

State workers to chose their bargaining agent, the
Civil Service Employees Assn, destroyed two myths—that
dt was a company union formed to sell insurance and that
the American Federation of State County and Municipal
Employees was a force to be reckoned with in the State
labor picture.

The victory also vindicates the court suits brought by
the Employees Association against the Public Employment
Relations Board, which divided State workers into five bar-
gaining units. State workers voted for CSEA because of its
magnificent past performances in their behalf, perform-
ances which were possible because of the vast bargaining
power of over 100,000 members being together in a single
bargaining unit. The ballots disprove completely PERB’s
theroies on how employees should be represented and under-
line that Board's complete misunderstanding of how to con-
duct labor relations among public employees in the State.

CSEA now officially represents the vast majority of State
workers, just as it did before the elections. The American
Federation of State County and Municipal Employees rep-
resents about 6,000, less than the membership it claimed
before the election,

The Rockefeller Administration had better remember
this when its meets with the CSEA bargaining team in
the near future,

N.Y. 10455

Paul Kyer, Editor

Misleading Assertions

HEN the Rockland County Grand Jury two weeks ago

pronounced a “scattergun” indictment of officials,
staff and patients at the Department of Mental Hygiene’s
Rockland State Hospital, the Civil Service Employees Assn.
took up the cause and condemned the Grand Jury’s mis-
leading assertions,

Now, two separate committees of the State Legislature
have agreed with CSEA that while isolated instances of
drug abuse have occurred at the facility, the great major-
ity of staff were found to be dedicated employees free from
any guilt or wrongdoing. Further the hospital administra-
tion notifed and cooperated with the Orangetown Police
in the matter,

This is another occasion of responsible union leader-
ship working together with a State body to right an in-
justice heaped upon public employees. We urge the Rock-
Jand County Grand Jury to withdraw their broad charges
against the employees,

If the Grand Jury wants to find something wrong at
Rockland State, let them look into the reason for serious
understaffing at the institution.

Gvil Service

Television

Television programs of interest
to civil service employees are
broadcast daily over WNYC,
Channel 31. Next week's programs
are listed below.

Tuesday, August 12

3:00 p.m.—Return to Nursing—
“Post-Operative Care.)

4:00 p.m.— Around the Clock —
“Courtroom Conduct and Pro-

cedures” (N.Y. Police Academy

series.)

:30 p.m.— Communications and

Education — “Privacy and the

Right to Know”— Charles A.

Siepman discusses the right to
privacy and the increasing use

of electronic devices.

Wednesday, August 13

700 p.m.—Return to Nursing —
“Inhalation Therapy” (refresh-
ef course, lesson 14).

4:00 p.m.— Around the Clock —
“Courtroom Conduct and Pro-
cedures” (N.Y. Police Academy
series.)

7:30 p.m.—On the Job—"Con. Ed-
ison Dist. Facilities” (New York
City Fire Department training
series).

8:30 p.m.— Communications and

Education—“Censorship and Ob-

scenity”—Charles A. Siepmann

discusses the meaning of “ob-
scenity.””
Thursday, August 14

:00 p.m.— Around the Clock —
“Courtroom Conduct and Pro-

cedures” (N.Y. Police Academy

series.)

7:00 p.m.—The Power of a Womn
—Film on how Women’s Clubs
have organized to improve their
communities.

7:30 pm.—On the Job—‘Siamese
& Gates” (NYC Fire Depart-
ment training series).

Friday, August 15

10:00 a.m.—Staff Meeting on the
Air—Officials in New York
City’s Department of Social
Services answer phoned-in in-
quiries from the offices in the
field.

11:00 am. — The Power of a
Woman—Film on how women’s
clubs throughout the country
have organized to improve their
communities.

11:30 a.m.—Community Action—
Community Council of Greater
New York series.

4:00 p.m.— Around the Clock —
“Courtroom Conduct and Pro-
cedures” (N.Y. Police Academy
series.)

Saturday, August 16

5:00 p.m—Communications and
Education — “Consorship and
Obscenity” — Charles A. Siep-
mann discussses the meaning of
“obscenity.”

7:30 p.m.—On the Job—"Siamese
and Gates” (New York City Fire
Department series).

o

ry

August 8 Meet Set
By Committee On
Regional Offices

According to A. Samuel Notaro,
who chairs the Special Regional
Offices Committee of the Civil
Service Employees Assn., a meet-
ing of this panel has been set for
Saturday, August 8. The session
will take place in Room 161 of the
Syracuse Country House,

In conjunction with previous
meetings, Notaro observed, special
note should be taken by each
member that the purpose for this
meeting is to finalize the commit-
tee’s recommendations into a draft
of a report, to be presented to the
delegates meeting in September.

Civil Service
Law & You

By WILLIAM GOFFEN

(Mr, Geffen, » member ef the New York teaches law at the
College of the City of New York, is the author of many books and
articles and co-authored “New York Criminal Law.”)

Mental Incapacity II

JUDGE BREITEL’S sense of injustice was evidently
shocked by a judicial determination that confirmed a men-
tally and physically il teacher’s foolhardy selection of
retirement benefits with the resulting sacrifice of a retire-
ment reserve of $62,000 (Ortelere v. Teachers’ Retirement
Board, Column of July 29, 1969).

STILL, JUDGE Breitel did not reinstate the determina-
tion at Special Term which had rescinded her selection of
benefits. Instead, he remanded the matter for a new trial.
His reason for requiring another trial was that the trial
was held on an outmoded concept of mental incapacity,

AS WITH MANY trials, the lawyers may have attempted
to produce witnesses whose testimony will meet the legal
requirements for success. The Trial Court, too, seeks sup-
port in the record of the trial to satisfy the legal tests and
to justify the decision reached.

IN THE ORTELERE case, the Trial Court and the testi-
mony of the parties were undoubtedly influenced by the
ancient legal test of mental incapacity to contract. Thus,
the decedent’s psychiatrist under whose care she had been
for the last months of her life, testified concerning victims
of involutional melancholia. “They can’t think rationally no
matter what the situation is.” Yet, the petitioner’s wife,
Grace Arelere, was evidently able to think very rationally.

IN THIS CONNECTION, as Judge Mathew J. Jasen wrote
in his dissenting opinion, the evidence conclusively estab-
lished that Mrs. Ortelere “understood not only that she
was retiring, but that she had selected the maximum
payment during her lifetime.” Indeed, her letter to the
Retirement System two months before her death indicated
a comprehensive understanding of retirement problems.
Nevertheless, modern psychiatric knowledge indicates that
@ person like Grace Ortelere may still be unable to enter
into voluntary contracts.

THE RESTATEMENT of the Law of Contracts, a presen-
tation of what the law ought to be in view of the scholars

responsible for its preparation, substitutes a modern rule
on competency to contract for the old one based on ability
to understand the contract and rationality. The new Re-
statement section makes a contract voidable if by reason
of mental illness the person is unable to act in a reason-
able manner and the other party knows of his condition. In
the case at bar, Judge Breitel held that the System and
the Board of Education knew or should have known of Mrs.
Ortelere’s leave of absence for medical reasons.

JUDGE JANSEN IN his dissent stressed that there was
no evidence that Mrs. Ortelere knew when she selected the
maximum benefits that her health would affect her life
expectancy. Moreover, her selection was predicated on a
need for higher income to support herself and her husband.
Under the “no-option” arrangement, the monthly income
was $450, instead of $375, a twenty percent increase. Under
the circumstances, the election of maximum benefits rather
than Option I was not only rational, but necessary.

JUDGE JASEN stated that the former rule as to mental
incapacity has proven itself workable and fair. It rep-
resents a balance between policies to protect the security
of transactions on the one hand and those mentally handi-
capped on the other. It allows for a broad range of evidence
including psychiatric testimony to establish mental condi-
tion. In any even, as the Jurist observed, the jury “instinc-
tively judges” what is normal and what is abnormal, there-
by harmonizing competing policy considerations with hu-
man experience.

IN ANY EVENT, the majority rule as enunciated by
Judge Breitel will now require proof of mental incapacity
with current standards frankly in view.

Pp. R. Column

HERE 1S how they kick you
the teeth:

«70 FIGHT “ity Hall and win,
ost people need a good deal of

THE RADIO station paid a bun-
e of money to the newspapers
let everyone know that they
ink relations with government
a game, where the idea is to
» battle like a Roman gladiator.
pok mt the cartoon illustration
pat goes with the ad and you'll
¢ what I mean.

NO CIEVEL servant objects to

lance the public service image of
radio station.

Ferguson Reappointed
ALBANY—Whitworth Ferguson
Buffalo has been reappointed
the State Atomic and Space
evelopment Authority for a term
ing April 1, 1975.

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py ME COURT OF THE STATE nF

ANUEL “JORG | DOMINGUEZ, Pasi
paiiaines MARIA URSULA JAUREGUL
MINGUEZ, Defendant. — Index

130-69. Piniatitt designases New ‘york
Sig nas the lace of rial,
ION FOR A DIVORCE.

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THOMAS T. HECHT, ESQ.
Attorney (4), for iiaiatist
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w York, New York 100017
‘he “above “named defendant: The
iin summons

Sneak preview

of next year's

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If you just bought this year's VW sedan, congratu-

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Next year nobody will know you're not driving

next year's VW sedan

Because nex! year's beetle will look like this year's

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Which meons it will be just os hard to tell a 20-

AVW depreciates very slowly.
But even though next year's Volkswagen won't be
different, it will be different.

We've made some nice improvements, As usual.

year-old VW froma brand new VW.
Buying @ car that doesn't go out of style has still

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You don't take a beating when you sell it.

Amityville Monfer Motors, lid,
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Bay Shore Trans-Island Automobiles Corp,
Boyside Boy Volkswogen Corp.
Binghamton Rogbr Kresge, Inc

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Cortland Cortland Foreign Motors
Elmsford Howard Holmes, Inc.

Forest Hills Luby Volkswagen, lnc.
Fulton Lakeland Volkswagen, Inc.
Geneva DochakMotors, Inc.
Glens Falls Bromley Imports, Inc,
Hamburg Hal Casey Motors, Inc.
Harmon Jim McGlone Motors, Inc.
Hompstead Small Cars, Inc.

Hicksville Wolters-Donaldson, Inc.
Home! Suburban Motors, Inc,
Horsoheads H.R. Amacher & Sons, Inc.
Hudson Colonial Motors, Ince

{Over 2200 since 1949.)

So in next year's VW you can look forward to a
new ———— andabigger ——— andadiflerent—
Well, you wouldn't want us to give

away oll our little secrets, would you?

Huntington Fearn Motors, Inc.

Inwood Volkswagen § Towns, Inc,

Whaca Ripley Motor Corp,

Jamaica Manes Volkswagen, Inc,
Jamestown Stateside Motors, Inc.
Johnatown Vant Volkswagen, Inc.

Kingston Amerling Volkswagen, Inc.

La Grongeville R. E. Aled Volkswagon, Inc,
Latham Academy Motors, Inc.

Lockport Volkswagen Village, Inc.

Massena Seaway Volkswagen, Inc.

Merrick Saker Motor Corp. Lid.

Middle bland Robert Weiss Volkswagen, Inc.
Middletown Glen Volkswagen Corp.
Monticello Route 42 Volkswagen Corp.
‘Mount Kisco North County Volkswagen, Inc.
New Hyde Park Auslander Volkswagen, Inc.
New Rochelle County Automotive Co,, Inc.

New York City Volkswagen Bristol Motors, Inc,

New York City Volkswagen Filth Avenue, Inc.
Newburgh f & C Motors, Inc.
Niagara Falls Amendola Motors, Inc.
No, Lawrence Volkswagen Five Towns, Inc.
Olean "Olean Imports, Inc.
Onvonta John Eckert, Inc.
Celeste Motors, Inc,
Queens Village Wels Volkswagen Corp.

