Civil Service Leader, 1973 October 30

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, Ciwil Sewier
LEADER Bis, toute hane _ Coverage

America’s Largest Newspaper for Public Employees

— See Pages 8&9

XXNTV, No. 31 Tuesday, October 30, 1973 Price 15 Gents

Transportation Bond

Issue Gets CSEA OK

ALBANY — New York's largest public that "it was the proper thing to do from

employee union, the Civil Service Employ- any standpoint — economic, ecological and

ees Assn., last week officially endorsed the practical

adm tration’s $3.5 billion transportation Our present transportation network and

bond issue mass transit facilities can only get worse
The support was voted here at a regular as the burden on them increases, What the

meeting of the union's Board of Directors, state needs right now in this respect is to

who represent CSEA‘s 210,000-plus member- take a real giant step to build a lot more

ship employed by the

ate and local gov- ew roads, improve existing ones, and put

a ernment jurisdictions throughout proper emphasis on adequate mass trans-
VICTOR PESCI ARTHUR BOLTON York portation. We think that the bond issue
e decis: Pe ending 5 such a giant st aw i
i EXECUTIVE CHAIRMEN — Victor Pesci, teft, was elected ee decision cer wer ee, we Lan wh ina step 1 wise inyestmen'
b last week as chairman of the Civil Service Employees Assn.'s State Sty this month, when a full cony ney Ore

Executive Committee, meeting for the first time since the statewide Of CSEA statewide delegates had tentatively The CSEA chief also thought it signifi-
elections last month, Mr, Pesei is currently serving his third term discussed the question but then turned it cant that his Board's approval was unanim-
as Banking departmental representative on the State Executive over to the union's smaller body of dire ous, without dissent based on geography.
Committee, His counterpart as County Executive Committee chair- for further consideration and resolution Our endorsement comes from a firm con-
man, Arthur Bolton, right, was re-elected as County chairman at the Cc president Theodore C. Wenz! said viction that the bond issue will benefit the
CSEA Delegates Meeting earlier this month at the Concord Hotel. he was pleased with the endorsement and entire state equitably,” Wenzl sald.
Mr. Bolton had moved up to the chairmanship last summer after
having served as vice-chairman for nearly two years. The two
chairmen serve as members of the Board of Directors executive :
committee, the Association’s top governing body in the interims ] (d Th Le; d |
between Board or Delegate meetings, Other members of the exec nisi e e a er
e tive committee are the ten statewide officers; president Theodore CSEA Calendar ]
« zl, executive vice-president Thomas H. McDonough, vice-
presidents Irving Flaumenbaum, Solomon Bendet, James Leno:
Joseph McDermott, Richard Cleary and William McGowan, se
retary Dorothy MacTavish
members of the committee, ¢
bany last week are, repre:

— See Page 3

Latest Eligible Lists

i treasurer Jack Gallagher, At-large — See Page 15
cted at the Board meeting im Al

ing the State Executive Committe lf Nassau Chapter |
Anna Bessette, William Deck, Edward Malone, Nicholas Puzziferri |] Observes 25 Years

and Emil Spiak, and, representing the County Executive Conmitice, |} — See Page 16

William Doyle, John Mauro and William Sole. l

. _ To Seek Clarification On Individual

woe, | Mgt/Cont Classification Appeals
Repeat This! | 20x02

rifieation of a iploymen ations Board
(PERB) rule wh permits state employees classified as
Schuler Predicts anaginient confidential to appeal the designation under

in conditions on an indi

Stable Program if vidual bas!

Reassurance yf 1 € tence 19
vidual appeal procedure

Bond Issue Passes ‘a2"snen to CRAs Board

By RAYMOND T. SCHULER Dir cctors 5

Commissioner of Transportation {on's_ attorneys but th
mitted
TOTER approval of the the form

1973 Transportation
Issue will mean the

ssn. will seek

deprived
tutional

and lost

ily co
he U
ied C

Court

WENZL TESTIFIES — rheodore C. Wenal, right, recently
St to be heard — pe-elected statewide president of the Civil Service Employees Assn.,
testifies at a recent hearing in Albany before the Assembly Commit.

consequen

in Undertake a stable, press for clarification & ve tee on Governmental Employees, chaired by Assemblyman Alvin M.
1-year program of capital im- CBEA had sought to throw ed employees is to go Suchin, James Roemer, CSEA counsel, is seated next to Dr, Wenal.
i and also p t the ban a) he route of the iudividual ap- ‘This was the first in a series of hearings by the Assembly commit-

1 ivansportation ass bership by stat wided under the PERB tee being held throughout the state to hear testimony on possible
(Continued on Page 6) fied as manager revision of the State's Taylor Law

Dist. Officers Elected

POUGHKEEPSIE John A
has been elected pres-

Rockland Chapter Mounts Membership Drive gsr

NEW CITY—The Rock- the names and
d County chapter of the  non-m
¢ Employees Assn, ber 0

our people have. been gained Mauro cont
ated efforts of spade a
state

Let's call a

mbes

pa

employee CSEA in

he

nting an all-out cam- | Members in each bar and our local bargaining athauica Si Gated: cs of the Poughkeepsie City
sigh up all non-mem- 7 4 nformation wi tables s is a very costly pro- Ns _— : % i t ol District unit of the Civil

‘Sala < Bia) Gant hemataoaas make direct contact cess, A dues increase can be Pay Weir fair share of CBEA’S service Employees Assn, for the
non-member avoided Lf we make a concerted representation costs by remain- 1973-75 term, Serving with him

chapter membership com- to J

t to sign up the ‘free load- ing non-members. Those who do are newly elected officers Gary
s been asked to coop- president of the Rockland Cou ers’ Who have been sitting back pay dues are wholly justified in Marquette, vice-president; Jos-
Flip Amodio, CSEA ty chapter of CBEA, "The ber and reaping the harvests we have labeling them ‘free loaders’ and eph La Penna, treasurer, and Al
field representative, in obtaining fits that have beon gained for gotten for them. tree riders (Continued on Page 14)

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, October 30, 1973

Registered Nurses

May Apply Now
For State Positions

Experienced registered
nurses may apply for the
health service nurse exam
offered by the state for posi-
tions available in the Dept.
of Civil Service in New York,
Albany, Buffalo and Syra-
cuse. Applications for the
test, no. 20-333, will be ac-
cepted from now until fur-
ther notice.

Starting salary is $10,155, plus
differehtials for designated coun-
ties, The written test will ex-
amine candidates’ knowledge,
skills, and/or abilities in various
areas of nursings. See page 15
of The Leader for where to ob-
tain applications.

To qualify for the position,
candidates should be licensed
registered nurses and have one
of the following: a BS in nurs-
ing or with a major in nursing
plus one year of professional ex-
perience; or an associate degree
in nursing plus two years of pro-
fessional experience, including
‘one year in occupational or pub-
lie health, or supervisory mili-
tary nursing, or in emergency
room service or intensive care
unit, or as a school nurse teach-
er, or an equivalent com¥ination
Of these; or graduation from an
approved school of nursing plus
one year of the specialized pro-
fessional nursing experience out-
lined above.

Those within six months of
receiving a degree and with the
appropriate nursing experience
may be admitted to the exam.
Other opportunities for nurses
exist with the state, Por more
information, write to the New
York State Dept. of Civil Service
(see The Leader, page 15)

USE YOUR FINGERS
TO GET AHEAD!

Learn to be a Steootype Reporter,
‘Work when you with—for good pay.
by N.Y, Suite Education

CALL Wi

STENOTYPE ACADEM

259 Broadway - Opposite Ghy Hall

Dept.
FOR FREE CATALOG
| Wo 2.000:

After memorial services
for firefighters killed in line
of duty, or who have passed
away, it is time to do some
soul searching.

‘The bitter tragedy of the
widows whose husbands were
wrenched from them fills me
with dread. To behold such trag-
edy is to have one’s soul torn
asunder for many days sfter-
ward. It certainly is not some-
thing which can be immediately
erased from the subconscious. I
have some thoughts which, I
suppose, have been expressed by
others in different ways. My own
thoughts will just add slightly
to the growing crescendo on the
subject,

Listening to speeches at the
memorial ceremony, I found sin-
cerity In some speakers, and a
pious, tinsel-like quality of
others,

The Commissioner's words
were certainly sincere. Close to
death and tragedy as a firefight-
er, he was in the best position
to know what he was talking
about, and did so eloquently,
Other uniformed speaker's did
likewise.

We have open to us certain
means ty which to honor our
dead in a more tangible manner.
But we let politics interfere with
our efforts to do so.

We award medals to heroic
firefighters at annual medal day
ceremonies and we say that the
people of @ grateful city express
their thanks to these heroes for
monumental risks and spectacu-
lar results, The speeches are
made, the band plays, everyone
is proud and the ceremony ends
with each going his separate way
and so much for that until next
year, So it goes in politics.

I, however, refuse to think
these ceremonies really end with
the last speech, or the Jast line
at the bottom of the printed pro-
gramme (which says in so many
words that after this fellow sits
down, it’s all over so scram)

For information on
Group Health Coverage write

GROUP HEALTH
INCORPORATED

227 West 40th Street, New York 10018
Phone: 564-8900

SR ar

- FIRE he FLIES -

repair with friends
restaurant in the
Bronx where I let my hair down
about what the event means to
me.

I think about the firefighter

to Ehring’s

(whjte hat or blueshirt) who
leaves his family in time to be
on duty at the change of tour.
‘The wife seldom if ever says any-
thing but there is always a tinge
of fright . . . the sinking feeling
she hides. The firefighter arrives
and takes over his duties, He is
in perfectly fine health. Then,
somewhere during the tour, he
responds and without a thought
for his‘own safety, he faces the
danger inherent in his job, He
may fall suddenly through
floor, The roof my collapse be-
neath him sending him crashing
through several floors, There may
be a partial wall collapse. Work-
ing his hoseline into a fiat, after
being showered with boiling
paint down his neck, the ceiling
falls and buries him and the rest
of his company, Injuries are sus-
tained. Hospitalization {s follow-
ed by a lengthy convalescence.
Meanwhile, having been a good
student, he would have “hit the
books," taken the next promo-
tional exam, passed It, and would
have been promoted.

The day arrives when he would
have stood to recelve his well-
earned promotion, Instead, he
doesn’t even receive the courtesy
of a note saying “Sorry pal, no
Promotion for you, not in your
busted state.”

This sort of thing has been
going on for years and has
never been tested in court. Since
Hector was a pup, it has been
the prerogative of the Commis-
sioner and the Mayor to pass
over a man for promotion if the
man, even though injured in
line of duty, may be unable to
perform the duties of the next
higher rank, As one stony-heart-
ed Commissioner many years ago
so bluntly put it: “I don’t want
to lead up the Limited Service
‘Squad with a bunch of cripples!"’

Another example of “grati-
tude” is the disgraceful state of
the pension paid to the widows
of line of duty firefighters. When
TI look at the list of cities which
pay as much as double what we
pay to those tragic‘women, TI boil.
We really cannot blame the May-
or on that one because he is
known to have requested the
passage of last year's legislation
to alter the situation. So did
Commissioner Lowery.
some gang of meatheads in Al-
bany looking to grab a head-
line or two who came up with
some of the most assanine ex-
cuses for a veto of the measure,

So, if twice a year I seem to
get more than a little cynical
about this “grateful eclty" bit,
it's because I have too many
words in mind to counteract the
honeylike hypocrisy of those who
Speak such pap. Shoddy, dis-
graceful, heartless and just plain
nauseating are a few tidbits
which come to mind. When fire-
fighters receive such treatment
at the hands of elected and ap~
Pointed officials, “grateful city”
doesn't quite ring true, Too many
firefighters still await the thanks
which never seems to come from
a “grateful city.”

BUY
vu. Ss.
BONDS!

Private Pensions Improved,

According To

State Report

ALBANY—Retirement standards and eligibility require-
ments for workers in private indsutry in New York State
have improved over the last 15 years, according to a pub-
lished report of the State Labor Department entitled 'Pri-

vate Pension Plans in New York
State."

‘The findings are based on a
survey of 279 pension plans with
& combined coverage of approx-
imately one-and-a-half million
workers. Three of every five
plans studied are company ad-
ministered and 247 out of the 279
pension programs examined are
financed on a non-contributory
basis with the entire cost of the
basic pension borne by employers,

Since 1957, 13 percent of the
plans have shifted from a con-
tributory to a non-contributory
basis.

Tn about two-thirds of the
present plans, retirement is man-
datory at a specified age, typi-
cally 65. However, more than 90
percent of the plans permit em-
ployees to retire with reduced

pensions earlier than their nor-
mal retirement dates.

‘The report also shows in most
plans, social security is consid-
ered a supplementary source of
retirement, but unrelated to pri-
vate pension benefits, In one out
of eight plans, part of the social
security benefits were considered
an offset of private pension bene-
fits, Sixty-two plans covering
640,000 workers have reciprocal
arrangements permitting “porta-
bility” of service credit from
employer to employer.

‘The full report, which Includes
summaries of each of the 279
plans, is available for $3 from
the Public Information Office,
State Dept. of Labor, State Office
Building Campus, Albany, New
York 12201

Open Three New Hotels
For Mentally Retarded

ALBANY—Three new hostels, or community residences,
for the mentally retarded have been opened in New York
City, Rochester and Buffalo, according to the State Depart-

ment of Mental Hygiene.

The New York City hostel, lo-
cated at 193 Ninth Ave., is being
operated by Voluntary Residen-
tial Facilities, Inc,, a non-profit
agency, with the department's
assistance, Tt has a capacity of
21 residents.

The Rochester residence, at 595
Brooks Ave. is operated by the
Monroe County chapter of the
New York State Association for
Retarded Children and it has a
capacity of 16.

The new Buffalo facility, at
119 Halbert St, has a capacity
of 25. It ts operated by United
Cerebral Palsy, Inc., of New York
State with assistance from the
state Menta] Hygiene agency.

These new hostels bring to 25
the number of community resi-
dences for the mentally retarded,
currently providing community
living for more than 325 resi-
dents. The programs give the re-
tarded the freedom and oppor-
tunity to engage in community
activities to the extent of their

Deputy Commissioner

ALBANY — Beverlee A. Myers,
acting director of planning and
evaluation in the U.S, Health
office of the Federal Department
of Health, Education and Wel-
jare, will become Deputy Com~-
missioner for Medical Assistance
in the State Department of So-
cial Services Nov. 15 at an an-
nual salary of $39,867,

Kelly Appointed

ALBANY — Assemblyman Ro-
bert P. Kelly, of Brooklyn, has
been named to a new $44,175
past as head of the State Com-
mission on Cable Television.
Former acting chairman Lynn
Wickwire, of Delmar, will oon-
tinue to receive $38,873 as CATV
executive director,

A Pint Of Prevention...
Domate Blood Today
Call UN 1-7200

capabilities, explains Robert
Hayes, deputy commissioner for

mental retardation and chil-
dren's services.
The Department of Mental

Hygiene program provides for the
purchase or lease of residential
facilities for use as hostels. The
department also furnishes and
equips the facility and then pro-
vides up to 50 percent of the op-
erating funds. The hostel itself
is operated by a sponsoring non-
profit agency.