What kind of sneaky preview would
that be?

Rensselaer Cooley Motors Corp.
Riverhead Don Wald's Autohaus
Rochester Breton Motors, Inc.

Rochester F. A. Motors, Inc.

Rocher Mt, Read Volkswagen, Inc,

East Rochester Irmer Volkswagen, Inc.
Rome Seth Huntley and Sons, Inc,

Roslyn Dor Motors, Lid.

Soratoga Spa Volkswagen, Inc.

Sayville Bianco Motors, Inc.

Schenectady Colonie Motors, Ine.
Smithtown George and Dalton Volkswagen, Inc.
Southampton Prosident Motors, Inc.

Spring Valley C.A. Haigh, Inc.

Staten sland Staten Island Small Cars, Lid.
Syracuse Don Cain Volkswagen, Inc.

East Syracuse Precision Autos, Inc.
Tonawanda Granville Motors, Inc.

Utica Martin Volkswagen, Inc,

Valley Stream Yal-Stream Volkswagen, Inc.
Vestal Jim Forno & Son, Inc,

Watertown Harblin Motors, Inc.

West Nyack Foreign Cars of Rockland, Inc,
Woodbury Courtesy Volkswagen, Inc.
Woodside Queensboro Volkswagen, Inc.

Yonkers Dunwoodie Motor Corp.

‘Yorktown Mohegan Volkswagen, Inc.

6961 ‘s wn8ny ‘fepsony ‘YyqVAT AIAUS TIAIO

1969

3;

S

CIVIL

ERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, August

CSEA Steamroller Crushes AFSCME

(Continued from Page 1)
sincere efforts and tangible
results of CSEA, This is truly
a great victory and could not
have come about had not CSEA's
membership across the State—
from tiny village units to huge
State chapters—given their all to
the cause, I am proud of these
dedicated members as they should
be proud of themselves. ‘This tre-
mendous victory backed up what}
CSEA had said all along—that
the great majority of State em-
ployees did, in fact, want CSEA
to represent them.
Burial Service

‘ouncil 50, our chief competi-
tor, has been buried under the}
avalanche it predicted it would
win by.’

Looking back at
the last two years
tated the elections, Wenzl made
the following conclusions:

“The AFL-CIO bid to get a
wedge in the State employment
scene has been resoundingly re- |
buffed by the majority of State |
employees. Those employees, by
an overwhelming majority, have
chosen CSEA, a New York State
Jocally-experlenced labor union,
to represent them at the bar-
gaining table.

“Council 50 said CSEA was
‘afraid of elections’ but CSEA
handily won in four out of five
units, representing 94 percent of
the State employees involved
This proved our earlier court con-
tention that elections were not
needed among State employees.
CSEA had been involved in court
action to protect the interests of |
its 172,000 members since soon |
after the beginning of the State's
widely acclaimed experimental
Public Employees Fair Employ-
ment Act, known as the Taylor

Investigation

the

the events of
which precipi-

during a long and tiresome week
to determine what organizations

|BRIEF RESPITE —vaking time out for a buffet dinner

of watching ballots being counted
would represent the majority of

State employees are these observers for the Civil Service Employees
Assn, The volunteer workers, numbering more than 50, were given
administrative leave for the five days of counting. The group stayed

at the Thruway Motor Inn.

employees had long since desig-

“tn November, 1967, Governor |nated their choice by overwhelm-

Law
Rockefeller, under the Taylor
Law, had recognized CSEA as

bargaining agent for 124,000 State
employees on the basis of CSEA's
100,000 employee membership, a
vast majority of State workers.
Pressure Cooker
“Shortly after this recognition,
the State began to succumb to
pressure from the State AFL-CIO
to give a piece of the action to
a local council of the AFSCME,
‘This outside group, which claim-
ed a piddling 15,000 members, be-
gan clamoring for elections to let
the employees decide who should
represent them even though the

|ing membership loyalty to CSEA.

“Following long, laborious hear-
ings and litigation, the Governor's
Office and its new minion, the
Public Employment Relations
Board, bowed to unfavorable
press reports brought on by
Council 50's strikes against sev-
eral mental hospitals and other
pressures, and discarded the orig-
inal lawful designation of CSEA,
setting up five units and calling
for immediate elections,

The Cover-

“The main ploy of the State
the camouflage their knuckling
under to the political AFL-CIO

coordinator;

was a move to set up the single
bargaining unit into several
smaller ones—the age-old divide
and conquer maneuver. The ‘want-
in’ union could then concentrate
their organizing efforts on a
smaller segment of employees,
hoping to gain a sufficient per-
centage membership to justify
their demand for a representa-
tion election.
Chickening Out

“When CSEA’s legal fight to
block the unwanted unit break-
up dimmed the rival union's
hopes, they stepped up the pres-
sure with an abortive strike in
a few mental hospitals, At this,
the Governor really caved in and
appeased that union by breaking
off negotiations with CSEA, de-

Critized

CSEA & Legislative Hearings
Refute Rockland Grand Jury
Charges Against Rockland S. H.

ORANGEBURG

with the Civil Service Employees Ass

‘The chairman of two State Legislative Committees have agreed
position that the Rockland County Grand Jury
rged that escapes, prostitution and illegal use of

quick to turn over these cases to

had overstressed the situation when it che

narcoti were rampant at the Rockland State Hospital.
Admitting that there were iso- |

Jated cases of narcotics use by

some employees living at the 5,000-
the two legisla-
eCloskey (R-Gar- |
and Dalwin Niles (R-
pointed out that the
administration were

Johnstown)
‘Hospital’:

local authorities,
“We owe it to the employees,
staff and patients at the institu-
tion to clear the air’, McCloskey
said
“After the

touring facility we

Central Conference Forms

Political Action

(From Leader Correspondent)

SYRACUSE — A Political
Action Committee—its first—
will keep the Central Confer-
ence of the Civil Service Em-
Ployees Assn, advised on legis-
lative matters and legislators,

Arthur F, Kasson Jr. Central
Conference president, appointed
the new committee at the meeting
of the executive committee last
week at Helene Callaghan's sum~
mer home on Oneida Lake,

Committee

Members of the committee will
be the presidents of all 30 chap-
ters—21 State and nine county

in the conference.

Andrew Placito, president
Onondaga chapter will head
committee,

of
the

Kasson said that Placito will
keep him advised on the com-
mittee’s work and findings. Both
are members of the same chapter,

The Central Conference's com-

(Continued on Page 16)

found no evidence of any major
drug traffic or organized prosti-
tution,” the legislators said.

Earlier, Dr. Theodore Wenzl,
president of the Civil Service Em-
ployees Assn,, which represents
Mental Hygiene Department em-
ployees condemned the grand
jury findings and the local press
reports concerning them.

“The report used a scatter-gun
technique—hitting everything in
sight with equal force, evaluates
nothing in its proper perspective
and attributes everything wrong
to poor administration by the hos-
pital's director,

Wenzl was also quick to point
out that the hospital was operat-
ing with 75 pereent of its auth-
orized staff, while the patient
factor was almost 100 percent.
“This should have been played
up by the grand jury. The prob-
lem at Rockland is strickly econ-
omies. It’s up to the State to come
up with more money to properly
staff the institution.”

the majority of State employees.

VICTORY — cseA staff members join hands in victory at
the New Scotland Avenue Armory in Albany last week after CSEA
was named the winner in the election as the bargaining agent for
more than 130,000 State employees. From left are Marvin G, Nailor,
assistant director of public relations; Joseph J, Dolan Jr., election
John Corcoran, regional field supervisor; and Joseph
B. Roulier, director of public relations.

priving State employee of what
would have been a much richer
benefit package,

“The whole shameful charade
has now come full cycle and the
good guys, the State employees,
have won a victory. They have
proven conclusively the right of
their chosen organization to rep-
resent them,

Watch Out!

“Along the way, though, they've
taken a beating and won't forget
it! It will set the tone of CSEA's
relations with State Goverment
in the years to come. The kid
gloves are off for good!

“When negotiations start, CSEA
will come in fighting and get

what State employees want.”

BRIEFING OBSERVERS — joseph rp. Reeay, standine,
collective bargaining specialist, briefs observers for the Civil Service
Employees Assn, during ballot counting at the New Scotland Avenue
Armory in Albany to determine what organizations would represent

Seated facing camera, is William

Van Wie, a correction officer from West Coxsackie Rehabilitation
Institution, This scene was repeated many times during the five
days of counting conducted by the Public Employment Relations Board.

Civil Service Employees Assn.

John J. Lagatt, personnel di-
rector for the department, in-
formed CSEA president Theodore
C. Wenzl last week that ‘‘positive
steps” to Improve the ventilation
in the 13 laundries would be taken,

The institution laundries which
will be improved either by addi-

MH Laundry Conditions
Are Being Corrected,
Department Tells CSEA

(Special To Phe Leader)
ALBANY—Poor ventilation and lack of cooling equip-
ment in 13 Mental Hygiene institution laundries is being
corrected as a result of a protest made recently by the

on behalf of laundry workers:

tional equipment, new air cool
ing systems or building renova
tion are Brooklyn State Hospital,
Central Islip State Hospital,
Creedmoor State Hospital, Go-
wanda State Hospital, King’
Park State Hospital, Letchwort!
(Continued on Page 16)

Candidates For CSEA Statewide Office

chairman of the Salary Committee HAZEL G. ABRAMS

and as a member of the Negotiat- Candidate For Third

ing Committee, the CSEA has suc- Vice-President

ceeded in securing salary increases} For eight years as an officer

and other benefits which amount} of your Association, I have duti-

to more than 500 million dollars, | fully submitted my biographical
Sol Bendet desires to continue | sketch, hopefully to tell you all

this type of service to the mem-|why I felt I should be elected

bership of the Civil Service Em- | to office,

ployees Assn., in the capacity of| This year I am running on my

(Continued from Page 3)
vice-president of the Capifol Dis-
trict Conference,

He also is a member of the
State Board of Directors and an
elected member of the Board of
Directors of the executive com-
mittee. He serves on the State
Grievance committee.

MeDonough is a member of the

eration in Batavia, she applied for
employment with them and was
accepted, During Miss Anastasia’s
employment there, she served on
the Union Board of Trustees for
several months before tendering
her resignation. ;

In 1957, Miss Anastasia took a
civil service examination and was
accepted as a correction officer

membership committee for the
Past year and also served as a
member of the credentials com-
mittee and special plaque commit-
tee.

A public servant in
Government for 23 years
started as a uniformed deputy
in the Sheriffs Dept. in March
1946, and until April, 1957 worked

County
he

paid-president’s committee and| second vice president and solicits | record of six years as your State|at the Albion State Training |in that capacity. At this time he
served on the State negotiating | your yote, secretary and two years as third | School in Albion where she still|was promoted to the rank of ‘
committee that achieved one of Ore vice-president. serves in the same capacity, detective and assigned to the

.
RANDOLPH V. JACO!
Candidate For Second
Vice-President
Randolph V. (‘Randy’) Jacobs,
candidate for second vice-presi-
dent of the Civil Service Em-
ployees Assn., is well known for
the programs he has successfully
sponsored for the benefit and pro-
tection of the members and for
the welfare of retirees. Employed
by the State Insurance Fund, New
York City, Jacobs, in 1964, was
elected president of the chapter
in that agency, and is currently
in his third term. The chapter,

the best contracts for salaries and
benefits that State workers ever
received,

‘Tom's philosophy is
ployees have rights,
public employees.”

He is a member of the Knights
of Columbus and the Woodmen of
America.