It is anticipated that another
10 hostels will be opened in var-
lous communities of the state be-
fore the end of the year.

Schoonmaker To Parole

ALBANY — John FP. Schoon-
maker, of Middletown, a retired
member of the State Board of
Parole, has been appointed to his
old board on a temporary basis
during the illness of member
Prank Caldwell.

Davidge To Council
ALBANY — Mrs. Jean L.
Davidge, of Binghamton, has
been reappointed to the Council
of SUNY-Binghamton for an un-
salaried term ending July 1,
1982.

Keyes Is Appointed
ALBANY — Robert B, Keyes,
of Albany, is the new counsel to
the State Board of Social Wel-
fare at an annual salary of $26,-
486

Ponts SERVICE LEADER
marica's Leading Weekly
on Public Employees

Published Bach Tusktay
u Bete fy NY, N.Y. 10007

Edizorial Office:
nu wanes % NY, N.Y, 10007

Es Second Ch mall aed

Sete is Paid. Oc

¥, Nom ; the 'Act of
New, a

Seong re 870 $7.00 Ber Your

e

-

Ld

Officers of Letchworth Village chapter of the Civil Service Employees Assn. sign one-year
contract for complete health care plan with North Rockland Medical Group. Seated, from

left, are John Clark, Letchworth CSEA president, Arlington Robinson, agent for the Medt-

cal Grou

Health Center in

MINEOLA A

agreement for
Nassau County

John W, Whittlesey, of New ments and that

Yor eo fact-finder named Should be retroacti
by the State Public Employment luding June 1, 19 he
Relations Board in a contract ‘commended a minimum
dispute between the crease of $500 annually to be ap-
the Nassau chapter plied to each full-time empic
Employees Assn He indicated

Whittlesey

Pass your copy of

The Leader

on to a non-member.

and Manny Ramire.

state

fact-finder has

of the Village of Mineola

should be pro-rated for p
employees by
ratlo of ar

nerator of

ber of hours actually worked by

sis in one

The fact-finde
at the minimu!
ommended wor
imately 24 cents
on the standard
called for

recommended
percent salary inerease in each year of a two-yes
employees

inorease
and in-

nis minimum

applying

the employee in question to a de-
nominator of 2080, the numbe
f hou rmally worked on

increase r

» CSEA

calendar °

1O—SUNY ,

10—

hould

e function

lendar may be subn
include the dat

October

November

tted directly
time, place,

chapter vice-president, Standing are Tovias Kalestein, left,
and Mark Shapiro, pharmacist and dental director, respectively, at
Haverstraw.

Fact-Finder Recommends
7'4% For Mineola Aides

the Norgh Rockland

Kempey Sworn In
Again As Leader
Of LI Armories

HEMPSTEAD—William Kem-
president of the
s chapter of
Employees
week was sworn in
of officers for the

ning term

Hempstead
represe

Letchworth Chapter
Signs Contract For
Health Care Plan

(Special to

The Leader)

THIELLS — After a period of intensive negotiations,
the Letchworth Village chapter of the Civil Service Em-

ployees Assn.

has signed a contract with the North Rock-

land Medical Group to provide a complete health care plan

for chapter members

‘The one-year agreement, which
will run through Oct, 16, 1974
will offer CSEA members who
work at Letchworth Village a
broad range of medical and den-
tal services, laboratory tests and
medicines “at very substantial
savings,” acording to John Clark
Letchworth chapter president

The pact was finalized re-
cently at a meeting that includ-
ed Clark and Manny Ramirez,
vice-president of the Letchworth
chapter, representing the local
CSEA, and Arlington Robinson
agent for the North Réckland
Medical Group and administrat-
or of the North Rockland Health
Center. Clark said the p-
ter had been seeking a hei
care arrangement of this type
singe last spring

The plan became feasible.
Clark explained, when a number
of doctors joined together re-
9 form the Nor
land Medical Group an
facilities to offer a com
sive variety of services at
North Rockland Health Center
Building, which opened its doors
in July of this year on Broad-

way In Haverstraw
Under the union’s new
CSEA members at Letchworth

Village pay a contract fee of
ar and receive an
d, upon pre
and memb
can obtain

any
es. provided by the

health cen-
| reduced rates

Albany Region 4 Plans

Organizational Meeting

ALBANY The {4
Service Employees Assn
9, 10 and 11 at
Accordi
bany Region

is Chalmers,
vernment

cw ne Albany
Rr Union Star
ides: reg

mmittee meeting

itive niceting

om 9:30-11 a.m. on

led by Jear
trman of thi
committee on Civil Se

to discuss testimony
ng lewistative hear

i-winter
Albany Region No.
© Queensbury Hote
to Joseph McDermott, president of the Al

the Civil
li be held
ns Falls.

workshop of
ew
nc

ings. The first half of the reg
g will be concerned wit!
taking pla
restructuring

During the one-year
of the agreement, as stipulated
in the contract, services and
specialties to be available at the
health center Include laboratory
services; dentistry, orthodontics
and dental surgery; pharmacy;
physical therapy; X-rays; elec-
trocardiograms: general practice;
internal medicine; surgery; pedi-
atries; obstetrics; and gyneco-
logy; orthopedics; dermatology;
opthalmology; allergy, and ear,
hose and throat.

Clark said that the Letchworth
Village CSEA chapter of about
1,750 members is the first or-
anization to enter into a signed
agreement to use the medical
group's services and facilities

Poughkeepsie Ed
Wins Benefits,
11% Pay Increase

POUGHKEEPSIE — Main-
tenance and cafeteria work-
ers of the Poughkeepsie City
School District have ratified
@ contract that will provide them
an 11 percent pay increase over
the next two years.

The pact, for 1973-75, includes
5.5 percent increases across the
board for each of the contract's
two years, as. well as improved
increments for longevity. Other
negotiated benefits cover paid
vacation time and a sick leave
bank, according to John A, Pa-
melette, president of the Civil
Service Employees Assn.'s Dut-

hi County Educational Em-
ployees chapter, which represents
most of the employees.

Under the new longevity incre-
ments, employees with 15 years
of service will receive an inere-
ment of $275; 20 years, $325; 25
years, $375, and 30 years, $425.

Those maintenance and cafe-
teria workers with one to 10
8 of service will be entitled
nree weeks of paid vacation:
(Continued on Page 14)

period

MORRISVILLE ANNIVERSARY — Making plans for the

upcoming 25th anniversary and

holiday season celebration of the

State University at Morrisville chapter of the Civil Service Employees

Assn. are these chapter leaders;
Anne

from left, corresponding secretary

ith, treasurer Irene Richardson, vice-president Doris Noble
and president Steve Zarod. The chapter

silver observation will be

Nov, 10 at Dibble’s Inn on Route 5 in Vernon, with the banquet slated

to begin at 7:30 p.m.

£161 “Of qORH “epsony “YACVAT ADAMS TAD
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, October 30, 1973

City Eligible Lists

Exam No,
sanmnassare Ha Aide
‘This Mst of 5,009 eligibles, es-
tablished July 25, resulted from
June 2 written testing for which
14,029 candidates filed and 9,392
appeared. Salary is $7,900,
The Civil Service Commission
has approved the eligibles on this
list for appointment to Police
Administrative Aide effective
Sept. 4 providing those eligibles

STATEMENT OF OWNERSHIP,
MANAGEMENT AND CIRCULATION
(Act of August 12, 1970: Section 68S

Title 39, United States Code)

1, Title of publ CIVIL SER
VICE_LEADER.

2. Date of fing October 1, 1973

3. Frequency of inte: Weekly,

4. Location of known office of pub-
lication; 201 Chuch Sc, Plainfield, New
Jersey 07061.

5. Location of the headquarters of
Reneral busines offices of the publish
ere: 11 Warren Street, New York, New
‘York 10007.

6. Names and addresses of publisher,
aging editor: Publisher:
jons, Ine, Jerey Finke
Niles Balvors Marvin Batley, 49-10. 434
St, 2M, Woodside, N.Y, 11377; Man:
Kiett Kietiberg, 166-33

York 10007. The ‘Civil Service Lealer
is published by Leader Publications,
Inc,. all of whose sock is owned by
ABE Indusries, Inc. The holders of 1%
fot more of the stock of ABC Industries,
Inc, are as follows; Jetry Finkelstein,
S12" Park Avenue, New York; Nathan
H. Mager, 1015 Ease Lawn Drive, Tea-
neck, New Jersey; Burton M. Abrams,
120 Broadway, New York, New Yor!
James Finkelstein, 18 Ease 79
New York, New York; Shitley

sein, 812° Park Avenue, New York,
Lucille Kaplan, 15 oh
New York, New York: Peter

10S Fast Lawn Drive, Teaneck,
New Jersey, N. H. Mager, as custodian
for Alison Mager, 1013 Enst Lawn Drive,
Teaneck, New Jersey; Warren D, Man:
shell, 120 Broadway, New York, New
York; Louis Stein, 3175 John F. Ken:
nedy Boulevard, Philadelphia, Pennsyl-
yania; Troster Singer & Company, 74
‘Trinity Place, New York, New York:
M. Marvin Berger,

Street
Mager

34-65, Avon Street,

New York; Mrs.
beet Marker, 2446 - 63rd

& Victor Hare & Fredrick Gelbere Tr
UA Mar 20 ‘68 Andrew Stein c/o Vic-
tor Harz, 630 Fifth Avenue, New York,

N.Y, 10020; Nathaniel H. Kaplan &
Victor Harz & Frederick Gelberg Tr UA

New York,

Toc. 230 Park Avenue, New York, N
10017; Cede & Co., 44 Broad Str
New York, New York 10004.

bondholders, —mortanares,
nnd other security holders owning of

holding 1 percent of more of total
amount of bonds, mortgages or other
securities: Nove.

%, Extent and nature of circulation:
A. Total number copies printed (Net
Press Run) 220,000 average number
copies each iamies during preceding
12 eomehas 219,175, actual umber
of copies of single isue priblished

filing dave;

ing date;

B, Paid circulation.
1,Sales through dealers and carriers,
areet vendors and counter sales
7.140 average number copies

nearene 10

2. Mail subscriptions
ane number copies each issue during
preceding 12 months; 207,167, actwal
number of copies of single imue
published nearest wo filing date

D. Free dimribution by mail, carrier of

204,400, aver

‘other means: |, Samples complinven
tary, aod other free copies: 430,
average number copies each isme dur
ing preceding 12 months; 350, a¢

published nearest vo fill
2, Copies distribuied to
but mot sold: 4,184, av

of copies of single isnue published
nearest (0 Gling

F. Tosal distribution (Sim of C and

D): 216,174, average number cop

during preceding 12

actual number of

wwe published near

unaccounted.
3026, average
tue duting pre
12 moothy; 3,206, actual
of copies of single imue pub:

lished nearest 10 Sling date,
©, Toul (Sum of F&F

should

equal net prom nin shown in A)
220,00, average number copies eich
juve during preceding 12 montis
219,178,

actual mumber of conics

eaten 10

on the existing Pollee Adminis-
trative Alde list are exhausted.
(From Previous Editions)
No, 2561 — 80%

2561 Myra Jacobson, Sonia
Hanana, Thelma W Daniels, Ro-
gelo V Vernon, Linda Stampler,
Annie B Thompson, Antoinette
Rowley, Ivy Kuspit, Deborah
Petashnick, Mary E Hill, Irwin
P Joseph, Edna E Jenkins, Ida
Goldenberg, Dennis Winter, Isi-
dore Ferber, Lenore P Shanker,
Marie F Mueler, Este C Nelson,
Isabelle Adair, John Sevens Jr.

No, 2581 — 80%

2581 Estele Hender, Bernice M
Miller, Charles W Gluck, Debor-
ah A Stevens, Emma C Or-
lick, Irene K Berlinsk!, Eugenia
A Palumbo, Edward A Condy,
Lillie M White, Ellen Townsend,
Renee A Boyce, Elaine Brown,
David Reichenthal, Janis M Wig-
fall, Morris W Siegel, Florence
Walter, Max Rich, Iris H Al-
Jen, Catherine Smith.

No, 2601 — 80%

2601 Giovanna Russo, Robert
J Judge, Dale Blumenthal,
George Yee, Yvonne Maldonado,
Rosadine Jasper, Dennis P Gal-
lagher, Judith Rosen, Joel B
Goldberg, Geraldine Martin,
Gertrude W Rosen, Lorraine M
Pedro, Evelyn Herschkowitz,
Charles T Heath, Ellen Katz,
Ann P Dunn, Anne T Fahey,
Dolores E Ryan, Elizabeth Yee,
Virginia 8S Pore.

No, 2621 — 80%

2621 Joan D Jones, Elleen G
Donahoo, Margaret E Whalen,
Rose M Salley, Shirley T Gil-
liam, Rosalie Slutsky, Vera Fo-
gelman, Marie R Debnam, Cath-
evine Boschert, Earlette Manetta,
Leah A Merrill, Betty W Gil-
more, Robert P Harris, Mary V
Weisman, Matilda E Adler, Mary
Baumbach, Robert A Misewicz,
Eva M Jackson, Doretha D Col-
lins, Marion W Veal,

No, 2641 — 80%

2641 Delores Walker, Janice A
Torres, Doris L Overton, Jack
Ciccolella, Mae Reggi, Gloria B
Smith, Catherine Graham, Mary
F Stein, Linda E Goldstein, Lil-
Man Meglino, Pearline B Everett,
William G Deluca, Brenda § Lo-
max, Pearl R Weingarden, Mar-
jan M_ Richardson, Charlotte
Goldstein, Rose Parkola, Rose
Kempner, Constance Hicks, An-
gelica Comis.

No, 2661 — 80%

2661 Anne G Ddrapoat, Evelyn
Francis, Carrie Mann, Gai) Al-
fred, Rhoda A Davidoff, Claudelle
Grate, Lawrence A  Gilvestri,
James G Katchusky, Jack Russo,
Agnes Jennings, Sarah GUboff,
Patricia M Williams, Edward J
Masterson, Leonard R Chirdo,
Richard § Weintraub, Clifford A
Aidala, Yolanda Bastar, Evelyn
E Brewster, Stuart H Aber, Min-
nie Mintzer,

No, 2681 — 80%

2681 Linda J White, Thomas-
ina Young, Lola Welxel, Morton
Lutto, Doris M Lyons, Marie Dil-
jon, Maria Goldman, Sherry) I
Frisch, Olivia V Mondesire, Edith
L Lane, Paul 8 Gewirteman,
Lawrence B Krasnov, Norman
Weisenberg, Glen V Masgia, Sel~
ma Brenner, Madeline Golis,
Elizabeth Dent, Shella 8 Levin-
son, Shelley F Young, Richard F
Petropoulos.