I must clear one fact for every-
one; I am not retired; I have
worked for the State Education

She was social chairman of the
Albion chapter of the Civil Serv-
ice Employees Assn. from 1958
1963. In 1964, Miss Anastasia
was elected president of the Al-
bion chapter of the CSEA and at
the present time, she still holds
the same office,

She is a member of the Western
Conference and of the Civil Serv-
jee Bmployees' Assn, She consid-
ers this organization to be the
people's true organization and
hopes to remain a member in
good standing,

Miss Anastasia is a member of

Youth Bureau, In April, 1962, he
Was appointed deputy county clerk
in charge of the Onondaga Coun-
ty Motor Vehicie Bureau, In Jan-
uary, 1967 he was appointed to
the newly-created position which
he now holds, of Administrator—
Clerk of the Family Court of On-
ondaga County.

Having come up through the
ranks to his present position he
has learned that cooperation be-
tween the employee and the em-
ployer is most important for a de-
partment to function properly
“One has to be fair with each

Department for 41 years and still | ¢
Bive dedicated service to my De-

“All em-
including

SOLOMON BENDET
Candidate for Second
Vice-President
Solomon Bendet, a member of
he Civil Service Employees Assn,
for 38 years, is seeking Statewide

wndny “depen “YydVaT ADIAUS ‘AID

‘ce

6veL

office in the Employees Associa-
tion to enable him to work more
effectively as chairman of the

CSEA Salary Committee. Bendet

under his leadership, sparked and

led the successful drive for re-

twoactivity of the 1/60th Retire-
ment Law.

feels that because of the Taylor
Law, the office of second vice-
president would lend more status
© his chairmanship of the Salary
Committee and his membership
on the Negotiating Committee in
seeking to continue te bargain
for State workers in all units,
Bendet holds his present ctvil
serviee position as a result of hay-
ing successfully passed several
written examinations,
He has served CSEA in the fol-
lowing capacities
Negotiating Committee, Salary
Committee, Board of Directors,
State Executive Committee, Pen-
sion Committee, Insurance Com-
mittee, Budget Committee, Edu-
cation Committee, Nominating
Committee, Special Committee to
Study Cost’ of Handling Group
Life Insurance, Special Committee | r
to Study Necessity or Desirability
of a Paid President, Legislative
Committee, Chapter
4nd Conference President.
During his lengthy civil service

Activities with CSEA he has served
8 treasurer and chairman of the
Supervisory Committee of the
New York State Employees Fed-
‘al Credit Union and as prest-
tent of the Association of New
York State Insurance Department
Examiners, Ine,

Tn 1967 he was awarded ‘The
Civil Serviee Award for Brother-
hood” by the New York State Em.
Povees Brotherhood Committee,

During his term of office as

six-year

activities,
was a vestryman of St. Philip's
Chureh, Manhatten, largest Bpi-
scopal congregation in the United
States. He is also treasurer of the
Parish Credit Union and is vice-
president of the Metropolitan Dis-
trict of the New York State Cre-
dit Union League. Jacobs, in ad-
dition,
Local Board 19, New York City,
of the Selective Service System,

Appointed chairman of the
State-wide Grievance Committee
in .961, Jacobs has been a mem-
ber of the CSEA Board of Direc-
tors since that date. During his
tenure as chairman

(1961-66) major achievements of

the grievance committee includ-
ed (1) a mandated grievance pro-
cedure for political subdivisions;

(2) a time limit on grievances

presented to the Grievance Ap-
peals Board; (3) full legal repre-
sentation by the CSEA at no cost

to the member in grievances and
disciplinary procedures,

Jacobs was elected president of

the Metropolitan New York Con-
ference in 1966 and is now in his
second term, He
@ member of the CSEA Special
Merit Committee, Special Memo-

also serves as

rial Plaque Committee and the

Special Credentials Committee, In
1968, he was appointed ag a CSEA
President, representative on the Committee
for Equal Opportunity, constituted
by Governor Rockefeller to find

Career, Sol Bendet has. devoted| wider employment opportunities
himself to the service of his fellow|for minority groups in State
‘ployees, In addition to his| service.

Prominent in Episcopal Chureh
Jacobs for 13 years

is a Board member of

partment and to the tax-payers
of the great State of New York. |

When President Wenzl assigned
me, as third vice-president, to the |
project of Member Benefits and
Retirement Affairs, I secepted |
wholeheartedly. I have many,)
many friends who -have retired |
and keep in touch with the CSEA

program.
With the membership and head-
quarters staff duly concerned

with the problems arising from |
the implementation of the new
Taylor Law, the initiation of a
retirement program at this time,
has been an uphill fight all the
way.

This next year every member
must meet this challenge to back
the retirees in their program and
win a breakthrough for them so
that they can*begin to live as
first class senior citizens of the
State of New York and the Nation, |

MARGARET ANASTASIA

Candidate for Third
Vice-President

Miss Anastasia was born in Ba-
tavia, She attended St, Anthony's |
Parochial School and graduated
from the Batavia High School.
After graduation, she was em-
ployed at the Massey-Iarris In-

ternational Harvester Company,
which at the time, was one of
Batavia’s leading industries. When

Cylyenia Products located its op-

the St. Jerome Hospital Guild and

is very active in their volunteer |

work. She donates one night a
week to the St. Jerome Hospital.
ARTHUR KASSON
Candidate For Fourth
Vice-President
Art Kasson has been affiliated
with the Civil Service Employees
Assn, for the past 18 yea! He
served on the Board of Direct-
ors of the Onondaga chapter for
12 years, and was the president
for a two-year period between
1963 and 1965. While in the capa-
city of president, he diligently

devoted his time in striving for
the right of the Onondaga Coun-

ty employees to*have the priyil-
edge of having the Group Life
Insurance Plan. After a year and
a half it was realized and went
into effect in June, 1966,

He was instrumental in the
Onondaga chapter joining the
Central Conference and in 1966
the Onondaga chapter was the

first county chapter to enter the
Conference,

Art was appointed third vice-
president of the Central Confer-
ence and since then has served

as both second and first vice-pres-
ident. During this past month of
June he was re-elected to the posi-
tion of president for the second
term. Over the past four years
with the conference he has been
chairman of the program planning
committee, membership commit-
tee and the county affairs com-
mittee,

He has served two years as a
member of the Statewide public
relations committee and was a
member of the Special Leader
Negotiations Committee. He has
been co-chairman of the Statewide

one of his employees and giv
credit where credit is due, If
| problems arise they must be aired
for ‘he proper adjustment with
each one allowed his say”, Art
contends that a department is
successful only when the employ-
ees are content in their positions.
Without this, the administtrator
is ineffective,

Knowing the vast
| problems that exist
employees today he
awaits the opportunity
where needed.
| Art has been a member
|New York State Associ of
| County Clerks and is currently a
member of the New York State
| Association of Clerks of Family
Court. He has served on the hos-
pitality committee and the com-
mittee on publications, He has
served as political chairman for
the past ten years in’ the town
in which he lives.

Art and his wife, Kitty reside
in Syracuse, They have one -son,
who is married and are proud
grandparents of a two-year-old

boy and two-month-old girl

RICHARD TARMEY
didate For Fourth
Vice-President
Richard A, Tarmey is present
ly is serving as the fifth
vice-president in the Civil Service
Employees A. He has been a
member of CSE.. for 20 years and
jdring that time has seryed in all
|chapter offices including chapter
president for seven terms. He is
a former chairman of the dire

amount of
among our
anxiously
to assist

tors charter committee; former
chairman of the special commit.
| tee on county problems; a mem-
ber of the site committee and is
liaison between the board and
| (Continued on Page 14)

Se

iz) Advisors Named

ALBANY—Governer Rockefeller
has reappointed Edward K. Hertel
of Middleport and Charles Banks
Belt of Southampton to the State
Pesticide Control Board, an ad-
visory position,

Floyd Starr

Floyd Starr, 45, supervising
license investigator for the
Licensing Division of the New
York Department of State,
lost his life in an automobile ac-
cident on the Adirondack North-

g Murphy Dinner Set | way tn Sai 4 County on July
4 ALBANY—A testimonial dinner 17.

ws was held in honor of former A veteran of World War If, he
+ State Tax Commissioner Joseph Joined the Oneonta Police Depart-

Murphy August 1 at the Thruway
Motor Inn.

ment with which he served as
@ patrolman until April 1960 when
he resigned to Join the staff of
the New York State Bingo Contro!
Commission, He served with the
Commission until October 3, 1962
when he was promoted to the
Licensing Division of the State
Department. At the time of his
death he was supervising license
investigator for the Department
and district manager of both the
Albany and Utica offices.

He was a member of the Pirst

Personnel. Attending the presentation ceremonies
are: Theodore Bach, Louis Swartz, Assistant De-
puty Commissioner Nicholas Corrado, John Nelson,
Commissioner Duchan, David Geisinger, Assistant
Deputy Commissioner Leo Goldner, James Damiano
and Mario Raccasi.

COURSES WENT WELL —

Acting Real Estate Commissioner Ira Duchan
(center) presents Certificates to six Dept. of Real
Estate employees for their successful completion
of courses in the Inter-Agency Training Program
that were sponsored by the City’s Department of

Do You Need A

If you want to know whal’s happening

for civil service

gich SCHOo,

for personal satisfaction valeur to you United Presbyterian Church which
coke Courne Approved. b he served for many years

WY. Slate Education Donk IPLOMA to your chances of promotion trustee, and 9 ember ot the

Write or Phone for Information ‘D to your job Utica chapter, Civil Service Em-

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@ legal equivalent

ANA" of graduation from a 4-

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non-gradvates of High School for:

ployees Assn.

Surviving are his wife; two
daughters, Pamela and Ruth; two
sons, Dennis, with the U.S. Air
Force in'Libya, and David.

a
Es
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NCR Bookkeeping machine, 1.3 EQUIVALE: & Danes,
EAST TREMONT AV BOSTON RD. BRONX — KI 2-600

29 BAST FORDA
VETERAN TRAINING, ACCRED!

ROAD,

BRONX — 989.6700
N.Y STATE DEPT. OF EDUCATION

lege Entrance

‘or Personal Satisfaction

or AT HOME

owents scHoo., HSL
SAT W, 37 Street, New York, N.

‘ones weekly Course IN SCHOOL

|. ¥, 10019
Please aend me PREE information on Hish School Equivalency,

Name
tres

ADELPHI

type, Court Reporting. Free Placement Svce, Api
for torcign students, Day & Eves, 1712 Rings
Bklya, DE 6-7200,

S “Top Training + Prestige”
Tab, etc, Computer Programming,
ig, Switchbd, Compimtry, Steno

proved
way.

, 47 Mincola Bivd,, Mineola, L.!

CH 8:8900,

ACCREDITED BY NEW

YORK STATE BOARD OF REGENTS,

APPROVED FOR VETERANS

NEW CARS

Special car purchase plan Includes almost any make or
model car at $100—$125 above actual cost from fran>
chised new car dealers in your area,

MAJOR APPLIANCES

All famous brand name B&W and color televisions,
washing machines, dryers, refrigerators, dishwashers,
freezers, ranges, and air conditioners at unbeatable
prices from approved dealers.

TRAVEL

Special charter and group trips to places that include:
HAWAII, MEXICO, LAS VEGAS, JAMAICA, FREE-
PORT, PUERTO RICO, EUROPE, ISRAEL and
others throughout the world . . . throughout the year.
‘See all the trips available in our special brochure,

ACT NOW FOR YOUR FREE MEMBERSHIP

Free membership is available to all Civil Service em-
ployees, Complete the application form and mail it in
at once, This FREE membership is limited! You will
receive your personal membership card immediately,
All applicants received before August 31st will be
eligible for the “Hawaiian Sweepstakes,”

CONSUMER BUYING CLUB
114 Old Country Road
Mineola, New York 11501

NEWYORK — (212) 886-4800
LONG ISLAND (516) 248-1131

FURNITURE

Complete lines of bedroom, living room, dining room
and occasional furniture . . . all at prices that provide
members with truly big savings.

CARPETING/TILE

National brand name first quality carpet and tile at
specially negotiated prices from reliable and approved
dealers.

OTHER BENEFITS

Discounts on Hi-Fi Equipment,’‘on bills at major restaur-
ants and hotels, on car rentals, on clothing, liquor, thea-
tre and amusements, tires, and many other products and
services. You'll read all about these and other benefits in
‘the “exclusive” CONSUMER NEWSLETTER,

— MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION FORM _ __
1 To; Consumer Buying Club

ae 114 Old Country Road, Mineola, N.Y, 11501

[ Lam a Civil Service employee and eligible for FREE
J membership in the CONSUMER BUYING CLUB.
Please send me my personal membership card,

| Name.

} Address.

1 City. State. Zip.
1 Employed at. *.

one ER = ahead = News Of The Schools

PRINCIPAL IN JUNIOR HIGH | 7667; "Stanley Edeshe HEALTH CONSERVATION IN
By A. L. PETERS

SCHOOLS Fatt sales pee DAY SCHOOLS

Luttey,, 9217; Beraned steia-| Vincent 1. Halley, 7 76535
I "Henock, 891

of Welatrauss, 9640; Rhode A Lead.
aild Hoogasi

stein, 7653; Reginald H. RAE Gi
we 1830; | Frances A: Kens
iti ASH" Maia Amie, 8S | Banc Soo chy 2714, tithe Riceme-| Open School Day Also
866: Ao Bergstein 8657; Fy iol f haga 7632; Francine le Sobel,

Liss, Rs ‘Morton

a cides Junior Highs Set Precedent

Sinted Th Leplers 847 lomon M. ‘obert J.

‘Melvin Tide 8440; Jay| Leonaard Landsman, 7610;

84 . Spratley, 7610; Perry "Weisenhotf. 7606: ae
Hi29, Arthur M. Lémer,, 8432; Marca chael It Bteetiere, $6065, Arch

W. Schneider, 8399; Jocelyne L, Tord 7602; . Led

Goldberg, 8380; Saul Gold-
Lobert johnnston, 8364;
i 7

With Summer Report Cards

For the first time the summer session of New York City’s
junior high schools have had Open School Days. They were
held in late July.

Dr. Bernard A. Fox, in charge of the program, said that
the 21 schools conducted an ex-
tensive program of parent parti-
é cipation, involving, also for the | ette St., Ozone Park; and JHS
LICENSE AS TEACHER OF COM-|first time, the issuance of report | 217, 85-05 144 St. Jamaica.

906;
* Grundfase
6810; Amelia R.
R, ,Senzon,

ieb, 835
Tie h345, Rober? Simmelkiatee”
Alvin Solomon, 63155

B. | Frank,
1364: Ja
leu- | Rose Helima:

Teh

ke

ley J.

8287; Wil- 7359, Frank
755:

Norman, C.

380; Filomena julo,
"Weleman, 6202; Ray Josowitz,

iakelsteia, MON BRANCH SUBJECTS IN |car‘s on pupils’ work during the| Richmond: JHS 49, 101 War-
Line! H. Lewie, DAY ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS | summer. ren St.

Gul 9002; David, B
Bedick, 8076; Robert *, Greenber
Gottl josephine

To promote closer cooperation
with parents, the report cards

Lederman,

43; Mare
7541; Gary A._ Shangold, | _ Matthew
8213; “Herman ip

Tr
ss, “Abrehas H. Hantman, 753
j, Stanley Miller, 7527;
326; Leon_D.

ae gore: 7716! were planned to precede Open . ’
“gn Redon é30; "Rusti | School Days, on which conferences Science HS S Plan
petemarhs eR ae *yettebr ind, 7350; Kevin were held between parents and
Lees Sieg ead ae Series teachers to discuss the progress . | P
rf 3 of the students in the summer | QPCCIAl FOStams

alias ‘Lice,

Cha
Goerence Horretes, bit: classes,

Jon’
Jeltrey 1. Vogel,
Stanley T Byck,

corrective ciawes =| FOr Minority Kids

Yunet, $360; Ronald B. This summer's junior high

a
TA72; »_ Ka 7 6306; lec 62.
thony Pitti 7401. Midced.. Gilgott, vb 386, Ala hia Kear Mf | school classes provide corrective
ES Leis Promoter 463; Grace it Martha’ Steiner, 6138; Bres: instruction for pupils retarded in Thanks to a special pro-
Sen ken ey Don reading or mathematics, and for|@ram being conducted this
Bruen, 74527 Marsia 451 tee AS TEACHER oF | pupils who have failed in one | Summer, a group of 355 boys
M. Quinn. 745 R. “abere 7450;
Fdward Weiss, 7449; Milton ©. Jones,| HEALTH AND PHYSICAL EDU- | °F More academic subjects during | and girls who would not oth-
cata: oer Bice CATION IN JUNIOH HIGH | the regular school year. In addi-|erwise be there will attend New
iy Kronenberr, 8037; LICENSE AS SCHOOL SCHOOLS tion, enrichment 1s provided in| York City’s famed specialized sci-
isola PSYCHOLOGIST Charles D. Calhoun, 7424: Anthony | BON-Credit non-academic courses | ence high schools in the fall. The
Seat oe . | Fane: ccjarelli, 7388: Joha A. Caworno. | in industrial arts, music, typing | students are primarily from mi-

and library services, nority groups.

Talented pupils are attending! The students are taking coach-
enrichment courses in science, |ing courses during the vacation
mathematics, music, art and dra-) period to prepare them for ad-
matics in special classes at an In-| mission to one of the vecialized
stitute for Mathematics and Sci-| science high schools: Bronx HS
ence, a Creative Arts Academy | of Science, Stuyvesant HS, and
and a School for the Humanities. | Brooklyn Technical HS. They are
The schools’ locations follow: | ®Mong applicants from disadvan-

“ taged areas who did not quite
eee ee aus 118, vi |™maxe the grade in the regular
ARTS IN DAY HIGH SCHOOLS | Non Ave. and eS Ae a | entrance tests last winter but

Arnold G. feaeee 7680; Sheila B. a who, in the opinion of their home
8600; Poser J.| Passions 77 Hapucer, manities ot 18 70/688 West 17)| uC: I cne Chun ba oe ae none

25 St.,; Creative Arts Academy at | ScR0o!s, have eos
the HS of Music and Art, Con. |™aintain themselves in the spe-
vent Ave. at 135 St. and the Math. |Calized schools LEGS, hel op:
matics-Sclence Institute at JHS | POUnty
104, 330 Bast 21 St. Ethnic Breakdown
Bronx: JHS 115, East 183 St.| Of the 355 students enrolled in
and Ryer Ave; JHS 123, 1025|the coaching courses, there are

t 8039;
Friedinnder, 8037; Jack J. Met
kL. Pg ag tre 8035; Ronald

Goodman,
7159; Michael

Ellman, 8026; Don: 3
03

hwartz,
M. Corry. 7023;

te indes
‘eter Lawner, Arlene Shafran, 7
Marilyn Mutchaike 7238; Henry Lipton,
By rece ‘M, Pops, 7188;
‘2175; George | Taschm:
Cleoals - Golding, 7150; Mic!
Becker, 70635 arsha, Siegel, 7030

Gus f
lowski, 665
M. Abrams,
Joel Balizer,

cep

liam Ra. Gand leva
ee} ri Hoc! 7990;

ce, 7998: Sheldon Osiaoft “7989, | GBL3:.”
cepa Wea Audrey 8, "We Arnott,
ner, can warts, cia G.
i: 5976; Philip. A. Zemmel, | Gladstone, 60

LICENSE AS SCHOOL
SOCIAL WORKER

bh Be
0;

ach,
E36; Yoot Arsanek, 6042.
LICENSE AS TEACHER OF FINE

jose §. Goldst
inkoff, 6150;

Bern:
Rdward ‘Goldman
D4 alph

Seideastein,
; Claire S.

1 Drucker,
79;

ap
aan he Riser,

Leah Feldberg, 797:
Stephen L. Ucko, 794
201; Hary IN. Glu
rer, 18020 David
Blader, 26861, Mottog |

M.’ Chi

Hariet
Rotibi,
Edna Vv M.
Green, "6025; fda "M. “Rubinstein 6273;

H te Morrison Ave.; JHS 136, 750 Jen-| 136 Negroes, 52 Puerto Ricans, 38
Bachtach LICENSE AS TEACHER OF | i oeeoio saan Bayes red Orientals and 129 others.
pier ACCOUNTING AND BUSINESS | Spinowi oii sigan Bupum, 2/0: fred | nings St.; and JHS 145, 1000 Teller |

75; Louis Latty, 7864; Seyme Avenue, The summer courses are being
E sce 7861; PRACTICE IN DAY HIGH LICENSE AS TEACHER OF Brooklyn: JHS 33, 70 Tompkins | oxfered from 8:30 AM. to 1:00

CLASSES FOR CHILDREN WITH | aye.; JHS 61, 400 Empire Blvd.; | P.M. daily at centers other than
RETARDED MENTAL DEVELOP- | jus 111, 35 Starr St.; JHS 220,/ the schools for which the stu-
MENT IN DAY SCHOOLS 49 St. at Ninth Ave.; JHS 258,|dents are preparing. These sum-
LioadJ-| 147 viacon St.; JHS 275, 985 Rock-|mer centers are: For Stuyvesant
away Ave., and IS 292, 300 Wy- | HS at Washington Irving Day
ona St. |Summer HS, 40 Irving Place; for
Queens: JHS 59, 182-55 Ridge-| Bronx HS of Science at Theodore
dale Ave., Springfield Gardens: | Roosevelt Summer Day HS, 500

ae is "ava vk, 78203, ‘Tore Hav.
10, is,

Ke isi Willies, mG. Sia 812;
lartvey.
rain. 7803; Tk toto, in?
Bikey 7708 | Jack

4, Maacolino, att
Norman M. R

ee rr Apicgel 700 Franc nei a JHS 189, 144-80 Barclay Ave.,|East Fordham Road, the Bronx,
fuer, 778 rank Be Berbers Tan Set. fe 6624: Alloa Flushing; JHS 202, 138-30 Lafay- | and .or Brooklyn Technical HS at
. Basternacl

eenbere, Solomon, Feingold asi Gee the Brooklyn Tech. Building, De

ant De ; Vincent a jachs, * Susi Dubi f ¢

janet OOSet Baker, 2771: Gerard G.| 6226; Arthur Fetuner, 6030. a Mamta Re Meal eesti Seclgnace Aura: |e GvenNe Bnd Hort Green,

Jor Kats, Vret: Alam: Rabinprtts, 7760; r 82 man, 6626 Carleen Me’ Peters, “cess; | Place, Brooklyn.

a a ai LICENSE AS TEACHER OF || Stren Albee J" eiced, ot Cis | eS80" Pine tho Giger berets Reogek:| |For further information  con-

famuel "Levy, 773 Parti 3] HARD OF HEARING 1N DAY M, O'Shea, 5952. 910i Rhona M. Roseman. 6448; | tact at Theodore Roosevelt HS,

te dems 6412; “Maryann, 'Scllenthin, “6405: | : a
Remcara LICENSE AS TEACHER OF | dea, arya an aD Mr. Lester Newman, CY 5-360; at

eae K. Werner, 6300

EARLY CHILDHOOD CLASSES

002; &, Ri | Washington Irving HS, Irving Or-
IN DAY ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS

nga 3210; sBarbies A: Copu'e.| fuss, OR 4-5000, and at Brooklyn

TIES % aris ng sai Etta Packer, Tech, M r
z . Forsyt 5: - 2 y
7738," Richard Mat 198: te {| LICENSE AS TEACHER OF |,,,9° “T TWell Sanders, UL &
Kingsley 7736; cy E. Pollack, 8188; Ji ' | 5150.
i, Jerome Grumet. 7 ick L. | 076; Mindelle” Feurst ‘chi HEALTH CONSERVATION
rie HR Daly, ‘ : eee Fred 8050; Fay, p07”: Bev'| CLASSES IN DAY SCHOOLS
erlee Friedman, 7 8; a
7721 iiman, 7842; Rhod: Elaine A_ Zounek, 8280; ohi 7 i i
tT. Ne rosa Rosch Sioa Bowe Hidden, “7960, Blanche. M. a oe University Council
Levy, OrConnors 2698: ‘Ruth’ Black Goldmann, 7640; Enid "1. Gs 7520: | ALBANY — Robe of
. 7 is 7 ol poy ini . Gartner, 20; —
sa So, Reshma 7720; "Uso. Pearl Olian, Hh | Carmine. F. Martino, 748 nem, Beh
arom a ichacl’ B. Lipner,, wate: ‘7558: lea: M. Weinfeld. 7548: Steiner, "7440; Helen L. | Buffalo has been appointed to
on, 7361 ima B. Cooper: » 7494; Peark Sehoskes, | A- Riotel, 7400; Rose 72
Daniet satitl Misebere, th TARA; Roslyn H, Scraum, 7452s, Eileen J. plied Carroll, 7120; avi P Kruch: | the Council of the State Univer-
7710, 3; Jack FE, Boyle, , Robi kon 40; Pearl ar te 7000; Ji
Mariiye“Pascor, i sity of New York at Rochester.