No, 2701 — 80%

2701 Lucey H Plugger, Agnes
A Johnson, Seymour J Hersh,
Anna Amatuzio, Nola M Brooker,
Michael D Demsky, Regina Dor-
tch, Marie L Piper, Clarence A
Bell, Lilian 8 Codrington, Beat
rice Pioon, Kemper Hoffler, Jo-
ann C Martn, Edith N Hill, Alice

(Continued on Page 5)

PART 1

(Editor's Note: Dr. Bloomfield attended this con-
ference and will report on speeches by Commis-
sioner Ewald Nyquist and by State Director of

Education Performance and Review
later In the series.)

GROSSINGERS.

ment Skills.” Describing
the purpose of the
meeting, John H. Ben-
nett (Executive Secret-
ary of the Council), who
masterminded the con-
clave said, “As chief
school officers, we are
trying to conduet a con-
ference that will reflect
changes facing practi-
oners of school admin-
istration,”

Among The People
Present Were Well -
Known Members Of The
State Education De -
partment. At meals, T

Allen Bradley (Assistant

ful at the conference were Arnold

Relations) and Vivian Anderson (Director of Hu-

manities)
There Was Only One New York

tendent Present among the 700 participants, David

Mareus of District 23 in Brooklyn.

tandem schoo! colleague {rom the Brownsville area,
Paul Gendler was also visible at meetings. Gendier
is now a superintendent in Merrick. Both visited
the NYU Alumni shindig hosted by NYU's John

Buckey,
The NYU contingent as

been chief of the NYU School of
well as Superintendent in White
Buffalo,

Some Superintendents from other parts of the
state told me they had begun their careers in
Joseph Brust, Superintendent in
Washingtonville was raised in Whitestone, Queens,
John Battles of Cornwall] Central Schools (West
Point) had been a teacher of Science in J.H.S. 22
and had also been an administrative assistant in

New York City.

. State Council Of School District
Administrators (NYSCSDA)

Y, — THE SEVENTH AN-
NUAL MEETING OF THE NEW YORK STATE
SUPERINTENDENTS OF SCHOOLS TOOK
Place Here On The Theme Of “Improving Manage-

(«
JACK BLOOMFIELD

spoke to Don Wood (Continuing Education),

to Commissioner Ny-
quist). Two SED people who were especially help-

well as the Couneil
paid a special tribute to Dr. Palmer Ewing —
celebrating 50 years of school service

THE EDUCATION ARENA

By DR. JACK BLOOMFIELD

Canarsie HS, Superintendent Jim OvToole of Cro-
ton-on-the-Hudson said he had taught for Walter

Degnan at De Witt Clinton HS. in the Bronx,
Ex-city Superintendent Nat Jacobson turned up

Daniel Klepak

in the exhibit area, He manned a booth for a
management consultant firm. Dr. Jacobson spe-
cializes in school board policy.

A MAJOR CONCERN OF THE ADMINISTRA-
TORS WAS REFLECTED IN A RESOLUTION A

and

Bloom (Public

Committee Had Prepared On Relations With The
State Education Department. It read:

“Whereas there is a growing need for coopera-
tion In the increasingly complex process of manag-
ing the enterprise of public education in the State
of New York, and

“Whereas the impact of making changes falls
directly on the joca] school district and its chief
school officer, and

“Whereas the State Education Department ex-
pects full cooperation from local administrators to
assist in implementing changes and improving lo-
cal programs, and

“Whereas when good two-way communication is
absent between the State Education Department
and loca} chief schoo) officers, many unforeseen
complications arise that could easily be avoided
with proper mutual consultation,

“Now be it resolved that the NYSCSDA asks
that the State Education Department adopts a
firm, written policy stating that no major policies
affecting elementary or secondary education shall
be adopted without prior consultation with a broad
cross-section of Jocal Chief Schoo] Administrators
and the NYSCSDA.

“Notes: 1, In recent years, Chief Schoo! Admin-
istrators across the state have been dismayed by

introduction of new policies, and accountability

City Superin-

His one-time

schemes where there had been no prior consulta-
tion by the SED, As the persons being held pri-
marily responsible for .the operation and success
of loca) districts, CSA's belleve they should be con-
sulted first and often about the {mpact of proposed
changes upon children, and the operation of local
school districts,

“2. Should the Department be unable to respond

—~ who had
Education, as
Plains and in

affirmatively to our request, such rejection should
be conveyed to the entire membership, in writing.”

Asked About This Resolution, President Herbert
C. Bettinger Commented:
the image of education and we're concerned also

“We're concerned about

about the image of the State Education Depart-

ment. We sincerely feel that the answer to Lm-

Proving this image of education in general and of

the Department in particular is for the Depart-

ment and the staff in the Department to work

more closely with the Superintendents of Schools.”

(Next Week — The Superintendents Complain
About State Financial Aid)

TEACHER ELIGIBLE LISTS

TEACHER OF COMMERCIAL

ARTS

Harry A LeM:
ditch, 76.90; Murray Sherma
Maria M_ Hechiman, 75.20: Ni

AMERICA’S
AWARD WINNING
| MUSICAL!’

*WINNER OF

24 LOCAL AND
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FOR MUSIC, LYRICS, DIRECTION,
PERFORMANCES AND BEST
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[EXTRA PERF. EVERY SAT. at 10 P.M

Gison Trectre

4) St, W of B'way © 751-7164

‘Thomas H Gaedson, 72.40; Robert N
Kerr, 7130; Jimmy J Graves, 71.00;
Maniet Soler, 6.80: Sali H Stern, 69.20;
Frank Denintendo, 64.20; Gilbert Ja:

TEACHER OF WOODWORKING
IN DAY HIGH SCHOOLS
Alternate B
(75 exam)

Francis J Dunlop, 77.20; Arthur
Brody, 73.60; James P Mullen, 63.50;

Charles Macseri, 69,90,

15 Not Eligible
Fifteen candidates for exam
3649, promotion to associate bud-
get examiner, are not eligible for
the position, according to the
Dept. of Personnel,

cobs, 65.50; Ernew Covta, 60.60,

TEACHER OF ELECTRICAL
INSTALLATION & PRACTICE
IN DAY HIGH SCHOOLS
Alternate B
(1/73 exam)
Andrew M = Mobitia, 90.20;
F ‘Tortoretti, 83.90; Louis A Marshall,
1M; Joho J Pamore, 7KA0: Metro
Nazaruk, 69.50; Leopold M Field,
66.30; Arthut King, 65.50,

77 Not Eligible
Seventy-seven candidates for
exam 2594, promotion to prin-
cipal human resources specialist,
are not eligible for the position,
the city Dept. of Personnel an~
nounced last, week

Pasquale

On an Acre
NeW Ww Aten Of Antiques
ee Open 10:30-6;

Thurs,10:30-9

Sun, 1-6; Closed Fridays:
IT’S ALL AT 962 THIRD AVE.

x
HONORED ONCE AGAIN — General 5, E, Senior, center, ts congratulated by New York
State Industrial Commissioner Louis Levine, left, as Edward 1. Goldberg, director of operations, Work~-

men's Compensation Board (WCB), looks on at a testimonial dinner held last month in honor of Gen,

Senior's retirement, The general, who served as chairman of the WCB for 15 years, entered state service
in 1934. He worked with the State Insurance Fund until appointed to the WCB In 1959 by Governor

Rockefeller. Gen. Senior is no stranger to honors: He w:

recipient of the Civil Service Leader's Gold

Medal award in 1947 and for his military service during World War I he received the Bronze Star Medal,
Army Commendation Ribbon and Croix de Guerre. He was a 1925 graduate of West Point and earned
his MA and LLB from Columbia University and Columbia Law School, respectively,

Eligibles

(Continued from Page 4)
M Crane, Gertrude Teitelbaum,
David J Leigh, Lillian L Browdy,

Florence Laborante, Gail E
Deutsch,
No, 2721 — 80%
2721 Raye Seidman, Edward

Hamilton, Nora G Ruperto, Mary
Pinto, Maryann T Donnolo, Syd-
ney B Ross, Judith P Daniels,
Carol J Vazquez, Carolyn Nel-
son, Zillah E Lawrence, Ronald
X McLaughlin, Reoemarie Skean,
Jeanne Ciaffa, Stephen Rosen-
feld, Lucyann Costabile, Lillian
McIntee, Dorothy Zweig, Muriel
Aronson, Donna M Curry, Ste-
ven M Kishlansky.
No, 2741 — 80%

2741 Marguerite Cronin, Flos-
tena Smith, P M Schwartz, Ag-
nes A Webster, Virginia Hudson,
Marsha R Thomas, Alice Gian-
tasio, Leo Bilander, Anne S Ma-
loy, Jack S Torosian, James M
Liander, V Holly Brinker, Jean-
ette Lack, Mary H Wolpensinger,

Jeannette Lewis, Marie Albanese,
Theodora R Harmon, Ruth M
Kahns, Florence M Meisner, May
Brosnan.

No, 2761 — 80%

2761 Patricia A Douse, Doretha
A Lawal, William M Ferris,
Marta C Vice, Robert Begun, Ina
H Surizon, Peter Coll, Roland E
Louard, Jack Jobson, Jeffrey
Blackman, Jack Cooper, Jerome
Mulberg, Sam 8 Suval, Morris I
Dyckman, Prank Kesten, James
M Jaffe, John L Jessop, James
D Davidson, Charles E Witzell
dr, Charles F Puleo.

No, 2781 — 80%

2761 Stephen Brown, Albert
Manley, Emanuel Saslow, Louis
Smith, Sidney Hecker, Lillian M
Hoffsein, Stephanie Solomon.
Filipina Auleta, Linda M Ebbets
‘Terry S Pomerantz, Rose P Or-
teneau, Eliza Nash, Anne M
Fritsch, Dorit H Fine, Robe
Martell, Lila G Feidman, Jo:
A Frame, Rapacl R
Eyssie L York, Catherine

No, 2801 — 78.8%

2801 Susan I, Blake, Maureen

TO HELP YOU PASS
GET THE ARCO STUDY BOOK
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Contains Previous Questions and Answers and
Other Suitable Study Material for Coming Exams

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LEADER BOOK STORE
11 Warren St.,

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« copies of books checked
check or money order for $

10007

Sta
7% Sales Tox

E Musto, Miriam L Rooks, Har-
riet E Taylor, Josephine Santi-
ago, Howard Hershaff, Gloria
Battista, Beatrice Elsenstein,
Blanche F Lando, John J Milaz-
#0, Elaine O Allman, L Kaufman,
Beatrice Shurak, Myra S Rosen,
(Continued on Page 7)

Key Answers

EXAM 3521
PROM TO SIGNAL
MAINTAINER

Test Held Oct, 13,
Candidates

1973

who wish to file
these proposed
have until Nov, 14
their protests, in
with the evi-
h such protests

writing, toget!
dence upon whi
are based,

1, A; 2, A; 3, Di
7, C; 8,0 9,C
13, ©;

4, D; 5, D;
10, B; 11, D;
14, D; 15, B; 16, D;
+ 19, A; 20, D;
C; 22, ©; 23, A; 24, D;
27, B; 28, A; 29, B;
2, B; 33, B; 34, A;
37, B; 38, A; 39, C;

43, D; 44, ©
; 48, D; 49,B
53, C; 54, B;
58, C; 59, B;

B

Final Key Answers

The city Civil Service Com-
mission has rendered final key
nswers for the following exams

ne city Civil Service Commis-
jon has rendered final key an-
wers for the folowing exams

Prom, to Power Distribution
Maintainer (TA), Exam 3517
test held July 7 (Sabbath Ob-

ver test held July 6)
(Sab, Obsvr

Changes
ho 2; no, 22) from

B to C
Prom, to Foreman (Buses and

Shops), Exam 2574 — test held
June 2. No changes

Prom, to Youth Services Spe-
cialist, Exam 2683 test held

Jan, 27. No changes

Prom, to Se, Key Punch Oper-
ator, Exam 2625 test held
March 10 (Sabbath Observer)
held March 9. Changes; no, 2
(Sab, Obsvr, no. 28) from C
to A andor B and/or C; and
no. 18 (Sab. Obsvr. ne. 24) from
A to A and/or B.

To Racing Commission

ALBANY — Former Assem-
blyman Donald C. Shoemaker, of
Webster, has been named to the
State Harness Racing Commis-
sion for a term ending in 1978,
He will be paid $100 per day
for each day spent on Commis-
sion affairs.

To OTB Commission
ALBANY — Rochester City
Manager Kermit Hill has been
named to the State Off-Track
Pari-Mutuel Betting Commis-
sion, along with Morrison Park-
er, of New York City. Hill was
designated chairman at $35,440,
while Parker will receive $100
per day as a member

Do Your Neeed A

for elvil service
for personnel satisfaction

6 Weeks Course Approved
Ny ae Eocaton "Bere,

Write or Phone for
Information

Eastern School AL 4-5029
721 Broadway, NY 3 (at 8 St)
Please write me free about the

High School Equivalency
Pass your copy of prea
The Leader
on toa Lee a
Civil Service Activities Association

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21 to November 25

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Tel. (212) 586-5134

th

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te your job

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seription now

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to your chances of promotion

to your next raise
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CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, October 30, 1973

Ciwil Sewier
LEADER

America’s Largest Weekly for Pablic Emplo|
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations

Published every Tuesday by
LEADER PUBLICATIONS, INC.

Publishing Office: 11 Warren Street, New York, N.Y. 10007

is & Editorial Office: 11 Warren Street, New York, N.Y. 10007
212-BEekman 3-6010

Bronx Office: 406 149th Street, Bronx, N.Y.
Jerry Finkelstein, Publisher
Paul Kyer, Associate Publisher

10455

ALBANY — Joseph T.
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1Se per copy. Subscription Price: $3.70 to mem!

Service Employees Association. $7.00 to n

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Ww eo

TU SI AY,

Use Your Ve Vote

MENDMENT No. 9 allows judges in most courts to serve

past the age of 70 for three terms of two years each
provided the Appellate Division declares a need for their
services and they are found physically and mentally able
following examinations at two-year Intervals, At present,
only Supreme Court and Court of Appeals judges may
serve beyond 70. The amendment would stop the waste of
judicial talent because of an arbitrary age barrier and the
cost would be minimal because of a savings In pension pay-
ments, At a time when judges are needed to implement the
new drug law, cope with rising criminal arrests and staff
the new landlord-tenant codes, it makes sense to utilize
proven ability to the fullest extent. We oppose, of course,
any arbitrary cut-off for any public servant.