McKelvin B, Seahouse, 7704; Edward

aro oe — R seas A fe ie arbors, bs He succeeds Seymour Knox of

et, Fa Carthy Net carey cge BG Donnisk ja O'Hanlon, 6560; Beverly ue [eee Whe Stee ae ees

ios Madetneim, 763; Gerard B.| ver. 6280: Mi ren OMe: S160, Ge | Baas MN j_ And Sone. rest 4320; Matthew J. Mclatee, "6320: ber, Mr. Rich's term ends July 1,
Hachliay 7618 ‘Jessy K' Resaick, | Grown, 044. ial I se Nee Bchaes, Cobe | Battacde adore C740) Jeckelva A. | 1971,

696l “S wnsny ‘depsony ‘YACVa'T AOIAUS IAID

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, August 5, 1969

This Week's City Eligible List

ter L Thomas, James J Fitzpat-|M Peterson, Howard Wright, Har-

(Continued from Page 4)

Edwin Oppenheim, Henry Fogle,
Joseph Barco, Harry Schaeffer,
Joseph M Langdon, Mary E Kelly,
Manuel Kapalowitz, Ferdinand
Plowden Jr, Juan W Mercado,
Juanita M Boone, Frank J Vario,
Sheila Benjamin, Nicholas Leva-
das, Ricoo R Hackney, Edward
C Newkirk, Mary R Allen, Thom-
asina Ford, Patrick Crocitto, Wal-

rick, Prince M Jackson, Walter J
Nortwich, Henry Urban, Christo-
pehe Cerio, James J Boland, Rich-
are Tucker, Frank Holmes, James
A Crowley, Salvador Heresi, Char-
les Bradley, Elbert S Benjamin,
Paul L Preston, Ellen E Hibbert,
Dorothy A Bryan, Herbert Middle-
ton Jr, Raymond Maffia, Maurice
W Wells, Lois M Percell, Robert

Long Island Hofbrau --

Queens + German American

80-11 Broadway - Elmhure, 438.1566
Unexcelled German American, Luncheons,

Dianers, Banquet Dinners from $6.00, — Danny Moran - Rudy Wolf, Hoss.

riet L Samuels, Berry J McKanis,

126 George E Beatty, Robert J
Poney, Pearl G Scott, Bernadine
Warren, Cecelia E Carter, James
G Coleman, Peter A Cartagena,
Calvin M Maoklin, Loretta A
Christian, Ja..es T Gerald, Louis
J Leo, Calvin I Francis, Galation
Sanders, Izetta M Baroo, Bert 8
Wankoff, Joseph Y Dowling, Es-
telle L Lichter, Daniel W Jacoby,
Herbert Ginsburg, Phillip Rogers,
Agnes L Gillen, Alan J Bleckner,
Alease L Sampa, Albert C Wilson,
Jean E Macklin, Magnolia Haw-

kins, Raymond J Rauscher, Den-
nis H Williams, Javier Barreto,
Vincent J Muro, Hezekiah John-
son, Helen L Patmon, Dianne Jef-
ferson, Josephine Thomas, Sylves-
ter Taylor Jr, Thomas S Salerno,
Jose L Sanoguet, Victor M Arroyo,
Chester F Zolnierowiez, Henry
Ward, Oliver W Williams, Richard
P Kaplan.

168 Ann P Valdes, Frank Cuer-
vo, Kenneth B Mattis, Joseph
Chiyuto, Helen Cangle, Robert B
Forte, Arnold F Harris, Roscoe E
Fountain, Frank Droughn Jr, Ly-
nous E Mattis, Emma Burke,
Taylor A Schofeld, Anthony Res-
cigno, Heather E Levi, Eleanor
Brewster, Anthony C Dilandro,
‘Theodore Burkett, Nicholas C Par-

The Statewide Plan:

it’s a nice, safe feeling.

Most of us don't have bags of money
around just to take care of hospital and
medical bills, Most of us just don't save the
kind of money a serious illness can cost
today. But Statewide Plan subscribers

can enjoy that nice, safe feeling —just as
if they had bags of money in their

own bank vault,

Why?

Because the Statewide Plan is literally
worth a small fortune, As a Statewide Plan
subscriber, thousands and thousands of
dollars are waiting, ready to pay your

BLUE CROSS #2! § BLUE SHIELD’

ALBANY © BUFFALO * JAMESTOWN ® NEW YORK * ROCHESTER * SYRACUSE @ UTICA ® WATERTOWN

THE STATEWIDE PLAN — COORDINATING OFFICE — 1215 WESTERN AVENUE, ALBANY, N. Y.
© National Association of Bive Shield Plans

@ Amorican Hospital Association

hospital and medical bill expenses,

The Statewide Plan doesn’t have an
option... it's a “no-nonsense” program
that takes care of you and your family

when you need it,

When you have the Statewide Plan you've
got it all... Blue Cross, Blue Shield and

Metropolitan's Major Medical

« realistic

coverage, especially designed for the

expensive long-term illness.

You didn’t realize you were so rich, or

did you, money bags?

ald R Jones,

illo, Michael J Hoban, Delores R
Tate, Roxie A Abraham, Barbara
L Smith, Virginia G Bogue, Janice
Biolai, Thomas J Denehy, Regin-
Jerome Anderson,
Charles E Howard, Marlene Har-
grave, Samuel E Benjamin Jr,
David Knight, Shirley N Gross,
Virginia A Scarabino, Wilson La-
salle, Ernest H Bonner, Frank 8
Ojeda, Willie M Leonard, Philip
N Spina, Leonard M Mancini, Ju-
lius L Harris, Salvatore Distefano,

(Continued om Page 13)

—

| THE PORT

POLICE
OFFICERS |

OF NEW YORK
AUTHORITY

Starting salary:

$150 per week with raises up to
$189.50 per week after 4 years.

BENEFITS:
Up to 27 days paid annual va-

cation
Rotirement with pension after 25
years

Annual clothing allowance
Group hospital, medical-surgical
and life insurance plans
Liberal Sick Leave allowance

BASIC REQUIREMENTS:

United States citizen

Resident of New Jersey or New
York State

Age: 21 but less than 30 years
old by November 1, 1969 (no
credit for Military Service)
Height: From § ft. 7 in, to

6 ft. 4 in

Weight: Normal for height

Viston:' 20/30 in each it
out glasses or artificial
not color blind or color confused

Applicants MUST
present at interview:

Birth certific

High school diploma or equival-

ency certificate
lid No

v.

registration and classification
cards

Veterans: Honorable Discharge
or Separation papers

TO APPLY:

Interviews will be held Monday,
August I through Friday,, Aug-
ust 15, 1969 between § p.m, and
8 pm.
(Written examination for qual:
ified applicants will be held on
Saturday, August 16, 1969. Suc
ndidates will be given
al_and physical
must pass cl

THE PORT OF NEW
YORK AUTHORITY

Personnel Department - Room
200, 111 Eighth Avenue (at 15th
Street) New York, New York

Aa Equal Opportunity Employer

Wanted - Part-Time

OR WOMAN WITH CAR
EVE!

Het ts

(Continued from Page 12)
Henrietta Lindsay.
210 Delphine Rogers, Billy R
Bowden, James W Jones, Vyne C
Forte, James H Cummings Jr,

4 ‘CANVASS!

i SALES — FULL TRAIN:

CALL: 665-9022, — 1 PM. 10 4 PM Daily
‘4 PM: 655-7850

Early Retirees John J Burke, Watson C Paige Sr,
bee sonal vod Geral otice Manley L ee somes My ee
GENCY. Lols &

Feri eee tae (Lex. 682-8250 | "0% oe ce, 4

Jat EAA Se (hee) 6828250 | nie M Tomlin, Anne Atkins, Isa-
Business Opportunities bella Henderson, Mary M Andler,

SHEET Meral Job Shop — Fully equi

“peevanee crciees, — Owner's 10 Business Opportunities
[voter “Hias, Re = Say a i pow you can make
8985 or: b; . Bar & Hotel, 12

‘of town. Price

4 ke
Waurtsboro, N.Y.
Bia T3.14b4 “oker 790 bam

BE A FOSTER PARENT

Homes needed for
ages for long term
write The Children’s
Foster Home Be

R
ingstoa, NY 914-338-9220
Opp. "Hrotidey tan (914) 338-0285

soBusiness Opportuniti:

MUCH for 1 couple to handle, 2

successful rests & ba Jeas Cad
one

co

Cit
Vacgme, "$20,000" handle,

1
D450 Soao ‘tan. 243.

Gittort!

e OFFICIAL
e MAJOR APPLIANCE
e DISCOUNT OUTLET

CIVIL SERVICE EMPLOYEE PRICES QUOTED
ARE SLIGHTLY ABOVE WHOLESALE

© WASHERS * DRYERS * REFRIGERATORS * FREEZERS
© RANGES * DISHWASHERS ° T.V. © STEREO
* AIR CONDITIONERS

° Featuring — All Famous Brand Names
With Make & Model Number For Lowest Price
JAMAICA GAS & ELECTRIC

42-24 BELL BOULEVARD
BAYSIDE, N. Y. BA 9-2853 BA 9-2400
OPEN EVES TILL 9? PM
WED & SAT TILL 6 PM

SPECIAL — PRE-SEASON AIR-CONDITIONING
SALE ON NOW

Fedders - G.E. - Philco - Emerson - Chrysler
——

LEAST LEASE?

NEW 1969 Renault 10
(4 speed standard transmission}
26 month equity lease

$59.

per month
Even lower fleet rates available on lease or purchase plan

Manhattan Leasing

Division of Manhattan Imported Cars
212 OX 7-5805 555 Fifth Avenue, N.Y.C.
212 GR 8-5200 76-02 Northern Blvd., Jackson Hgts
516 LE 8-2888 284 Main Street, Hempstead, L.I.

Call:

| year unlimited mileage new car warranty

FOR CIVIL SERVICE
EMPLOYEES AND FAMILIES

DE LUXE PACKAGE TOURS AT LOWEST PR

Las veees

ICES

$299
Hotels

$219 Mexico

TAK

Dinners

From From

Jet Transte
ng & extras.

15 Days,
Shows & extras Sightse

$329 Holidays to Jamica, Free-
TAX
Meals,

From

port, Nassau, Cruises
Transfers
: Europe & Hawaii

LOW COST CHARTERS FOR GROUPS OR ORGANIZ
Brought To You Exclusively By

PUBLIC EMPLOYEES TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS
597 MERCER STREET, ALBANY, N.Y. 12208
Telephone (518) 869-9894 or (518) 237-8414

ATIONS

Ismael Velazquez, Rosa O Thomp-
son, Elias McNeil, Filomena J Cut-
ler, Delmar D Robinson Henry
Prasier, Louella Brown Virginia
N Richardson, Joseph J Aviles,
Delores Hampton, Venice T Gray,
Pasquale Prancavilla, Sharley G
Lewis, Jose M Torres, Prank G
Robinson, Jimmie L_ Lowery,
Kathleen McGhaney, Dennis H
Hewitt, Prank H Chong, Nancy L
Martin, Alfonso A Catrer, Eladio
Gonzalez, Gwendolyn Sotherland,
Juan R Rivera, Zoila M Bonilla,
Eleanor E Bennett, Joseph R
Dasilva, Shirley Devivo, Curtis
Thomas, Pedro Laza, Johnny Wil-
liams, Pearl Jones,
Frye, Gertrude P Mitchell, Lucious
Johnson.

ASST YOUTH GUIDANCE
TECHNICIAN
1 Barbara A Folick, Phyllis A
Palletta, Carole D Schwartz, An-
thony J Lobue, Rhea S Friedman,

acca, Elizabeth Keesee, Linda E
Young, Irene L Schumer, Judith
A iZek, Mark W Tilley, Allyson I
Kalem, Sherry L Knazick Carl I
Cohen, Harriet .. Dolinsky, Mary-
ann F Jahn, Maryaynn E Pada-
lino, Amy M. Wisniewski, Karen
I Berland, Martin H Jennings,
Barbara M Casey, Joseph J Gil-
lick, Arnold Friedman, Mary J

Petrosky, Gail M Meisel, Michael
Rinko, Diane A Scheiber.
30 Michael B Baron, Hyacinth

L Morris, Frank R Coleman, Mel-
vn Wittenstein, Sherry M Solo-
mon, Linda R Zacks, Joan E Katz,
Veronica D Thomas, Anjta F Cal-
andrino, Ronda L Billig, Patric!
L Venditto, Linda M Hershkowitz,
Jeanne C Morse, Leonard J Klaif,
Hector L Garcia, Elise K Brandt,
Robert M Mittenzzwei, Marlene G
Ritehie, Barbar Pearson, Anne
Perno, Garie W Crawford, Elea-
nor L Cummings, Linda D Allen,
William C Thonias, Channing P
Cunningham, Rosa M Lopez, Louis
herman, Seymour Kaplan, Jona-
than Gilbert, Nick A Albaneze.

60 Harriet Sloan, Rachel H
Greenberg, Harold R Davis, Sta-
cey S Calhoun, Thomas C Bat-
tle, Donna R Proulx, Steven O
Salerno, Marian L Roffman, Dian-
that L Perry, Eileen L Krieger,
Clifford Cannon 3rd, Nen Telzer,
Paula E Doster, Olive E Comrie,
Janice L Booker, Carol B Haber,
Ira M Grber, Gail L Evans, Ruth
S Herman, Mary Newton, Joy D
Manoli, Philip H Kamlarz, Rebec-
Ca S Thatcher, Stuart C Crawford.

Alfred Q Carroll 3rd, Diane O
Henderson, Laura J Longenecker,
Phyllis Lowinger, Diane B Roth-
stein, Dane B Warren.

90° Joann Jones, Gwendolyn
Daniels, Kelvin Urquhart, Loyce
M Gibbs, Jeanette Blake, Linda
N Rueli, Elinor Dubroff, Roberta
R Kramer, Marcia R Kassel, Mar-
cia I Cohen, Michael L Porter,
Angela T Macklin, John R Bev-
erly 3rd, Anita A Looney, Ger-
maine G Branch, Madeline C
Branch, Linda Pisetzner, Betty
Kemp.

Pharmacist Trainee

1 Howard B Newman, Stephen
E Semo, Margaret P Mazzullo, Ed-
ward M Klaman, Stuart Rosoff,
Henry A Rephen, Gary D Clark,
Janet A Manco, Gennaro F De-
luise, John Malynchak, Akeita M
Graves, Therese M Lipski, Louis F
Latilla, Vincenza N Petrelli, Glo-
ria E Acosta, Arthur K Yellin,
Michael R Harris, Evelyn M An-
gel, Peter F Ciesla, Michael Ca-
farella, Louis R Heisler, Genia H
Kaminetzky, Barbara R Katz, Sey-
mour Ruditsky, Howard Leib,
Louls J Aliota, Irving Fox, Jo-
seph J Ellegast, Asmond F
Francis.

30 Swissa M Canillas, Leonor G
Beltran, Beatrice I Thwaites, Lila
Perez, Matthew Burd, Louis Kauf-
man, Irving B Siegel, Abraham
Gartenberg, Benjamin Hochman,
Sophie Minichiello.

PSYCHIATHIST
1 Louis Goldstein.

Nathaniel | —

Barbara F Sperling, Diane M Ci-!

This Week's City Eligible List

EXAMINATION NO. 8535
PROMOTION TO ASSISTANT
SUPERVISOR (ELECTRICAL

POWER) NYCTA

1 Walter F Newerencauk, Robert
M_ Fiebert,
William I Sorel,
tecki,
R Panelli,

Joseph J Kos-

Edward Zebrowski,

Joseph F Mazzaro, Joseph
Abraham Braustein,

Peter B Cchiovari, Ulysses S Davis,

Vineent Russo, Howard T Mall,
Andrew P Chiovari, David Lorber,
John P Martone, Salvatore Blando,
Pasquale FP Perrotta.

PROGRAM REVIEW ASSISTANT

1 Jeanette E Rogers, Laurence
Moss, Amy C Booth, Hargaret A
Best, Jessie L Carson, Wilma S
Jeff, Chong D Lim.

ELECTRICAL ENGINEER
1 Vito A Nittolt.

(F.D.)

REAL ESTATE VALUES

~ Farms & Country Homes, —
New York State

NEW SUMMER. Cas
Bi

lon of Hundreds of
it Eseate ae 4

ness Bargains. All
& Prices. Dahl Realty,
N.Y.

pes. Sizes
Cobleskill,

Copake Lake (Housekeeping)
Units For Rent

COPAKE LAKE: Housekeeping units, com:
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325-3178.

(518)

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Sullivan County

* shingle home

DL

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R.
BERTHA
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UPPER BRONX

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ASKING $33,000

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OL 45400

finished

CAMBRIA HTS. $25,990

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LONG ISLAND HOMES

168-12 Hillside Ave. Jamaica

|| ° MANY OTHER 1 & 2

Copake Lake
House For Sale

Copake Loke
Cabins For Sale

COPAKE LAKE: Por sale
Complecely furnished.

4 Cal
Few
Lake. Priced for quick sale, Phil Auer
bach, Craryville, N.Y. (518) 325-3178,

For Sale - Schoharie County

VILLAGE - 10.ROOM RETIREMENT
‘asily converted to 2.family

Part furnished. Lor
OWNER - BOX’ OQ.
NY. 1

wT ‘$8,500,
RICHMONDVILLE,
2149,

“Farms & Country Homes, —

2 families, or occupy one & rent other.

Immed. jPosestion. Golf courses & rec Orange County
teational facilities by, Monticello pat Adie =

3 mil allsburg 2 miles. Price| "pik, Acreage

_ $25,000. 212-658-8144

Farms. &  Cquatry Homes
Ulster County

4 ROOM Cottage in Kingstoe eho WANT Ti
errors Nara pager 70 crt arse Mow mm
ALSOr Bars — pene = and Bara, pire tl Ji sac?

$2/500: 2. plus acr

BERTHA GALLY. RE.
Boice s La, Kingston, NY 914-338-9220
Opp. Holiday In

914-338-0285

ST. ALB. 319,990
WIDOW'S SACRIFICE

Der Engl Stucco Cottage, 6 ige rms,

fin'd basement, gar. Modern thru-out,

Landsepd

CAMBRIA HTS $27,990
2 FAM SET-UP

Det colonial, 5 Ig rms om 1 fir. 4

rm apt. fn bsmt. 2
tree-lined. street.
QUEENS VILLA

OWNER TRANSFERRED

Det legal, 2 fam 5 & 3 rms. Gar. Fin'd
hasmt, All modern

car gat. Set om a

4 Garden grou
SPED GARDEN $38,990
LEGAL 2 FAM 6/6
6 ye old brk & shingle. 6 rms io
cach apt, Fin bsmr, Landsepd fenced:

in grounds,

FAM HOMES AVAIL

‘||| QUEENS HOMES

| OL 8-7510
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To Keep Informed,

RE 9-7300

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SAI
BALI HAI,

“Aepson, "YACVAT FOIAUSS TAI

6961 “S Busny

=RVICE LEADER, Tuesday, August 5, 1969

Candidates For CSEA Statewide Office

(Continued from Page 9)
headquarters staff.

He is employed by the Mont-
gomery County Department of So-
cial Services as a Resource Con-
sultant. He is a graduate of Siena
College with a BA in Sociology.
A veteran of World War Il, Tar-
mey served three years in the
European Theater of Operations
and also served in Africa and in
Tran and in the C.B.1.

He is the immediate past grand
knight of Council No. 209, Knights
of Columbus, is presently serv-
ing as chairman of the compre-
hensive health plan group for
Montgomery County and ts a
member of many other civic or-
ganizations,

‘Tarmey is married to the form-
er Edith Hartnoll and is the father
of two daughters, Katherine and
Nancy.

soe
GEORGE W. DE LONG
Candidate For Fifth Vice President

George W. DeLong is an em-
ployee of the Department of
Mental Hygiene, and has served
for 22 years at Craig State School,
Sonyea.

He was CSEA chapter president
of the Craig State School chap-
ter in 1958 and 1959. During this
administration he advocated and
succeeded in having his chapter
join the Western Conference, At
that time the Craig State School
ehapter was the only large chap-
ter in the Conference area not
belonging to the Western Con-
ference,

He has served on the executive
council of his chapter for 18 years,
and has served on countless chap-
te: standing and special com-
mittees.

In 1959, he was elected second
vice-president of the Western Con-
ference and helped organize the
newly created legislative contact
committee. This importnt com-
mittee arranges area meetings
with Legislators to bring before
them the CSEA program.

He also served on various other
conference committees and was

proxy to the State CSEA Board
of Directors.

In 1960, he was again elected
to the office of second vice-presi-
dent of the Western Conference,
continuing as chairman of the
legislative contact committee
and proxy to the Board of Diree-
tors. He was appointed by Prest-
dent Feily to the State Educa-
tion and Attendance Rules Com-
mitiee,

In 1962, was elected president
of the Western Conference, con-
tinuing to represent this body on
the Board of Directors, and was
appointed to the special commit-
tee to develop regional conference
problems, educational, memortal
plaque and Buffalo convention

host committee,

In 1963, was re-elected pres!-
dent of the Western Conference,
and it was during his adminis-
tration that the conference paved
the way for county chapters to
become conference members. Con-
tinuing to serve on the Board of
Directors. he was appointed to the
following Committees by President
Feily: director's chapter, special
committee to develop regional con-
ference problems, educational, spe.
cial committee to study the fea-
| ibility of removing the ‘‘no strike
clause’’, from the CSEA State
constitution, memorial plaque,
nominating, legislative and was
present at some of the salary
committee meetings.

At present he continues as a
member of State committees and
also hag helped with clerical at-
tendants, and industrial shop ap-
peals for reclassification.

On completion of his term as
Conference president he was pre-
|sented with a citation by the con-
| ference for outstanding service in
|behalf of Public Employees.

In March, of 1968, he was ap-
pointed by President Wenzl as
chairman of the Statewide griev-
ance committee, a standing com-
mittee of the Association. In Octo-
ber, 1968, he was re-appointed for
another year, and at present is
serving his fellow employees in
this capacity.