Another important item is the State Transportation
Bond issue. We find it significant that labor — in both
the private and public sectors — has lined up so solidly
in endorsing a “yes” vote for the issue.

Obviously, there are some profound economic benefits
that will come to public employees if the bond issue ts
approved. More public employment is in the offing, for
one thing, because of the many complex tasks to be per-
formed in the area of highways and other transportation.

Again, we strongly urge all public employees to use
their vote on all ballot items next month, Remember, pub-
Ne employees and their families make up nearly 20 per-
cent of the electorate in New York State. Your vote can
determine the outcome In many areas, Use it

On zrOREK

Questions

and
Answers

Q. I'm a 61-year-old widow,
Since I had only been married
for 2 months when my husband
died in an airplane crash in 1971,
1 couldn't get monthly social
security benefits, Now I hear the
Jaw requiring that the marriage
had lasted at least 3 months has
been changed, Is this true?

A. Yes. If the worker's death
‘was accidental or occurred while
he was on duty in the Armed
Forees, there is no requirement
about the length of the marriage
You should reapply for widow's
benefits at your local social se-
curity office.

Q. I'm 21 and sinee my father
died 2 years ago, I've been get-
ting monthly social security pay-
ments. I go to classes at a trade
school where each student ad-
vances at his own pace. I'll be
22 in January, but I won't com-
plete my course until February
of 1974, Can I continue to get
payments until I graduate?

A, Yes. Your payments can
continue until the month you
finish the course or for 2 months
after the month you're 22, which-

ever comes first.

Q. I retired and began getting
monthly soclal security payments
when I was 63. I'll be 65 in the
fall, Is it true that T'll be en-
rolled in Medicare automatical-
ly?

A. Yes, you will be auto-
matically signed up for both the
hospital and medical insurance
parts of Medicare. The medical
part will cost you $6.30 4 month,
but you can decline the coverage
if you do not wish to pay the
premiums for it

Q. My doctor has ordered me
to quit work right away because
of a severe heart ailment, I'm
63, Should J apply for monthly
sockal security retirement or dis-
ability payments?

A. You may apply for both
benefits at the same tme. If
you're eligible, you can begin
wetting reduced retirement pay-
ments immediately. If you are
also found to be entitled to dis-
ability benefits, social security
will substitute the higher dis-
obility payments after your 5-
month waiting period 4s over,

(Continued from Page 1)
programs from avaliable current

revenue, with no increase tn
taxes needed to finance the pro-
grams

The Bond Act Proposition
One on the Nov. 6 ballot —
would allow the State to borrow
$3.5 billion over a 10-year period.
These funds would supply the
State’s share, reaching out and
obtaining $9 billion In matching
grants, for a $12.5 billion pro-
gram to upgrade mass transpor-
tation — subways, buses and
trains — and improve our high-
way system.

Able To Plan Ahead

These bond funds would give
the state the stability it needs,
over a 10-year period, to plan
ahead in transportation, confi-
dent that when it’s time to pay
the bills, the funds will be there
In, addition the availability of
bond funds will take the pressure
off our available current revenue,
so that other transportation im-
provements can be undertaken
such as fare stabilization

‘And since the bond funds sup-
ply the state's share
capital-matehing nts, ap
proval of the bond issue will ease
the pressure on general state
revenues for other needed pro-
grams of deep concern to the
people of our state — including
education, local assistance, men-
tal health, and environmental
contro}.

Despite the misgivings of some
critics, the Bond Issue is a sound,
responsible measure. It deserves
the support of all thinking New
Yorkers, especially public em-
ployees who work with such dedi-
cation in programs of great so-
cial concern,

Statewide Master Plan

Some critics say it was con-
ceived in haste at the Special
Session of the Legisiature last
July.

In truth, the bond issue had its
beginning some two years earlier
with the development of a State-
wide Master Plan for Transpor-
tation, This plan is the result of
statewide public hearings, count-
less mectings with citizen groups,
and approval by public officials
at all levels of government. The
bond issue finance: plan, and
the plan Itself been subject
to careful, orderly, and syste-
matic development over two
years.

Some critics
section of the
or fosters one
over another

In truth, the plan is based on
statewide needs, and fasters the
type of transportation that each

it favors one

é over another
mode of travel

tegion itself has declared it
needs.

Some critics feel we can't af-
ford it. .

In truth, the bond issue ts fully
fundable within the present tax
structure, No tax increase is
needed to pay off the interest
and principal, But if we were to
do the same job from the state's
current revenues, without bond
financing, the ultimate cost
would be greater

Some people say it isn't fair
to borrow money now, leaving
future generations in debt

Tn truth, it isn't fair to leave
future generations a legacy of a
broken-down public transporta-
ton system which, in its state
of decay, will cost far more to
rebuild in a further-inflated
economy than it will today

In & positive veln, the bond
issue, besides giving us the trans-
portation we need at fares we oan

(Continued on Page 7)

Civil Service

Law & You

By RICHARD GABA

Mr, Gaba is a member of the firm of White, Walsh and Gaba,
P.C,, and chairman of the Nassau County Bar Association Labor
Law Committee.

Retiree Wins Lawsuit

An action was commenced in the State Supreme Court
in which the plaintiff, a retired employee of a school dis-
trict, claimed that she was entitled to receive a higher
monthly retirement allowance than that which was being
paid to her by the New York State Employees’ Retirement
System

The plaintiff had been employed by the schoo! district
for some 17 years and retired as an employee on Dec, 1,
1970, She was a member of and represented for bargaining
purposes by a chapter of the Civil Service Employees As:
At the time she retired, the plaintiff was entitled to certs
retirement benefits provided under section 75-e of the Re-
tirement and Social Security Law, Those benefits had been
secured for her pursuant to a collectively negotiated agree-
ment which was then In effect between the CSEA ‘and the
defendant board of education. As part of its agreement
with the CSEA, the board of education required to
file with the State Employees’ Retirement System a resolu-
tion of the board stating that it had elected to provide
employees the benefits provided under section 75-e of the
Retirement and Social Security Law. The school board, by
inadvertence or otherwise, neglected to file the resolution
at the time it was required to do so after the contract was
signed in 1970, but finally did so in March 1971, some four
months after the plaintiff had retired from the board of
education,

AS A DIRECT RESULT of the school board's failure to
file the required resolution when it was obligated to do so
prior to the plaintiff's retirement on Dec, 1, 1970, the plain-
tiff was ineligible to receive the retirement benefits provided
for under section 75e, RSSL. As a result of the failure to
file on a timely basis, the retired employee was deprived of
approximately thirty dollars per month in retirement ben-
efits, The plaintiff alleged that the failure to receive this
sum of money was directly due to the fault of the board
of education, It appeared that the retirement system was
not Hable and could not be sued because the school district
had failed to file the resolution and according to the Re-
tirement System records, the employee was covered under
a section of the Jaw which provided lesser benefits than
section 75e, The employee: filed a Notice of Claim with the
school district and commenced the lawsuit asking for dam-
ages jn an amount necessary to make up the difference be-
tween the monthly payment she was receiving and the
monthly payments she would have received if the school
district had filed the resolution on a timely basis.

THE PLAINTIFF made a motion for summary judg-
ment which was granted by the court and a judgment
was entered awarding the plaintiff an amount sufficient
to cover her for the months gone past from the time she
retired and awarding her payments in the future on a
monthly basis until the time of her death,

It appears that this situation Is not unique; it has oc-
curred in the past, and will undoubtedly occur in the
future, The employee is not without his remedy, but under
the fact presented, the remedy appears to lie against the
board of education and not against the Retirement System

Exam 2216 Cert Pool

Fifty-three eligibles from exam
2216, senior quantitative analyst,
have been called to a certifica-
tion pool to be held Noy. 4 by the
city Dept, of Personnel, Appoint-
ment salary is $17,450, The last
number called was 53.

92 Called to Cert Pool

A total ‘of 92 eligibles from
exam 2213, quantitative analyst,
have been called to a certification
pool to be held Noy. 2 by the
city Dept, of Personnel. Number
92 was the Jast eligible called,
Starting salary is $15,000,

BUY
us.
BONDS!

Transfers Responsibility
For State Civil Defense

ALBANY—Civil Defense coor-
dination throughout the state Is
now the responsibility of the Di-
vision of Military and Naval Af-
fairs under terms of a jaw which
took effect October 1. Maj, Gen
John C. Baker, head of DMNA
has assumed statutory responsib-
ility as Chairman, New York
State Civil Defense Commission
and State Director of Civil De-
fense in addition to x duties
as chief of staff to the Governor
and Commander, New York
Army National Guard

About 30 employees periorm-
ing civil defense and disaster
duties with other agencies have
been transferred to DMNA with
no change in civil service status,

°

°

Dear Editor:

My son is a Vietnam veteran
who served an enlistment period
of three years and was discharged
in August 1971, He served a year
in Vietnam, from March 1969 to
Mareh 1970,

After spending the interim
time in college, he took the walk
in post officer clerk examination
for Vietnam veterans a few
months ago and scored 87%
At the time, it was his under-
standing from both the civil ser-
vice papers and the explanation
given at the examination point
at that time that if you were an
honorable discharged Vietnam
veteran since 1964, you were
eligible for a temporary posi-
tion at a salary of $4.22 per
hour, and when appointments to
career positions would be made,
you would be appointed when
your rating was reached on the
eligible list.

Not untit he read an article in
one of the citil service papers
did he learn that, in order to
be considered eligible for the
temporary assignment, you had
to apply within one year of dis-
charge from the service. Since
this walk in examination was
only established in April 1973 by
the President under a V.R.A. or-
der, any veterans discharged
prior to April 1972 would be in-
eligible, What kind of arbitrary,
discriminatory order is this? The
veterans who actually served in
Vietnam and were discharged
prior to April 1972 served dur-
Ing the greatest fighting and
danger period but they are in-
eligible for assignment to this
temporary position at $4.22 an
hour.

I think this is an arbitrary
and discriminatory order and
that these temporary positions
should be open to all Vietnam
veterans regardless of date of dis~
charge. My son is unable to get
@ job, he is an intelligent, edu-
cated individual (2 years of col~
lege) and he could certainly use
this post office job for which
he passed the examination.

If this letter is printed, T urge
all Vietnam veterans in the same
predictament as my son to write
their congressman.

Mrs. Mary Gebbia
Bronx, N.¥.

Don't Repeat This!

(Continued from Page 6)
afford, will generate some 830,000

since
spent again and again tn our

construction

communities as laborers buy
groceries, grocers pay wages, and
wage earners again spend their
salaries, it means an economic
boost of $65 billion for our state
over the next decade,

‘The end product js a transpor-
tation system that will meet our
needs and keep all of New York
Stato thriving and on the move
for years Wo come, at a cost we
all can afford.

When you look at it that way,
there's really no logical choice
except, Yes," on the 1973 Trans-
portation Bond Issue.

To Monroe County Court

ALBANY —Hyman T, Maas, of
Trondequolt, has been named by
the Governor to a vacant judge-
ship on the Monroe County
Court for a term ending Dec. 31,
974

GSA Political Bias Found

WASHINGTON — Evidence of
preferential treatment based on
the political connections of ap-
plicants to the General Services
Administration has been found
by the Civil Service Commis-
sion.

In a report released last week,
the commission charged the GSA
has been hiring personnel based
on references by political sources
— including the Republican Na-
tional Committee, the Commit-
tee for the Re-election of the
President and figures on Capitol
Hill — rather than on job quall-
fications.

A detailed check was made of
20 hirings by commission inves-
tigators and improprieties were
found in 16. The hirings were
found to have disregarded per-
sonnel laws and violated merit
practices. Most of those hired
and later checked were in mid-
dle management, GS 11-12 po-
aitions, but some held more im-
portant jobs.

The commission has give the
GSA 30 days to review the ap-
pointments and ruled that un-
Jess hirings could be made to
conform to Civil Service require-
ments, the employment of those
involved will have to be term-
inated. z

According to the commission,
the hiring had been done by a
“special referral unit and the
number of officials involved in
it ranged from one to four peo-
ple, The unit operated within
the office of the assistant admin-
istrator responsible for admin-
istration, public affairs and Con-
gressional relations.

People who operated the re-
ferral system and those who took
improper action within the
agency will be subject to disci-
plinary action, the commission
asserted.

* * &

HUD Continues Cuts

The staff of Housing and Ur-
ban Development is down to 15.-
500, compared to 16,400 just over
one year ago. The target is a staff
of 14,000 by June 30, 1974. De-
spite the reduction, HUD has re-
quested 73 new supergrade jobs,
with 43 of the GS 16, 17 and 18
slots planned for fleld activities.
However, that boost is not ex-
pected to be approved, but if tt
is, it would reduce the depart-
ment ratio of supergraders to
regular employees from 1 to 120
down to 1 to 80.

«x &*

Retirees’ Raise
Because the cost-of-living per-
centage increase for September
reached 135.5, @ 4.7 percent raise
will be effective Jan, 1, 1974 for
all federal retirees and anybody
who retires by Dec, 31, 197%

Horning Appointed

ALBANY — Allen D, Horning,
Sr,, of Newark, has been reap-
pointed to the Industria) Exhibit
Authority for a term ending July
1, 1976. There ls no salary, The
Authority oversees the operation
of the industrial exhibition por-
tion of the annual New York
State Pair.

Negus To Sunmount

ALBANY — Shirley L. Negus
of Mussena, has been reappoint~
ed to the Board of Visitors of
Sunmount State School for a
term ending Dec, 31, 1976. There
is no salary,

Eligibles

(Continued from Page 5)
Louis D Altman, Ada Gadry,
Steven Altman, Dennis Pain,
Deborah E Belton, William F
Clancy.

No, 2821 — 18.8%

2821 Rosalie Goggins, Jerry
Pox, Samuel A Johnson, Scott C
Lottor, Joyce L Durante, Na-
than Waldman, Beverly J Jen-
kins, Myrtle E Tyler, Ruth B
Einhorn, Arthur Lorenzo, Beat-
rice R Stoler, Sara L Zalon, Be-
linda A Williams, Stephen M
Faibish, Linda Chicchetti, Myron
E Schutaman, Helen Ziott, San-
dy W Alston, Dina M Viscarde,
Mamie Matthew.