Remaining active at all CSEA
levels, he continues to work to
elevate the positions and fight
for the rights of all public em-
ployees.

eee
NICHOLAS PUZZIFERRI
Candidate For Fifth Vice-President

Nick entered State service at
Rockland State Hospital in 1937
as a student nurse. He graduated
in 1940 and moved up in the

nursing levels to his present po-
sition of supervising nurse, After
a number of years of activity in
the Rockland State Hospital chap-
ter he became president of the
chapter in 1957 and served in
that capacity for seven years.

While president of the chapter,
he became involved in the South-
ern New York Conference by
working on a number of com-
mittees and serving as fourth and
first vice-president. In 1963, he
was elected conference president
and seryed for two terms, As Con-
ference president, Nick was @
member of the CSEA State Execu-
tive Committee and the Board of
Directors. After a two-year inter-
val he was again elected to the
presidency of the Southern Con-
ference in 1967 and 4s now serv-
ing hls second term of this sec-
ond round,

Nick has gained some rather
extensive insight in the organl-
zation and operation of CSHA by

his membership on the following
committees: education committee,
legislative committee, constitu-
tion and by-laws committee, pla-
que committee, credentials com-
mittee, the no strike committee,
the committee to study proposed
dues increase, The Leader nego-
fations committee, and several
committees of the Board of Di-
rectors. For the last six years
he has been a member and one
of the committee chairmen of
the Metro-Southern and Metro-
Southern-Long Island Conference
Workshop committees.

Nick and his wife, Marge, who
is also a graduate of Rockland’s
School of Nursing, and does part-
time nursing in a local hospital,
have a home in Pearl River. In
local activities he is chairman of
the Rockland State Hospital Boy
Scou. committee, and is a mem-
ber of she Triune Council of the
Knights of Columbus in Pearl
River.

Tn his work, chapter, and Con-
ference activity, Nick has taken
leadership in stride. He now
seeks the office of fifth vice-
president of CSEA and is fully
convinced that there is enough
intelligence, capability, skill, and
determination among the public
servants of the State of New York
and its political subdivisions to
enable them to run their own
labor organization, and to produce
results at the negotiating table
which are second to none.

see

DOROTHY E. MacTAVISH

Candidate For Secretary
Dorothy MacTavish is just com-
pleting her first two-year term
as CSEA Statewide secretary. She
states that this has been a most
stimulating and gratifying experi-
enc. She has become very fami-
Mar with the duties of the office
and has fulfilled these duties to
the best of her ability, and, she
believes, to the satisfaction of

eyeryone concerned. She has at- |)

tended all meetings of the Board
of Directors,
and delegates (with the excep-
tion of one meeting when she was
hospitalized), and has furnished
headquarters with a rapid and
accurate transcrir+ of all these

meetings. In addition, she has
traveled widely throughout the
State, attending meetings and so-
cial functions in her capacity as
secretary, and has performed nu-
merous other duties of the office.

As to her background and ex-

verlence, she feels that the
ten years of her employment at
CSEA headquarters (1950 through
1960) gave her a valuable insight
into the problems of the Associa-
tion and enabled her to better fill
the office of secrotary, From 1960

to 1965, she was employed in the

chapter presidents | © :

office of Lt, Gov. Malcolm Wil-
son as secretary to the State
Commission on the Capital City.
She is now employed as a legal
secretary in the State Court of
Claims in Albany for Presiding
Judge Fred A. Young.

A native of Amsterdam, she
has lived and worked in the Al-
bany area for more than 20 years.
She 1s an active member of the
Nuat‘onal Secretaries Assn. (Al-
bany Chapter). She resides in Al-
bany. Her husband 1s connected
with the General Aniline and
Film Corporation, and they have a
son who ts a high school music
teacher in Connecticut, and a
daughter who is a secretary in
Boston.

If re-elected, Mrs, MacTavish
plans to continue to put her sec-
retarial abilities and experience
to work for CSBA in the most
diligent manner possible.

.

DOROTHY RABIN
Candidate For Secretary

Before entering State service,
I was an executive secretary for
an electronics company for a
number of years. I started work-
ing for the State ag a stenogra-
pher in February, 1962, in the
evening college office of the State
University, Agricultural and Tech-
nical College at Farmingdale.

After three years in that capa-
city at Farmingdale, I transferred
to State University, International
Studies and World Affairs Cen-
ter at Oyster Bay as secretary to
Dr. Ivan Putman. I then trans-
ferred to State University College
at Old Westbury where I have
been secretary to the facilities
director.

My community activities in-
cluded: (From 1960-1955) secre-
tary and then president of Levit-
town Education Assn. Upon moy-

ing to Westbury, (between 1956-
1967), I became membership chair.
man and then secretary of the
Westbury Parent-Teachers Assn.

I was a 4-H leader, den mother
and Brownie leader during the
years that my children were grow-
ing up.

Since becoming a civil service
employee, I served first as sec-
retary and then as first-vice pres!-
dent and alternate delegate of
the Farmingdale Civil Service
Employees Assn, Upon transfer-
ring to Oyster Bay, I organized
the CSEA chapter and became the
acting president.

I also organimd the chapter at
Old Westbury and was elected
as its first president and dele-
gate,

I am a member of the State
University presidents’ committee
as well as a member of the State
University select committee,

JACK GALLAGHER
Candidate For Treasurer

Jack Gallagher, candidate for
treasurer of the Civil Service Em-
ployees Assn., is highly qualified
for the position to which he as-
pires in the State-wide election.

Born in Syracuse in 1919, he
was graduated from St. Lucy's
Academy in 1938. From 1943 until
1945 he served in World War If
with a mine and demolition unit,
For his service he received the
combat infantry badge, the
Bronze Star, the ETO, three bat-
tle stars and the New York State
Merit Award.

After service, Jack took courses
in accounting and business man-
agement, and was later employed
as an office manager, a cost ac-
countant, a payroll clerk and
time expediter prior to coming
to work for the Thruway Auth-
ority in 1955.

In his first year of Authority
work he became a member of
the CSEA, and in 1963 became a
delegate to a Special Thruway
Committee. He was elected Presi-
dent of the Syracuse Thruway

oe on
chapter in 1964-65 and re-elected
as president every two years since,
He is presently serving his 1968-
70 term.
He was appointed to the Labor
Relations Board of the Central
Conference in 1966-67; chairman
of the legislative committee of
the Central;Conference in 1967-
68; chairman of the negotiating
committee of the Central Confer-
ence 1968-69; charman of the New
York State Thruway grievance
committee from 1964-69 and is
presently a member of the nego-
tiating committee for Unit 1 of
the Thruway CSEA,
In addition to his Thruway job
and his CSHA activities, Jack has
been manager of the Ilion State
Bowling Center for over 11 years,
and owns and operates the Brook-
haven Mobile Court.
He and his wife, Arlene, reside
in Mohawk. They have three
children, John a project engineer;
Janet, a senior at Oswego State,
and Jill, a High School sophomore.
eee
LOUIE G. SUNDERHAFT
Candidate For Treasurer

Loule G. Sunderhaft has served
on the State pension committee
for the past four years. He
served his first two years under
the former president, Joseph Feily,
and the last two under president
Theodore Wenzl. He is presently
the president and chairman of the
negotiating committee of the City
of Utica Board of Water unit.

Under his leadership the Water
Board now has the State Healt
Insurance Plan and the 1/50(
Career Retirement Plan, This 4
@ first in the political sub-division

(Continued om Page 16)

(Continued from Page 1)
jeave things alone, without’ rock-
ing too many boats.

The hawks are led by Victor
Campione, a Bronx District Lead-
er and long time Procaccino inti-
mate, whose immediate interest is
the election of Procaccino, with
little or no concern about the
future of the Democratic party
and the important Gubernatorial
and Senate elections of 1970. The
doves, who have thus far succeed-
ed in moderating the Campione
influence, are led by Meade Es-
posite, ‘Brooklyn's
chieftain, who sees beyond the
City’s Mayoral race into future
elections, in which some kind of
accommodation with the Party's
liberal wing is essential for the
Party to win

The public announcement on
Tuesday by Assemblyman Albert
1H, Bhumenthal of his endorsement
of Mayor John V. Lindsay will

tion as an Assemblyman, Blumen-
thal is Deputy Minority Leader of
Se Assembly, under Assemblyman

Representative
Bhirley Chisholm of Brooklyn, an-
junced for Lindsay. Mrs. Chis-
im is also Democratic National
ommitteewoman.

The Campione wing promptly
ent after Mrs. Chisholm's scalp

Mitteewoman and wanted her to
removed from that post. Es-
and Democratic State
Chairman John Burns managed to
ontain the sharp reaction of
‘ampione and his supporters at
he Procaccino headquarters.
Reshape The Party
This is precisely the unarticu-

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Don't Repeat This! |

lated strategy of the liberal and
reform wing of the Democratic |,
party, who plan to reshape the |:
party in their own image. From
their point of view, Procaccino
personifies the party's reactionary
elements, whom the liberals are
Prepared to read out of the party.
In their judgment the party
should lean to the left, but not so
far out as to alienate the broad
middle moderate group.

The doves in the Procaccino
camp, like Meade Esposito, believe
that they can bridge the gap be-
tween the Party's right and left
wings, with the center, represent-
ed by himself and the traditional
party leadership, retaining con-
trol.

The net result of a long series
of conferences on that subject at
Procaccino headquarters among
Party leaders and Procaccino ad-
visors was a public statement by

NEW OFFICERS — ric new officers of the Rockland
State Hospital chapter, Civil Service Employees Assn, were installed
recently following a regular chapter meeting. Left to right, are:
Thomas Brann, field representative;
Ames Damon, third vice-president; Edna Knightly, treasurer;
bella Eufemio, secretary; Martin Langer, first vice-president;
ine Holmes, second vice-president;
sentative and Thomas Luposello, supervising field representative.

George Celentano, president;
Re
Earl-
W. Reuben Gorgin, field repre-

Burns that there would be no re-
prisals, but that Representative
Chisholm had painted herself into
a conflicts of interest corner that
she could resolve only by resign-
ing from her party post as Na-
tional Committeewoman. In effect
Burns suggested that Mrs. Chis-
holm should reprise herself.

It had been known for some
time that Assemblyman Blumen-
thal would come out for Lindsay,
with only the timing in doubt.
Black political and community
leaders had been awaiting Blum-
enthal’s announcement with deep-
est interest to see what the party
reaction wouki be to his defection.
Unless Burns recommends that
Blumenthal should oonsider re-
signing his post as Deputy Min-
ority Leader, the black leaders are
prepared to pounce upon Burns
for reacting differently to black
and to white defectors,

Lindsay Strategy

In the meanwhile the Lindsay
strategy for handling the Demo-
erats who switch to his support
is becoming clear. He is arranging
for their announcement in pairs,
like creatures of the earth board-
ing Noah's ark. There were two
black legislators from Brooklyn, a
pair of legislators from outlying
boroughs, two legislators from
Manhattan's West Side coupled
with a pair of legislators from
Manhattan's East Side, and coming
up in the very near future are two
Borough Presidents: Percy Sutton
of Manhattan and Herman Badillo
of Bronx,

What 1s particularly galling to] ’
Campione is that many of the
Democratic defectors will support
Francis X. Smith, the Democratic

OE’S MT. VIEW

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(From Leader

Nassau Chapter Wins Fight
For Promotional Opportunities
Open To Employees Of Courts

Correspondent)

MINEOLA—Job opportunities in Nassau Supreme Court

open an examination for senior

court officer in the Supreme
Court to persons holding that title

other courts. It also extended

candidate for Council President,
and an even greater number will
support Abraham D. Beame,
Democratic candidate for
Comptrolier.
forces for his two running mates
but not for Procaceino will em-
phasize more deeply the isolation

City
these

Support by

the party's Mayoral candidate

from the party's liberal forces.
And strangely enough, no one
has dared state if you're not for
Mario you can't be for Smith and
Beam

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have been assured for the staffs of other courts through
the efforts of Nassau chapter, Civil Service Employees Assn.

The State Judicial Conference,
sued by the chapter for closing
job opportunities to some pros-
pective applicants, has settled the
case out of court by agreeing to
the demands of CSEA, it was an-
nounced by chapter president ev
ing Plaumenbaum.

The Judicial Conference agreed

the time to file for the examina-
tion and accepted CSEA's demand
that an existing civil service list

of four years and that the list be
exhausted before appointments
from the new eligible list are
made.

“We received complaints from
court personnel that this situation
was unfair,” Flaumenbaum as-
serted. “I am glad to report that
the Judicial Conference has re-
sponded fully.”

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be extended to its maximum life |

9 Nassau Units
Ratify Contracts

|
(From Leader Correspondent)

MINEOLA—In two local
contract settlements,, the Nas-
sau chapter of the Civil Serv-
ice Employees Assn, has gain-
ed salary boosts and key. benefits
sought by employees of the vVil-
age of Bast Rockaway and the
Long Beach Sewer District.

The village pact, ratified unan-
imously, provides full hospitaliza-
tion insurance, liberalized vaca-
tions and a five-day work week
in addition to a $24 across-the-
board salary adjustment. The two-
year pact also provides for a cost-
jof-living adjustment in the second
year.

Unit president Harry Conklin,
who was aided by Nassau chapter
president Irving Flaumenbaum in
negotiations, praised mediator
Frank McGowan of the Public
Employment Relations Board, who
ended a deadlock.

The Long Beach unit won a
reven percent pay boost along with
reviement and vacation benefit
liberalization. The two-year agree-
ment also calls for talks in the
second year on a cost-of-living
adjustment

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CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, Au

$6.00 Minimum

50 Items In Contract
Demands Of Nassau
Chapter Negotiators

(From Leader

Correspondent)

MINEOLA—A 50-item negotiationg package—including a
20 percent across-the-board pay boost, $1,000 minimum in-

crease and $6,000 minimum salary.

has been presented on

behalf of more than 12,000 county employees by the Nassau

chapter, Civil Service Employees
Assn,

Chapter president Irving Flaum-
menbaum noted that the broad
package represented the expre:
ed needs of employees in all de-
partments, whose delegates met
in long sessions to hammer out
the program.

The demands were presented in
two preliminary negotiation ses-
sions last week with county of-
ficials,

Flaumenbaum said it had been
agreed to accelerate talks in Aug
ust. “We hope to complete the
job by Sept. 15," he asserted.

The Cs

Negotiating for
*laumenbaum, regional
Richard C. Gaba and
representing all departments,
cluding two nurses

“The cost of living has soared
about six and one-half
since our last contract, and may
hit 10 percent by the time our

ZA Team
CSBA are
attorne
delegates
in-

new contract is effective,
Flaumenbaum asserted. “By the
end of next year, who knows

where it will be?

“Formulae of the past are not
relevant. We intend to fight for
fair treatment circa 1969."

Other major features demand-
ed include 25-year retirement at
half pay, time and one half for
overtime, double time for sixth
and seventh day worked, double
time and one half for holidays, in-
creased medical and dental in-
surance, pay for unused sick leave
on separation or retirement, full
seniority and binding arbitration
of disputes.

Also, pay for nurses be brought
up to par and top of salary grade
to be reached in three years in-
stead of six,

Cent. Conf. Initiates
Polit. Action Panel;
Convention Bus Set

(Continued from Page 8)
mittee “will work closely with and
be guided by” CSEA’s State-wide
Political Action Committee, Kas-
gon explained.

The group will also get to
know the State and local legis-
lators in all areas of the con-
ference, ask them to keep com-
mittee members advised on all
Civil Service matters coming up
in the State and local legisla-
tures and provide legislators with
information on what legislation
the conference and CSEA would
like to see passed,

The executive committee also
has decided that the conference
will sponsor a bus for members
who plan to attend the CSEA
meeting in September in New
York ity. Miss Callaghan of
Syracuse chapter will chair the
committee arranging for the bus.

The group discussed other com-
mittee assignments—to be an-
nounced later—and plans for the
conference's next meeting in the
Pall.

percent |

Albany Retirees
Unit Selects
First Officers

ALBANY—Members of the

Area Retirees Group of the
Civil Service Employees Assn.,
chose their first slate of elected
officers at a recent meeting of the
group held at CSEA Headquart-
ers in Albany.

Dr. Albert H. Harris, of Sling-
erlands, was elected to the post

chairman, Vera R. Russell, of
Delmar, the secretary will be
Elizabeth Steenburgh of Schenec-
tady, and May M. Deeve, of Al-
|bany was chosen as treasurer.
An Executive Council of five
was also elected by the member-
ship and ouneil members will be
Mildred Meskil, who had been
chairman of the Ad Hoc Com-
mittee on Retirees and Chair-
man of the Nominating Commit-

O'Hagan, Ralph Winton and
John Coffey.

In a brief address of accept-
ance of the post, Dr. Harris called
}upon the members to wage an
active campaign to interest
younger employees in CSEA, to
interest other retired employees
in membership in the group and
|to actively participate in the de-
velopment of programs that will
benefit retirees,

Dr. Harris announced the ap-
{pointment of the following Com-
mittees: Constitution & By-Laws
Mildred Meskil, chairman; Mem-
bership, Margaret Willi and Ethel
Bellew, co-chairmen; Social,
Helen Rich; Resolutions, Char-
lote Clapper; Legislation, Sey-
mour Ellenbogen; Publicity, May
DeSeve.

‘The next meeting of the Unit
will be on September 17,

(CSEA Leads Fight
Seasonal Barge

Aides Win Night
‘Differential Pay

| (Special To The Leader)
ALBANY—As the result of

ployees will receive inconvenience
pay for night work prorated to
the amount of days they work dur-
ing the year.

Inconvenience pay for regular
full-time State employees who
work four hours or more between
6 p.m. and 6 a.m. was negotiated
at $300 per year by CSEA earlier
this year,

The permanent seasonal barge

Candidates

(Continued from Page 14)
to be negotiated. He also has the
title of first vice president of
the Onelda County chapter, and
has served on its salary com-
mittee, legal committee and griey-
ance committee,

Sunderhaft is a native of Utica
and is married to the former
Loretta Techmanski. He is the

Albany unit, Capital District|

of chairman. He will have as vice- |

tee, Charlotte Clapper, Isabelle M. |

[efforts of the Civil Service |
| Employees Assn,, permanent
| seasonal barge canal em-

| father of three children; a mem-
ber of the Usher's Club at Our
Lady of Lourdes Church, and a
|Fourth Degree Knight of Col-
| umbus,

Loule attended Utica College
Jond majored in accounting. He
| has received other training in data
|processing. Presently he is in
| charce of the Data Processing
Department of the City of Utica.
Previous to his present position,
|he headed the Accounting Depart-
ment for the Water Board.

He is a former unit director of
the Boys Club of Utica and a
|former director of the Central
Water Works Assn.

| Competitive Unit
rie Chapter Wins
5.5% Pay Boost For
‘Buffalo School Aides

| (From Leader Correspondent)

BUFFALO—Cost of living
pay increases for non-teach-
ing employees of the Buffalo
school system were assured
| this week after a surplus of near-
ly $2 million was reported in the
City treasury.

The non-teaching custodians
clerks and other personnel are
represented in collective bargain-
ing under the Taylor Law by Buf-
falo Competitive unit, Erie chap-
ter, Civil Service Employees Assn.

“It now appears,” said Mayor
Frank A. Sedita, in revealing the
surplus, “that the cost of living
during the past year has increased
5.5 percent.” The mayor estimated
the total cost of paying the 5.5
Percent at about $2.5 million.

Although gratified with the pay
boost, CSEA leaders explained
that CSEA negotiators bargained
for the cost-of-living provision and
it is provided for in contracts
with the City.

“We don’t want the impression
to get around," said one CSEA
worker, "that employees will only
get the increase when the City

workers will get proportionate
Percentages of that amount de-
pending on the number of days
they work per year.

CSEA president, Theodore C.
Wenzl declared, CSEA is proud to
be responsible for winning this
benefit for permanent seasonal
barge canal employees.”

THE WINNER — thomas McDonough, left, president of the
Albany Motor Vehicle chapter of the Civil Service Employees Assn,
congratulates the winner of the annual motor vehicle race held re.
cently at the Saratoga Raceway in Saratoga Springs,

CSEA Protests
Safety Officer
Upgrading Delay

(Special To The Leader)

ALBANY—The Civil Sery-
ice Employees Assn. has re-
ceived word from John J.
Mooney, assistant administra-
tive director and counsel to the
State Civil Service Commission,
that the commission's determina-
tions on the CSEA-sponsored re-
allocation of positions in the in-
stitution safety officer series will
be delayed because “the serious
consideration required mandates
deliberate detailed study of all
the Issues involved.”

CSEA has been seeking reallo-
cations of from grade 8 to 12 for
institution safety officers, from
grade 11 to grade 16 for institu-
tion safety supervisors and from
grade 13 to grade 18 for chief
safety supervisors,

“We are not happy with this
answer,” said CSEA president
Theodore C. Wenzl last week.
“The reallocations of these em-
ployees has béen on the State's
back burner for nearly a year
now.

“The facts are clear and irre-
futable: these employees’ duties
and responsibilities have changed
radically, and they deserve real-
locations, Perhaps if this delay
results in the desired realocations,
it can be justified. But so far,
it cannot.”

Laundry
(Continued from Page 8)
Village, Pilgrim State Hospital,
Rochester State Hospital, Rock-
land State Hospital, Syracuse
State School, Utica State Hospi-
tal, Wassaic State School and

Willowbrook State School,

“Most of the improvements are
in effect now and the rest should
be done by next summer,” Wenzl
told The Leader. “‘Now the laun-
dry workers can work in com-
fort and do better jobs, We are
grateful to the Mental Hygiene
officials for acting so promptly
in correcting the poor conditions
once they were pointed out by
CSEA.”

has a surplus. The increase is a
contractual obligation of the
City.”

Joseph Drago is chairman of the
CSEA unit that represents non-
teaching workers.

Taconic Park Post
ALBANY — State Conservation
Commissioner R. Stewart Kilborne
of Katonah has been reappointed
to the Taconic State Park Com-
mission. His new term ends Jan.
31, 1975.

Therapists Eligible
To Receive Benefits
Of Career Ladders

ALBANY—The Civil Service
Employees Assn, last week as-
sured all State employees who
hold titles in the occupation.
al therapy-recreational therapy.
physical therapy series in every
State department that they are
eligible for the career ladders
won by CSEA and printed re-
cently in The Leader,

An Association spokesman said
CSEA had received some inquiries
whether the career ladders ap-
plied to title-holders in all de-
partments.

Election
Scoreboard

Here is the official box scorg|
of the elections.
Operational Unit

Eligible. ?
Council 50

\smru ...

Oper. Engin. .

Total Valid .

Challenged .

No Vote .. ee.
‘Total Valid & Challenged . 13,420
Volded . él
Clerical, Administrative Unit
Bligible + 35,046)
CSEA + 18,643}
Council 50 2,428
SEIU

No Vote

Valid Total

Challenged .... ,
Total Valid & Challenged 24,191
Professional Scientific And

Technical Unit
Eligible .. Ann
NYNA
CSEA
SEIU
Council 50
No Vote
Valid Total
Challenged *
Total Valid & Challenged

Institutional Services
Hligible :
Council 50
CSEA . ae
No Vote
Valid Total
Challenged . F
Total Valid & Challenged .
Security Unit

22,10
Unit

Metadata

Resource Type:
Periodical
Rights:
Image for license or rights statement.
CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
Date Uploaded:
December 22, 2018

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