No, 2841 — 78.8%

2841 Gaynelle L Wright,
George Novich, Ellen G Axelrod,
Rolf J Kastenholz, Evelyn C
White, Virginia D Brown, Eve 5
Curci, Steven V White, Ruth
Pikser, Hyacinth J Taylor, Irene
Moore, Ana L Hinds, Julio C

Fire News

Exec Ass’t Appointed

Lt, Ceaser W. Sansevero has
been appointed as executive as-
sistant to Fire Commissioner
John T. O'Hagan and will have
a broad of scope of duties in de~
partment and public affairs.

A twenty-year veteran of the
Fire Dept, Lt. Sansevero began
his career with Ladder Company
113 in Brooklyn” He next became
a chief's aide and later a com-
missioner's alde. He was pro-
moted to lieutenant in 1967 and
worked for a time In the Com-
munity Relations Bureau before
being assigned to Ladder Com-
pany 4, “the Pride of Midtown.”

Sophie
Slutsky, Shella S Vallade, An-
drea Vtaile, Armindo G Rivera,
Barbara L Greozl, Esplanola
Luckett, Claude R Ritman, Ruth
Chavkin, Teresa J Ryan, Vivian

ens, Shirley B Taylor, John Lau-
ruska, Julius Levy, Jeanne A
Moynthan.

No. 2901 — 78.8%

2901 + Josephine McMahon,
Joan Cereghino, Mary E Hill,
Constance MeNeil, Sherrie L
Goodman, Richard B Kniep,
Sheila Roberts, Anita J Prin-
clotta, David Harrison, Lucille R
Putterman, Sharon C Holder,
Hilda Stone, Joan A Mason,
Veronica C Palmer, Carrie Wil-
son, Abraham Roseman, Donna
J Brown, Gertrude Silverman,
Leon P Sealey Jr, David B Riess.

No. 2921 — 78.8%

2921 Richard Roseman, Sharon
K Dolled, Carmen I Valentin,
Anita Cannata, John G Olekson,
Grace A Spruill, Gladys Ghigliot-
ty, Marilyn R Foster, Judith C
Lawrence, Janis E Wilson, Rich-
ard C Johnson, Rose Shaffer,
Eleanor M Vunck, Joseph G Mc-

Gulre, Beulah M Pettus, Patricia
Antine, May Kramer, Madelaine
Weick, Bernice L Thompson,
Linda G Elias,

No, 2941 — 78.8%

2941 Emma Memillin, Ruth
Surpin, Mildred Dien, Anne Mor-
genstern, Evelyn Hersh, Lioyd R
Singer, Blanche Cooke, Josephine
Russo, Nancy N Crawford,
Yvonne C Yarborough, Annabelle
Davis, Fred G Finkelstein, Edith

Beverly L Jenkins, Frances
Sharfstein, Merrick

Stephanle Wilson, Helen R Me-
Nulty, Bernard Bullock, Edith
Grycan, Daryl E Moore, Adelaide
Lock, Bessie M Ervin, Jean E
Hampden, Maxine Heyward.

No. 2981 — 78.8%

2981 Joan P Gaine, Edwin H
Basterl, Carl K Butler, Beverly
I Berson, Helen R Hein, Lena
Monaco, Josephine Maga, Law-
renee Miller, Robert Bruno, Zel-
marie Washington, Lucille Laf-
renfer, Mary M Reardon, Jose-
phine Petti, Sharan Harding,
Carolyn A Mena, Carmen M
Rodriguez, Mildred Nisco, Luther
B Turner, George A Pagan, Dol-
ores Edwards,

No. 3001 — 78.8%

3001 Ruth Cohen, Nellie L
Stewart, Mollie Pollack, Irene
Anderson, Robert Zaino, Frances
Mermelstein, Julia E Boykin,
Clara M Callis, Richard Marin,
Ellen L Winkler, Laura K Gar-
finkel, John K O'Doherty, Dor-

(Continued on Page 10)

we Thes

ver the world, There will be

Come to New Yorks

irst

wine-and-cheese

tasting festival.
Eat the exhibits.
Drink the exhibits.

it A week it's going to be for people who love wine. people who love
spacious Coliseum will be a paradise of wine exhibits trom all
colortyl stall after stall, crammed with hard
solt cheese, sharp cheese, mild cheese, moldy cheese, runny
cheese-every kind of cheese you've ever heard of
e°3 an actual vineyard, growing There's an auction of rare wines planned

There's awige museum. There's a breathtaking Wine and Cheese
Store from the year 2001 A.D.

Sul most of all, there'tl be the friendliest wine and cheese merchants ever
pressing their goods on you. You might sip a Bordeaux, nibble a hunk
ot Gouda. try a little Riesting, savor a glorious Brie, delight ina

California Burgundy or aN
(And every bite. every sip. «

foe)

ew York State Champagne

You can come in when the doors open. stay until they close and you'll learn

me
This is th

about wine (and wine bargains) than you'd find in.a dozen books
ow all New York 5 coming 10 sae. Beat the crowd—don't wait

n line —Save Money to bool by sending for special discount tickets

now

‘only $2.50 each, a

vings of $1 off the

eguiar $3.50 admission

price (Under 18 admitted only with parent.) Use the coupon

Attention Wine

and Cheese Distrib-
utors, If you don't
have a stall at the
Hey it’s not too
i

Joseph Proctor
(212) 686-2000,

International Wine-and-Cheese Festival
258 Broadway, New York. N.Y 10007 + (212) 686-2000

ing testivar
Asan,

a toe tohety (12.58 wacn

© Mew York's teat

“a

S261 ‘Oe 2qoRO “Kepeony, URGVET FOIANAS “ALD
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, October 30, 1973

CSEA COMMITTEE REPORTS AT CONVENTION -

Report

Resolutions Committee

The following report was delivered
by committee chairman Dorothy
Rabin,

‘This report is limited to the 1974 leg-
islative program, Because of the fact
that we are beginning a multi-year con-
tract, proposals were not submitted for
negotiating demands as in past years.

LEGISLATIVE PROPOSALS

SALARY PROTECTION FOR
NON-TEACHING SCHOOL
EMPLOYEES
Provide non-teaching school district
employees protection under Section 2023

of the Education Law.

WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION
Mandate Workmen's Compensation
insurance for political subdivisions.

LABOR LAW SAFETY AND HEALTH
STANDARDS

The state and its political subdivisions

shall be subject to state and federal

labor law safety and health standards,

SUNY UNCLASSIFIED SERVICE
PROVISIONS

The criteria for changing the juris-
dictional classification of SUNY posi-
tions to the unclassified service shall be
based solely upon a clear and direct in-
volvement in the education of students;
and further provide notification of
changes to CSEA.

UNION SECURITY PROVISIONS
UNDER TAYLOR LAW
Provide employee organizations with
the right to negotiate union security in
the form of a union shop, agency shop
or closed shop,

RIGHT TO STRIKE
Provide public employees with the
t to strike.

RIGHT TO
UNION REPRESENTATION
Provide that all public employees be
allowed representation under the Taylor
Law and the right to membership in
employee organizations.

TAYLOR LAW REPRESENTATION
PROCEEDINGS
In union representation proceedings,
provide for examination of competing
organizations’ showings of interest

EMPLOYER PENALTIES UNDER
TAYLOR LAW
Provide for penalties against employ-
ers who attempt to intimidate employees
because of union activities.

WATERFRONT COMMISSION
EMPLOYEES
Extend Taylor Law provisions to em-
ployees of the Waterfront Commission
of New York Harbor.

MILITARY AND NAVAL AFFAIRS
EMPLOYEES
Extend Taylor Law provisions to em-
ployees of the Division of Military and
Naval Affalrs.

CIVIL SERVICE DEPARTMENT
ELIGIBLE LISTS

The Civil Service Department shall
maintain a list containing the names
of at least three qualified candidates for
every ttle for which a vacancy exists.
Whenever such Mat includes less than
three names, or when there are more
vacancies in a title than there are
names on @ lst, vacancies shall be filled
first and then another examination shall
be scheduled and held within 90 days
for the purpose of establishing a suM-
cient Met. An employee on such an eligt-
ble list who has not received appoint-
ment shall not be required to retake
the same examination once the list ex-
pires,
(Bd note: It was agreed that the above
resolution would be rewarded by counsel
for greater legal clarity.)

NEGOTIABILITY OF RETIREMENT
BENEFITS:

Notwithstanding any inconsistent pro-
visions of this act or of any general
or special law, during the period July
1, 1974, to June 30, 1976; (a) a partici-
pating employer {n the New York State
Employees’ Retirement System of the
New York State Policemen’s and Fire-
men’s Retirement System shall continue
to have the right to negotiate with its

employees with respect to any benefit
provided by or to be provided by such
employer to such employees as members
of such system and not requiring ap-
proval by act of the Legislature; and
(b) a public authority or public benefit
corporation which is not « participating
employer in the New York State Em-
ployees Retirement System or the New
York City Employees’ Retirement System
shall continue to have the right to nego-
tate with its employees with respect to
benefits to be provided by such em-
ployer to such employees upon retire-
ment.

THE FOLLOWING RESOLUTIONS
WERE INTRODUCED FROM
THE PLOOR
Provide state employees who com-
menced employment with the Federal
War Manpower Commission or who
were transferred from the Division of
Employment to the War Manpower
Commission and returned to state ser-
vice with opportunity to purchase re-
tirement credit for time spent with the
War Manpower Commission through the
payment of the required annuity con-

tributions.

(submitted by Dorothy Rabin)

The retirees committee recommends
to you the following resolutions to be
presented to the delegate body. These
matters were supposed to have been
submitted some time ago to your com-
mittee, but through an oversight were
forgotten

Membership Committee Report

The following report was prepared
for information purposes by com-
mittee chairmen Samuel Emmett
and Howard Cropsey and commit-
tee members Jon Schermerhorn,
Terry Dawson, William Kempey,
Michael Sweet, Karen Herbst,
James Mangano, Anthony Gian-
netti, John Mauro, Harry Raskin,
Lyman Connors and Charles Orr

The attention of your membership
committee during the past few months
has been focused on the continuing
growth of our Association, During meet-
ings of the committee, much consid-
eration was given to the most effective
way of accomplishing this purpose, and
it was decided that another membership
campaign in the late spring continuing
into the fall would be the most practical
way of doing this, It was also decided
that In view of the fiscal problems of
the Association, the campaign would be
run without the awarding of prizes or
other financial inducements.

From the middie of May until the
present, approximately 15,000 new mem-
bers have been obtained. These new
members were obtained as a result of
direct mallings addressed to non-mem-
bers employed by the state and political
subdivisions where such information was
available, Non-member cards were for-
warded to State Division chapters where
they were distributed to potential mem~
bers and the results have been reason-
ably gratifying. Through the cooper-
ation of chapter presidents, field super-
visors and ficidmen, it ts hoped that we
shall be able to continue our efforts to
increase dur membership at least by.
another 15,000 during this year, The
committee feels that this Is an absolute
minimum in view of the potential loss
of members classified as Management-
Confidential

The committee is pleased with the
development of the new plastic mem-
bership card and the new three-part
membership application with the tem-
porary membership card attached to
the application, It is felt that this will

—That the cost-of-living provision be
made permanent.

—That the cost-of-living be consid-
ered on an escalator basis by consider-
ing the federal cost-of-living index of
the year prior to the year of retire-
ment.

—That the Association expend all
effort to amend the Sociat Security and
Retirement Law relating to supplement-
al pensions in that it includes all re-
tirees who retired prior to April 1, 1970,

—That the Association make every
effort to amend the Taylor Law to pro-
vide for representation by the Associ-
ation for retirees,

(urbmitted by Vincent Rubano)
Whereas: There is a move to take
promotional titles in the competitive
area out of the promotional series, and

Whereas; The removal of these titles
is being moved from the promotional to
the open competitive, thereby prohibit-
ing the orderly promotton of the career
employees,

Be it resolved that steps be taken
to prohibit the remoyal of any title in
the promotional series to the open
competitive series

(submitted by Solomon Bendet)
That the body immediately negotiate
to te the retirement which a retiree
recelves to the salary grade for which
he retired, and every time the salary

_ rade 4s increased, the pension be in-

creased correspondingly,

The following are membership statistics developed after the basic report of the
Membership Committee to be distributed at the 1973 Annual Meeting was prepared

and printed
State County reo Total
Division Mambers Members
6/1/72 Audit 12,182 9.945 201.679
6/1/73 Audit 112,282 15.38! 206.728
Net Change +128 +5436 +-5,049
New Member $11,195 $3,931 o° 15,086
Deductions
since §/18/73
Est. Loss of 3,000 4,000
Management
Confidential
$ 4,000 2,000 6,000
Membership
$71/73-9/30/73
Total including 116417 80,998 15,38! 212.796

rew member de
ductions since

$/18/73

Pay Orly

RECAP OF ABOVE

Full Pay Members

Retirees
Total

eliminate some of the problems involved
in Initiating new membership applica~
tions, and the new membership card
reflects a favorable image of the status
of the organization

The response to the committee's re-
quest for each chapter president to
name a membership committee has been
very disappointing, As of this writing,
jess than 100 of the 232 state chapters
and less than 25 of the 61 county chap-
ters have named people to membership
committees. Despite repeated requests
to this effect, cooperation in this arca
has been relatively negligible. It is the
hope of our committee that chapter
presidents who have not as yet named
a membership committee will do so at a
very early date.

‘The committee believes that following

197,415
15,381
212,296

restructuring, its efforts will be strength-
ened by the alignment of a regional rep-
resentation on the committee, It is only
through such a statewide representation
of interested people that the aims and
objectives of our membership thrust will
be realized.

Appeals for chapter and conference
membership drives have been made at
various chapter meetings and conference
meetings, and several times during staft
meetings by both the director of mem-
bership recruitment and the executive
director, Plans are continuing to de-
velop a membership program which will
be put on a year-round basis with never
ending efforts being made to bring un-
der the large umbrella of CSEA the many
public employees who need and deserve
the services which we offer

eo

On The Convention Floor
And In Special Meetings,
Delegates Debate Issues

From Erie County, Victor Marr, left, and chapter president
George Clark take time out from meetings for quick
strategy huddle

At microphone ts Long Island Region president Irving Flaumenbaum, while awaiting their
turns are William Cunningham, left, New York City Region third vice-president, and
Seymour Shapiro, New York City chapter treasurer.

At State Police departmental meeting, James Welsh, left
and John Corcoran, CSEA regional field director, listen to
comments.

a 2 P ™ ’ a

Tax departmental m was chaired by, Various county delegates at meeting are, from left, West-
School chapter, emphasizes a point dur- from left, departmer representatives chester's Carmine Lamagna, Pat Mango, Michael Morella
Daley and Jack Dougherty, with assis- and John Haack and Suffolk's Rudy Scala

¢ from CSEA field rep John Conoby.

R

ing his turn at microphone.
(Leader photos by Ted Kaplan)

Health representative Ernst Stroebel, center, ts flanked at departmental meeting by CSEA Central Counties chairman Fran Miller, left, has the at-
staf! member Jason McGraw, left, and John Adamskt, delegate from Roswell Park tention of Correctional Services representative Jack Weisz

a1 SOIAWAS TIAIDD

aava

£161 “Of qowO “Suprony, “y
10

1973

r
2

SERVICE

crvit

‘Tuesday, October 30,

This Week's New York City Eligible Lists

(Continued from Page 7)
othy Peterson, Madelynne Mar-
shall John N Brady, Shekton
Eldridge, Edward P Trinclante,
Tafari Makonnen, Milton Hymo-
witz, Joseph Romanelll.

2021 — 18.8%

3021 Thomas J Palazso, Jos-
eph J Danna, Robert J Scanion,
Glenn E Ellison, Stockton L
Whitten, Max Rock, Gerald J
Malzacher Jr, Bert L Griffin,
John A Heck, John J Brennan,
Josephine Cauthen, Bertha Zeid-

man, Marvin Silverdoliar, Mar-
garet Clark, Mayra Y Nicasio,
Sally M Holdsworth, Stanley P

Kaufman, Ronald G Woodfin
William A Gilman, Jeanette
Romanoff.

No. 3041 — 77.5%

3041 Deborah J Singleton,
Rose M Stolfa, Anna B Burger
Marvin Davenport, Edward R
Velsor, Jeanne L Murray, Dor-
othy I Weitzel, Florence Cirnig-
Maro, Gregory S Johnson, Ther-
esa A Cudlin, Robert L Shired.

;
:

Carlos Romero, Joan M Marko~
witz, Inez L Thomas, Bernice
Lowery, Paula A Goldman, Rose
M Valis, Hilda Goldstein, Maria
E Jimenez, Leonard J Parkan.

No. 3061 — 77.5%

9061 Alan D Ostrow, Eliezer
Ramos, Esther Shelsky, Gerald
Dean Jr, Geraldine Murphy,
Loretta Cobe, Gladys L Jackson,
Gloria B Depalo, Carl J Vac-
cariello, Elizabeth Thomas, Anna
Mingione, Michele D Starks,
Martin § Greenberg, Annette B

Labroceo, Letitia O Frett, Ade-
Mne R Pezrotta, Gertrude A Gog-
win, Paula C Warner, John J
Primavera, Annie Brunson

No, 3061 — 77.5%

3081 Bessie Silver, Carl A
Panto, Nellie S$ Richardson, Deb-
orah Duvdevani, Kenneth Prit-
sky, Gloria N Meadow, Jimmy A
Mann, Joan L Gallon, Naomi
Bibbins, John W Jaick, Thelma
P Beckles, Harry B Rubizovsky,
Prank J Ragonese, Goldyne L
Cohen, Gregory M Roberts, Rob-

believe

one's
right.

a healthy
smile
isevery-

If you work for a town, county, village, city or school district covered by Blue
Cross and Blue Shield, you already know what good plans they are.
How about dental coverage?

Ask the person in charge of your health care plan to look into the dental

programs available under Blue Cross and Blue Shield Plans of New York State. These
contracts provide dental insurance only.

pare
Wn +]
Blue Cross

Blue Shield.

Biue Cross and Blue Shield Plans of New York State

*

Equal Opportunity Employers

in Gerber, Cynthia T Corsover
Doris Jacocks, Carole Zeifman
Russell G Webb.

No. 3101 — 77.56%

3101 Carmela Catalano, Rich-
ard M Rosenberg, Frances A
Lodge, Myra Shevlin, Evelyn 1
Brooks, Linda B Zipkis, Lillian
Honig, Glenn E Frantz, Carol E
Minan, Zara Baumgarten, How-
ard R Oldak, Anthony T Zanfini,
Harriet Shelsky, Lola D He
dricks, Howard A Glass, Fate'le
Singer, Jayne H Treichel, James
FP Schultz, Bella Diamond, Mae
F Anderson.

No. 3121 — 17.5%

3121 William V Lonergan, Sara
Martin, Ida U ‘Trustman, Helen
E Washington, Sylvia Mantz, V
Elaine Hatchett, Eve M Charnes,
Barry H Schwartz, John J O'-
Brien, Charles J Morea, Russel!
Brown, Ann Mazen, Howard
Price, Caro] Johnson, Julia Ro-
sitano, Stacle E Williams, Nina
G Sanzone, Barbara J Richard-
son, Dominie Gardosante, Cath-
erine Davis.

No, 3141 — 77.5%

3141 Elaine Ovaduke, Jane M
Carroll, Randolph T Lagressa,
James W Samuels, Michael J
O'Dwyer, Gladys J Stern, Arlette
Washington, Carol White, Myrtle
B Peele, Anthony F Papa, George
W Friedman, Mae Crosby, Her-
man H Carmon, Herbert N Bel-
lovin, Minerva Ruiz, Ellen 6
Kingsley, Helen D Syria, Mae
S$ Johnson, Patricia Binyard,
Cynthia Thompson.

No, 3161 — 17.5%

3161 Reina 6 Brody, Patrick J
Johnston, Olson Redhead, Jorge
L Lanzo, Claude H Collins, Mar-
tin Schwartz, Eva M Sanders,
Elaine Wilensky, Nancy M Hear,
Richard Preputnik, Norah Roth-
berg, Marvalette Clarke, Eileen
Kadnar, Mollie Gilbert, Joyce
Martin, Frank A Kessler, Jennie
Williams, Helen Cantor, Roy S
Whitelock, Zoraida Espada,

No. 3181 — 17.5%

3181 Barbara A Siegel, Thomas
R Lyons, Margarene Vaivera,
Eileen M Maher, Ureal G Charles
Jr, Joan B Jacob, Laura I Dan-
drea, Kate C Markowitz, Judy
Solomon, Steven E Fleming, Eve-
lyn L Brown, Paula O'Brien
Helen A Sopcheck, Ruth Epstein
Betty Childs, Irene Wiggins, Ro-
salind Rose, Adele G Dashow,
Samuel D Achtman, Francis
Kiley.

Ne. 3201 — 77.5%

3201 Jean M Smith, Steven C
Styltanou, Valerie E Brathwaite,
Ronald Ferguson, Esther L
Brown, Sandra M Smith, Harold
Meyer, Muriel P Goods, Mary A
Ciganek, Rosalie Cilmi, June A
Hafferkamp, Josephine Beckwith,
Jacqueline Figueroa, Catherine
Sears, Catherine Stubenvoll,
Veronica M Stevens, Cathy B
Lopez, Alfred Bnneett, William
E Tyson Jr, Frankie E Gamble.

No, 3221 — 11.5%

3221 Susan Rein, Leah Rabin-
owitz, Nathaniel Stubbs, Rita
Geller, May Haas, Rosa A Ros-
arlo, Phonzetta Weston, Helen
Deshane, Deborah A Carter,
Sharon M Marshall, Dorothy
Belanoff, Barbara A Tutnauer,
Pearl Gelb, James EB Pord, Ar-
lene F Sweeney, Beatrice Kirsh-
ner, Israel E Licht, Steven A
Rosenblatt, Leonard Phipps,
Sandra Ferguson
No, 3241 — 17.5%

1 Roger L Gaines, Mary A
Rose, Ann B Burns, Beverly J
Rayford, Florine Brewster, Molly
Firsenbaum, Frankie G Sims,
George M Espinoza, Marjorie A
Cannone, Larry Goins, Dorts
(Continued op Page 11)
*

Eligibles

(Continued from Page 10)

Kemp, Marvenia Knight, Lillie
E Kovi Joan P Geiser, I V
Crenshaw, Erika W England,

Lols M Wright, Leanne P Am-
brose, Sylvia Kraft, John A Set-
bert.
No, 3261 — 17.5%
3261 Marie A Chase, Jean B
Sutain, Martha A Freeman, Phy-

iis Reden, Mildred W Davis,
Anne D Raymond, Ida Brodsky,
Elliott H Velger, Janet A John-
son, Cheryl Jenkins, Lois M
Johnson, Shirley Halpern, Rose-
mary Tracey, Bernhard B Isaak,
Doret L Thomas, Stephen L
Christensen, Willie Bethune Jr,
Jesus Felix, Dorothy Moughis,
Betty J Abner.

No. 3281 — 77.5%
3281 Theresa A Sisto, Cynthia
I Ellison, Josette Kernizan, Ann

M Progier, Elizabeth. Phoenix,
Eleanor L Sereder, Alice B Alex-
ander, Natalie 8 Cabarrus, Cath-
erine Kettell, Selma Rothman,
Irma B Dennis, Frances B
Ratchford, Anthony Morales,
Leonard A White, Mary A Wash-
ington, Charlotte Jones, Beverly

‘Tyson, Ruth Shulman, Adel
Jennette, Nathan Epstein.
No, 3301 — 77.5%

3901 Doris M Foreman, An-

nette Lichtenfeld, Joseph T Di-

vuolo, Edward H Nord, Alfred
Gore, Emanuel Greenberg, Har-
ty L Cohen, Fernando Benitez,
Julius L Cohen, Alfonso Alfano,
Ira F Cohen, Abe Greifer, Leon
Levinsohn, Harry I Rubin, Frank
A Magier Jr, Schwann C Grimes,
Rose Mendelson, Victor M Suro,
Dorothy B McGovern, Edna Hol-
liday,
No, 3321 — 76.3%

3321 Hilda Kessook, Gilda

Booker, Evelyn Smith, Robert L

SLEEP
BETTER

INTRODUCING THE 1974 VOLKSWAGEN

When you

buy one,

you get covered by our Owner's Security Blanket,
the most advanced new car coverage plan in the world,
For the first 12 months or 20,000 miles, if anything goes wrong,
we'll fix it free.* (If the repair takes Overnight,
just make an appointment and we'll lend you a car free.)
That's just part of our Owner's Security Blanket.
Come in and we'll tell you more.

*For 12 months or 20,000 miles

whichever comes first, in normal use ond service we'll fix any
es and filters on any properly maintained '74 Vo

swagen

See your participating VW dealer in N.Y, N.J., or Conn. Register for a chance to win free tickets to Super Bow! '74,
All entries must be in by Dec. 8. Winners will be announced December 16
Everyone who registers gets a free 9 by 12 color picture of the '73 Giants
No purchase necessary.

33-11-39120 WW

Sommers, Lillian M Brennan,
Adelaide F Raac, Hazel P Mc-
Donald, Mary Sydorko, Charles
© Simmons, Theresa Pallotto,
Norma V Marshburn, Rae Mala-
ment, Helen Rosenthal, Denise L
Monerief, Janet A Carrino, Es-
ther M Gillyard, Serena B Papa.
Bertreann Allman, Lucy Gabay,
Timothy P Bradley,
No, 3341 — 76.3%

3341 Louise Green, Elizabeth
Bailey, Edna V Thompson, Lil-
lan R Rubin, May Cohen, Ruth
E Baker, Hilde Finley, Norma E
Alvarez, Primitivo Aquino, Shar-
on Harris, Naomi R Glencamp,
Janet C Crottl, Lenora E Zolli-
coffer, Carol M Cooper, Mar-
jorie M Nell, Rosa Lovejoy, Shir-
ley S Levine, Steven Tanenhaus,
Jennie Daniels, Selma Zamerof-
ky.

No, 3361 — 76.3%

3361 Mary Pitts, Alice L Batts,
May Spitansky, Israel Cruz, Eve-
lyn Gabrielsen, Iris L Redmin,
Beverly B Scher, Emma V Lum.
Robert J Lindsay, Francine E Al-
lalouf, Bernard Dubi, Roberta
Lucks, Perry Brainin, Orlando A
Jimenez Jr, Ida Goldberg, Bar-
bara Rodriguez, Lee Reiter, Rose
Hershkowitz, Peter Hartofilis.
Lildan E Todaro.

No, 3381 — 76.3%

3381 Evelyn Fishman, John J
Viola, Samuel Bundridge, Clau-
dette Gant, Vita Dibenedetto.
Bessie K Hibbert, Dott Halsey,
Sylvia Suslan, Sandra M Harris,
Lena A Negiia, Roberta Gordon,
Gladys Gauley, Bruce Blumstein,
Bernice Matza, Kathleen Tub-
ridy, Amy K Tang, Bernyce E
Sullivan, Delores Francis, Vicki
H Bandel, Rose Roth,

No, 3401 — 76.3%

3401 Thomas J Thomas, Stan-
ley 8 Williams, Charlotte Russell,
Ajbert Welssberg, Samuel W
Kessler, Michelle M Tokarczyk,
Plavellar Jones, Grace Campbell.
Jacqueline Jones, Viola P Chap-
man, Clarence E Fields, Mildred
Barash, Laura Young, Doris L
Graham, Bernard J Murphy,
Dorothy Canty, Catherine Mc-
Gowan, Isabel Nazario, Everett
MsKay, Mildred Jagoda.

No. M21 — 16.3%

3421 Elyse R Levine, Richard
E. Dowling, Lucius A Talley.
Marilyn A Tutchinson, Antonetta
Russolese, Ruth Miller, Charles
6 Koretsky, Mary F Miller, Mic-
hael FP Shaughnessy, Elaine M
Mary A Jones, Fredretha

L Mena, Elsa L Smith, Geraldine
Aden, Virginia R Doyle, Dorothy
M Johnson, Pearline Mack
Heather Stone.

No, 3441 — 76.3%

3441 Gladys L Hemmons, Carol
E Wells, Enid M Torrence, Sam
Wilner, Marcella Melore, Wes-
ley Willams, Delores Wood,
Bernice H Frazier, Ronald Neal,
Florence Lipton, Claudia M Ross,
Veronica M Dawson, Rosalyn
Meisler, Paye Diamond, Jewell
Jemmott, Joan E Wharton, Fred
© Ronchini, Rand A Goodkin,
Joan E Conetta, Sandra Abisdid.

No, 3461 — 16.3%

3461 Annie O Martinez, James
V Bucchino, Sylvia C Brickner,
Elayne Ganer, Dorothy Baidel,
Stephen J Sessa, Richard J So-
ter, Diane A Edwards, Verna L
Willis, Eligea Dancrea, Anne FP
Dultz, Eleanor Kaplow, Claudine
Beazer, Anne Gibbons, Annabelle
Barnwell, Sharon J Kerr, Rae
Inselman, Ruth E Allen, Caro) A
Poindexter, Esther M Carcone.

No, Mil — 16.3%

3481 Anna W Campbell, Ann
Rosenfeld, Godfrey Richardson.
Rhoda Gokienberg, Dorothy M
Harmon, Paula E Knight, Mi-
chele R Kearse, Adrienne F
Blocker, Rinah Bullock, Violet E
Burnett, Louise Bradley, Bitelle

(Continued on Page 12)

“OE qORO “epony, “YAGVAT AOTAW

lw

as WALD

eLot
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, October 30, 1973

Eligibles

Rita A Perrone, ‘Arleen A Wein-
traub, Frieda Strunin, Sol Sch-

DEER HUNTING

om 2600 Catskill Mes, acres. Bocks
everywhere. Deluxe steam heated
rooms. Cockeail Lounge. For rex
ervations:

Paramount
motel/hotel

PARKSVII
DIRECT WIRE

LLE, N.Y.
(212) 424.3370

No, 3541 — 76.3%

3541 Alice I Isaacs, Audrey A
Clinton, Bessie I Kearney, Eileen
M Radlauer, Mikdred M Braun-
stein, Veronica D Shepard, Mil-
dred Lewis, Douglas Neville, Syl-
via Shafran, Helen Rhodin, Sadie
V Bagnall, Robert J Karbowski,
Arthur P Haddock, John Bum-
bato, Eileen S Dizvengoff, Charles
© Davis Jr, Joseph Natale, Jo-
anne Piampiano, Ellen O Wyatt,

REAL ESTATE VALUES

CAMBRIA HEIGHTS
$37,990
BRICK RANCH

kitchen, oversized living room,

parage, automatic gat heat, patio,
all 1 wall carpetic

FALL Catalog of Hundreds of Real
Estate & Business Bargains.
sixes

2-Family
Detached legal 2 fam home, 2 ge
apts, god income,
ROSEDALE $34,990
Ca;

4 bedems, deluxe Cape Cod, mod
thruour, fin amt, garage, | patio,
barbecue.

ST. ALBANS $28,990
Solid brk 7 rm colonial, ige mod
rma.

Bimston Realty Inc.
229-12 LINDEN BLVD.
CAMBRIA HTS, QUEENS
TEL: 723-8400
= Open 7 Days A Week +

abopping and only a shore bur
ride to subway.

ROSEDALE

eprional home in am excep-
ional location. 7 rooms, 2 baths,
finished

midst of beautiful trees, shrubs
and flower gardens. You have to
see it t appreciate it.

BUTTERLY

& GREEN
eS es Avenue

=:

i

icone Bl
automatic gas heat, main
2|

PT MU LULU LU RU Dn DO
iif
&

sianneesoiaaeaiied

heme, Modra “thrw-ent

LAURELTON

$35,
5-BEDRM COLNL
Dt on 4,000 sq fc garden grads,
Formi diarm, 2 behs, | car gar
All this for gracious living.

QUEENS VILL $44,500
1 OF A KIND DREAM
Det legal 2-fam 5 Ig rms plus fia
beme for owner plus 4-rm ape for
inc. Beaut surroundings on 9800 sq
ft park-like grounds, To see is to

buy, call for appme,

Queens Home Sales, Inc,
170-13 Hillside Avenue
Jamaica, NY OL #7510

BUY U.S. BONDS

rss:

Florida

FLORIDA LIVING

Live th id if ie

afford fetid fi Fine “obi

20" mocele ai a ren anue’t

a

$7,950 Compiste seeteation program,

Weiter
Pomme] VILLAGE, 275 NE. 48th St.
"AMO BEACH, FLORIDA 33064

JOBS

FLORIDA = JOBS? Federal, State,

County, City. FLORIDA CIVIL SERVICE

N. Mioml, Fla, 23161,

SAVE ON
YOUR MOVE
TO FLORIDA

Compare our cost per 4,000 Ibs 10
Se. Petersburg from New Yori
$504.40; Philadetphia, $4
Hartford, Conn. 4,000 ths... §!
Vor an estimate to any destination
ia Plorida,

Write
SOUTHERN TRANSFER

and STORAGE CO., INC.
Tel (613) 822-4241
DEPT, ¢, BOX 10217
ST, PETERSBURG, FLORIDA, 39799

“VENICE, FLA, — INTRESTED?
SEE M,N. WIMMERS, REALTOR
ZIP CODE 53595

Andrea C Lindo, Winifred Sch-
wartzbach, Frieda E Jonas, Dor-
othy E Mason, Richard L Hum-
phreys,

Museoe Washington Jr, Herbert
J Rothschild, Omle 8 White,
‘Thomas P McLaughlin, Pred Ab-
rams, Mare Kravitz, Jerome P
Levine.

No, 3601 — 76.3%

3601 Allan H Warton, Vincent
Susinno, Charles Pischel, William
E Eisele, Eugene Small, Nor-
man M McAllister, Mildred Sach-
aroff, Selma § Huhnenberg,
Maryellen Vitagliano, Vincent J
Scarbino, Howard Abrahams,
Carolyn D Malloy, Irving Zim-
merman, Harry Frankel, Eleanor
Monaghan, Sol Anthony Jr, Em-
{ly M Calloway, Minnie Davis,
Inez C Santoro, Annie M Ed-
wards,

No. 3621 — 15%

3621 Virginia M Mitarotondo,
Carolyn J Lowe, Ralph E Villano,
Sarah Colson, Cynthia Ellis, An-
nie L Williams, Miriam Chlopak,
Essie M Govedy, Pauline Salis-
bury, Mildred Bachrach, Mark B
Seale, Esther Gillespie, Cynthia
Watnick, Carl A Campes!, Pearl
Rabinowitz, Doris A O'Toole,
Stanley Rothberg, Ruth Saslow,
Willie L Rush, Dolores K John-
son,

No, 3641 — 715%

3641 Theresite Aaron, Virginia

McCarthy, Carolyn J Smith,

Help Wanted M/F
bao A ve posible, spare time tg
cae Cn ye

self-addressed
reggae 2G, Ben 16739, Poe
nix, Arizona 8°

oC oe

WANTED —— REPRESENTATIVES
TO LEARN TRAVEL INDUSTRY—

90 experience necesary — Commis.
sion plus travel benefits — Full or
parttime — Hours open — Call for
information between 2:00 P.M, and
9:00 P.M.

212 336 1000 or 516 872 3111

pottblig Netice
UMM
CIGARETTES ‘ONL 43.99 & CARTON
INC.

EIDENDERG. JEWELRY
264 CENTRAL AVE, ALBANY
ETT TT

Lashley, Roberto Rivera, Edna
D Phillips, Deborah O Samuels,
Sarah Bibbins, Norma Taylor,
Robert A Castagna, Marjorie C
Ressmeyer, Farouk Salik, Maure-
en C O'Shea, Joyce Porter, Mary
L Ray,
No, 3681 — 15%
3681 Darrell S Johnson, Ann

ith M Gorenstein, Lillian Fon-
tane, Mary A Alicea, Deborah
Threats, Patricla A Parham,
Vercountes Cheatom, Barbara J
Wilkins, Samuel B Berry, Eloise
'T Lewis, Louise Berryhill, Edith
B Ramsey, Stella L Ploss, Lore A
Spiegel.
No. 3701 — 75%

3701 Sylvia A Rogers, Laetitia
E Wilson, Helen M Neumann, Ro-
salind Pleckman, Bernice C
Cummings, Dorothy L Mathis,
Betty Smith, Marfiaret M Scoz-
zari, Geraldine Johnson, Paul T
Quaranta, Arlene M Dobbins, An-
na L Jackson, James A Graham,
Richard G Matarazzo, Ouida
E Jackson, Lynda M Sobylak,
Blonetha M Welch, Noble J
Hickman, Mary D Greene, Car-
oline A Monez,

No, 3721 — 15%

3721 Doris E Grant, Patricia
A Walker, Linda J McDouffie, Jo-
an Godette, Leonard Wilensky,
Ruth Kornfeld, Steven Fedorack,
Mildred R Handler, Anne Sellick,
Linda Hansley, Debora J Kra-
vitz, Elsie 8 Friedman, Veronica
E Wilkins, Renee E Jackson,
Sara Patasnik, Andrew Rison,
Louls Damato, Myra J Jarrell,
Shirley C Banton, Angela M
Pizzurro,

No. 3741 — 15%

3741 Ruth Berwin, Sylvia L
Bilt, Kenneth M Nicholson, Gra-
clela Scott, Valerie 8 Wilson, Nic-
holas Silvestri, Ruth H Bross,
Michael J Dubelman, Bertram H

Furniture For Sale
A Big Savings New Furniture

Ch ia

GOURMET'S GUIDE

MANHATTAN

GIAN MARIN
tion, Mon, to Fri,
Noon to 10 P.M.

TEHERAN

Handsome

‘221 EAST SBTH ST. PL 2.1696, Unexcelied Italian food
decor, Gracious service, A place af distinc-
11:30 AM. to 12 Midnight; Sat, 4 P.M. to Midnight; Sun, 12

45 WEST 447TH ST. MU 2-6588, No. | Cocktail place for tree
hors d'oeuvres, Howard Hillman, a top authority in New Guide

ITALIAN

Book Inside N.Y, Famed for Seafood — Steaks — Persian and Italian specialties,

Curtain time dinner, Alter theatre cocktails, Parties of 400, — Luncheon
Cocktails — Dinner,
BROOKLYN
SEAFOOD

BAY RIDGE SEA FOOD CENTER "22: .¢

" Famous for Sea Foood Luncheons md | Dinners. Also Maison
year, This two-in-one sea food establishment features all varieties
of sea food from steamed tinnan haddie to |

Deep Blue to you.
Pod Open a

Luncheons from $2.75
served to 11 PM. Sunday
ise A la Carte,

ATH AVE.
ut of the

lobster. Also features a sea food stove,

to $3. Dinners rom 3 P.M. to 9 P.M, Daily, Saturdi (aos
dinners from 12 Moo 2 te

to 9 PM — $3:

Gibbs, Ruth Alexander,
A Hegarty, Joseph C

H

Gaffney, Loretta Douglas, Mic-
hael E Mazur, Lee H Lawrence.
No. 3761 — 15%

3761 Mindy K Chamoff, Fran-

hen, Yolanda T Costa, Barbara
Austin, Anne C Renton, Mar-
garet A Heaney, Joseph H Mar-
enfeld, Angela Buttafuoco, San-
dra Dixon, June R Simmons,
Phyllis L Whitman, Annette
Freeman, Janet J Simpson, Cyn-
this E Jones, Rhoda O’Ber, Miri-
am Adelson, Edythe aretsky,
No, 3781 — 75%

9781 Mamie L Goldston, Elsie
E Russell, Nadine V Coates, Lou-
is M Miro, Irving Altman, Mel-
vin Leifer, Steven E Feinstein,
Sydell Weiss, Fannie L Brown,
Esther N Diaz, Linda R Kauf-
man, Saundra J Smith, Ollie M
Ward, Samuel A DeGrasse, Pat-
rica Brown, Robert G Fonfrias,
Mery A Hicks, Ida M Brown,
Merrna E Drayton, Shirley T
Preiss.

No, 3801 — 75%

3801 Ana M Mercado, Barbara
A Sadauskes, Ainta Harris, Con-
nie Leone, Tda Ostrow, Chris-
tine Brown, Frank E Zychowski,
Lena R Davis, Mark G Green-
berg, Eileen 8 Allen, Julians
Bercu, Katherine Hammonds,
Rosalind J Zeitner, Laurence
W Weber, Leslie 5 Johnson, Carol
A Nelson, Gladis E Barnes, M A
Burgie, Edmond M Bensimon,
Catherine Frost.

No, 3821 — 15%

3821 Bella Seus, Louise Nasta,
Ruth E Mitchell, Evelyn G Jack-
son, Beatrice Plotnick, Fanny E
Johnson, Northeree Butler, Mic-
hael DeFreitas, Antonia Santi-
ago, Dorothy L Eversley, Con-
stance Sadauskas, Marguerite
Taylor, Queen E Brown, Lucille
J Byrd, Cherry Headley, Ernestine
Tuck, Elsie L Stubbs, Lucy L
Johnson, DeeAnn D Gumes Ce-
cilia V Jackson.

No. 3841 — 75%

3841 Ruby Ford, Isabell T
Holden. Ana Cortes, Harvey G
D Gerstman, Millicent Wood-
Isy, Leatrice M Ciacciabaudo,
Davir O'Flaherty, Florine L Dav-
is, Harriet R Wasserbach, Deir-
dre Owens, Ruth M Tennyson,
Richard Johnson, Cynthia Layne,
Mary M Marfillus, Yvonne T
Bryant, Anegla Bonica, Rebecca
L Cummings, Carol A Alexan-
der, Abraham D Aizenman.

No, 3861 — 15%

3861 Lillian Helpern, Alethia
E Gaston, Dale A Davis, Juliette
C Williams, Joseph Piechocniski,
Paul D Rose Jr, Renata M Gad-
son, Ruth L Reiter, James FP
Willlams Jr, Tanya Cook, Pran-
ces Behan, Marilyn C McDaniel,
Jennie F Spencer, Janct M Hunt-
er, Kathryn C Conway, Margaret
Murphy, Vivian Sharpe, Jerome
B Wilson, Carlos Greeniles, Ir-
win Tuchfeld.

No, 3881 — 15%

3881 James F Pratt, Frances
Heavey, Leo Skolnick, John J
Duggan, Lester Demsky, Robert
Krebs, Robert R Fernandes,
Frank J Cumbo, Earl Price, Jef-
frey L Joven, Leslie Fischer, An-
gel Piecha, Willy Thervil,Willi-
am D Hill, Luls G Osorio, Hen-
rietta Thompkins, Johnnie M
Lovejoy, Paula F Rosefelt, An-
na M Berry, Marlene 8 Brodas,

No, 3901 — 75.8%

3901 Ronny J Schneider, Shir
ley L Shafiroff, Margaret A Nash,
Jerry Liebenberg, Helene Okras-
zeweki, Elinor R Sacks, Annet-
te C Zemienieski, Ann C Mon-
crief, Sylvia M Frier, Myrtis
L Holmes, Ann E Meehan, Har-
viette Wasington, Margaret R

(Continued on Page 13)

”»

Eligibles

(Continued from Page 12)
Fieming, Daryl L Jones, Sheryll
L Lounck, Roger Washington,
Eunice V Barnett, Sylvia Schiis-
sel, Adele Delisa, Cecilia Mari-
nell,

No, 3921 — 73.8%

3921 Harriet M Hardin, Claire
R Balmon, Barbara W Cogen,
Gem M Brutus, Roberta K Mc-
Cormick Patricia S Haynes, Mary
M Rizzo, Estelle Sleavin, Aban
Cooper, Patricia L Sable, Helen
Palevsky, Annie Johnson, Peter
A Crise, Howard W Baker Jr,
Joseph A Caroline, Nathan L
Coleman, Jerome A Oddo, Charles
Delia, Regina A Jacobowitz, Han-
nah R Jacobs.

No, 3941 — 73.4%

3941 Marion A McSulla, Vera A
Reid, Geraldine Garofalo, Ethel
Berman, Mamie L Adams, Jenny
L Allenberg, Lottie M Klotz, Pat-
ricia A Koehler, Vivian O Rob-
inson, Willa D Crosland, Fran-
ces V Weber, Emma D Wilson,

Drayton, Janet P Silverman, Jose
Sin u O'Cehiuto, i I

Dillon, Lee Smith, Jean A Dor-
v.

8

No, 3961 — 73.8%

3961 Bernice W Seldon, Stev-
en R Cohen, Frances Zaback,
Pauline Goldfeder, Grace Ruf-
fino, Yolanda I Butler, Mar-
garet B Pierce, Jacqueline Bent-
ley, Michael Goldstein, Emily E
Madden, Wendelin Pierce, Eile-
en M Rodgers, Francine Longo,
Eleanore Gorochow, Catherine
O'Rrielly, Prank Labar, Diana
P Gibson Helen H Tyler, Floris
Hodge, Merial C Allen,

No, 3981 — 73.8%

3981 Dora Serenkin, Olivia R
Taylor, Evella A Crooke, Aud-
rey T Dearman, Melba Robin-
son, Pearl Ferst, Prances Schoen,
Paul Benson, Leslie G Harrison
Jr, Etta Shields, Rose Cohen,
Dauphine Buggs, Ruth M Roth-
schild, Frances Ramirez, Rose
Levine, Helen Solimando, Charles

R White, Caroline F Fahey,
Frances Hunt, Richard E Res-
nick.

No. 4001 — 73.

4001 Harold I Goldman, Car-
rie Pair, Cathy A Fitzgerald, Ro-
bert A Reaseel Dorothy A Ju-

out}

hase, Valerie M Cole, Marie
Curtis, Roy L Calhoun, Mar-
Jorie P Bauer, Hortense McCrvey,
Cecile Gargano, Sylvia R Dulitz,
Jacqueline Good, Mae F An-
drews, Patricia A Hall, Kathieen
A Watkins, Anne M Collins, Gen-
esis Washington, Naomi B Dar-
row, Martha A Zucconi.

No, 4021 — 13.8%

4021 John P Defino, Yvonne
A Magruder, Eileen T Geoghe-
gan, Gloria Bolden, Belle B
Dan, Doris McKay, Howard L
Jackson, Sally Cohose, Zelda
Pomerantz, Viola E Carroll, Leo-
nard Johnson, Ida Sessa, Ro-
bert 8 Lockser, Emma Naidisch,
Waldetrudi Masson, Tillie Ros-
ner, Jacqueline Clay, Odessa T
Lawson, Loretta E Schiavi, Ger-
trude Zonis.

(Continued Next Week)

Name Oswego Sheriff

ALBANY—Ray T. Chesbro, of
Phoenix, has been named sheriff
of Oswego County to succeed
former Sheriff Ramond Cotton,
resigned, The appointment will
tun to the end of next year

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High Schoo! Entrance an -2.00
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uesday, October 30,

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7

CIVIL

FOR THE DEMS — democrats were first-up for a two-part series of meetings
sponsored by Rensselaer County unit of the Civil §
didates for local office in order to learn their views on public employee issues. Here
Susie Pfaffenbach, the unit's political action chairman, is flanked by,
committee member Ray McDonough, Democratic DA candidate John Kingsley, Demo-

cratic County Clerk candidate George F. Regan and committee member John Poleto.

Poughkeepsie Ed

(Continued from Page 1)
Shaut, recording secretary.
Serving on the executive com-
ittee are Alexander J. Detmer
and Jerry Gusmane; auditing
committee: Kenneth Quick and
Joseph R. Ringwood, and pub-
lietty chairman, John A, Fame-
lette, Jr.

ANOTHER DEGREE —
Joseph Dolan, director of lo-
cal government affairs for the
Civil Service Employees Assn
has completed work for his mas
ter's degree from SUNY at Al
bany's Graduate School of Pub
le

Please Check the Appropriate

tetfective date
eltertive date )

Sullivan Chapter
Endorses Several
Local Candidates

MONTICELLO — The
directors of the Sullivan County
of the Civil Service Em-
Assn. has endorsed the
ug candidates for offices
Sullivan County

"Stretch" Hanofee

board of

within
Francis
County Clerk;

George Nauhaus
Town of Bethel

Dennis Greenwald — Supervisor
Town of Mamakating

Supervisor,

George Schork — Justice, Town
of Cochecton.

The actions we
based ords of the can-
lidates in dealing with public
employees and thelr representa-
tives. Additionally, the chapter
received ‘om = Henry
Panchyshyn
suppor
bring ¢ r
Thompson Highway Department

cted Superintendent

don this letter, the Sul-

County CSEA board of di-
rectors ed to support Mr
Pai his bid for elee-

tion

Pass your copy of
The Leader

on to a non-member.

uxfes)

Tar Tatra

Appre

PPTTTT TTT

priate Boxtes)

.
.

rvice Employees Assn. with can-

from left,

Poughkeepsie Schools Gain Pay

iContinued from Page 3)

) 20 years, four weeks, and
than 20 years, five weeks.
nployees participating in the
ick leave bank who give one day
of accumulated sick leave will be
matched by the Board of Edu-
eatior

Board of Education president
Louls Kustas commented, “These
workers have been among the

of the Civil
Court. He appears at

PILGRIM STATE INSTALLA

lowest paid employees in the sys-
tem. We are happy that we could
squeeze some extra money out
for them

Bargaining on of
CSEA chapter we Fame-
lette, chapter first vice-president
Gary Marquette and delegate
John Famelette, Jr., with assist-
ance from CSEA collective nego-
tating specialist Nels E. Carlson

ita

FOR THE GOP — Republicans were in the clean-up spot in the second of the
Rensselaer meetings for candidates. Making political points at Troy Elks Club are.
from left, Republican County Legislative candidate James Pasihella, Rensselaer County
unit president Joseph Pastore, Republican County Legislative incumbent Herbert L.
Bauer, Republican County Legislative candidate Izetta Fisher and CSEA executive
vice-president and statewide political action chairman Thomas H.

MeDonough.

Training Academy

ALBANY — A former Catholic
seminary in Albany will become
the site of a new training aca-
demy for post-adjudicatory per-
sonnel in the Correction and Pro-
bation field

Designed to give additional
training to Correctional Services
personnel, probation officers and
Personnel of county jails, the
new academy will occupy the
former Mater Christi seminary
on New Scotland Ave., Albany.

TION — At recent ceremonies,
Service Employees Assn. were sworn in by Marquette Floyd, judge of the Suffolk District
far left in all three of the installation pictures here.

fs

officers of Pilgrim State Hospital

Above, from left, chapter

officers taking their oath are president Julia Duffy, first vice-president Emmett Foster, second vice-pres-

ident Rudolph Perrone, secretary

Directors of Pilgrim State Hospital chapter taking the oath from
White, Maria Damasco,
Fischer, Oradil Fuchs, Mic
won, not in photo, is also a director,

Tanghe
Tucker

Rone Cili, Theln

Annie

Charles Blazik,
ael Stekardis.

Doris Greene

Mar

Augusta Steward and treasurer Alice Sarabia.

a= A”
Judge Floyd are, from left, Emma
Naya, Elmira Cuffee, Leo
and George Inman, John Jack

Delegates for the chapter, left from Judge Floyd, are Ben Kosiorowski, Jerry
ner, Raymond Magtuilo, Al Bregencer, Bertram Holmes,

Messina, James LaRock,
MePhalter, Julia Duffy
from the photo,

Florine Alla

vivia Weinstock, Alfred Carlson, Harry Raskin
Emmett Foster

Rudolph Perrone and Margie

Stoneham, Henry Bitt-
Catherine Kosierowski, Joseph
Erwin Zimmerman, Crawford
Noya. John Jackson is missing

@e
Latest State And County Eligible Lists

PROM, TO TATIONARY ENGR,

‘Ten Held May 12, 1975

Lise Eat, Sept, 21, 1975
‘Onwepo

1 Goebricher N 98.2
2 Heide H 942
5 Colgan T Elnbeg Depot 929
4 Fillo H Bk 92.6
5 Hilbrandt F Red Hook 92.3
6 Stoliker J Troy 924
7 Madison G Hadiey 2
‘B Eldredge W Sharon Wt
9 Tietgens J Franklin Sq 0.6
10 Chapin H Dover Plains 90.4
11 Lamont L Buffalo 90.1
12 Seaman _K_ Binghamton 99.7

WHERE TO APPLY
FOR PUBLIC JOBS

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

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

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

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

The Board of Higher Educa-
tion advises teaching staff ap-
plicants to contact the Individ-
ual schools; non-faculty Jobs are
filed through the Personnel De-
partment directly

STATE — Regional offices of
the Department of Civil Service
are located at the World Trade
Center, Tower 2, 55th floor, New
York, 10048, (phone: 488-4248);
State Office Campus, Albany,
12226; Suite 750, 1 W. Genessee
St. Buffalo 14202. Applicants
may obtain announcements
either in person or by sending
& stamped, self-addressed envel-
ope with thelr request,

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

Judicial Conference jobs are
filed at 270 Broadwa: New
York, 10007, phone; 488-4141
Port Authority jobseekers should

contact thelr offices at 111
Eighth Ave, New York, phone:
620-7000,

FEDERAL—The US, Civil

Service Commission, New York
Region, ‘Yuns a Job Information
Center at 26 Federal Plaza, New
York 10007. Its hours are 8:30
am. to 5 p.m. weekdays only,
Telephone 264-0422.

Federal entrants living upstate
(North of Dutchess County)
should contact the Syracuse Area
Office, 301 Erie Blvd. West,
Syracuse 13202. Toll-free calls
may be made to (800) 522-7407.
Federal titles have no deadline
Nnless otherwise indicated.

INTERGOVERNMENTAL —
‘The Intergovernmental Job In-
formation and Testing Center
supplies information on N.Y,
City and State and Federal jobs.
It ta located at 90-04 16lst St,
Jamaica, Queens, 11432 and of-
fice hours are from 9 am, to
5 pm, weekdays. The phone for
information about city jobs is
523-4100; for state, 526-6000;
and for federal, 526-6192,

13 Miller © Ovid 99.0
14 Dailey 1 Potsdam #87
1S Martone BR Mechanicvil 887
16 Boltin FE Acdca 88.6
17 Dobion R Verona #85
1k Rowand R 88.5
19 Spaulding T Marieca 88.2
2c Georgetown Bat
21 Coil M_ Fredonia #80
22 Moaley A Whitesboro 880
24 Szilacri B Newark 877
24 Bergfels R Wamaic 87.7
25 Riley G New Palex a6
26 Glazier R_ Cortland 87.3
2° Sheridan J Smithtown 87.3
28 Rutledge RN Western 87.2
29 Wimhip M Gowanda 872
40 Creek a7
31 Vanschaack B Hudson 865
42 Mark Ho Platesburgh 865
33 Bates T Cectarangus 45.9
M Nie D Buffalo 858
55 Prindle B Ovid 858
M6 Tyo J Albany 85.6
47 Guinier A - 85.1
SR Kearoey R Poughkeepsie BOR

(4 Hough A Maryland
43. Moffac D Mt Morris
46 Steber P Placesburgh
47 Mahler F Groton

48 Verbridge K gun

49 Wolf C Cheektowaga
50 Graber 1 Interlaken
S1 Varden R Tupper Lake
52 Catalano G Blasdelt

70 Hatko J Albany
71 Hamilton D_ Schenevus
72 Basset G Me

16 Reevs M_ Filenville

77 Drennan H Lk Rookonkma
TA Bartlet L Ronkoooma

79 Miller A Albany

80 Bornswick R_ OsweRo

81 Kosiba A Hagaman

£2 Givliana C Buffalo

5} Puglia M Bellerose.

ft Valentini R Cot Inlip.

85 Joswick R

88 McCarthy G Ogdensburg
89 Nephew D Gowanda
90 Sawyer J Lycoming
21 Haines E Warwick

92 Ogborn K Davenport
93 Reed C Millipore

94 Scligman R Bktyn
3 PpAuRe
L_ Amscerdam
97 Pebler J Clim
98 Cairns Bovina Cir
99 Gage DE Feeetows
100 MacArthur R Batavia
101 Woods F Churubusco

102 Foster R Amsterdam

103 Adama M Port Jervis... ..
104 Trawinski F Wes Seneca

FRIENDSHIP INNS
SKYLANE

STATE & GOVERNMENT
EMPLOYEE RATES
FREE CONT. BREAKFAST
1927 Central Ave - Rte 5

2 Mi Of Norhway
Call 518-069-0002
For Reservations

Pancake & Steakhouse

Opening Soon

ALBANY
BRANCH OFFICE
FOR RORMATION “segeriing, ad.

“

tisement, Pl
PH T. SELLEW
303 SO. MANNING BLYD.
NY Phome IV 2-5474
ARCO
CIVIL SERVICE BOOKS
and all tests
PLAZA BOOK SHOP
380 Broadway
Albany, N.Y.
Mail & Phone Orders Filled

MAYFLOWER-ROYAL COURT APARTMENTS.
Furnished, Untwrnished, and Reems,
Phene HE 41994 (Albany),

16.6

106 Schaar Oncones
107 Wi F Bx

1s Hetes ) androes
109 Fordyte

IIL Mothersell RK  Lacona

130 Turner KR Pawling
‘ennedy A Oxfor

131 K

132 Boarkney J Fax Aurors
133 Garrect P Bktyn

134 Fedsano R. Beenwood
135 Ryan R Coreta

136 Dewyer: R Cables

137 Nene

168 Doolicle J Binghamon

EXAM 35214

PROM. ‘TO ASST. ARCHITECT
Tese Held June 2, 1975
Lise Ket. Get, 1," 1973

J Demarracis DE Greenbush 86.0
2 Sutyla L Amsterdam 81.6
3 Rathbun D_ Stillwater 80.9
4 Ryan JS 30.8
$ Mare H Burnt Hills Thad
6 Cohen J Schenectady 737
7 Eason © Mt Vernon 84
EXAM 51203

PROM, TO CHIEF PAYROLL
& ROSTER CLK

Ten Held Jan,

Lit Fa. Sep 6,

Demski C Buffalo 75.4

FXAM_ 51208
PROM. TO PRIN, STENO
Tee Held Jan. 13, 1973
Lint Ex. Sept. 6,
Monoron J
Paree V Williamsvid
Perron 1 Williamavit

90.8
5
167

FXAM 35133
PROM, TO COMP. CLAIMS INVSTGR
Test Held Apr. 14, 1978
Lise Fst, Sepe 7, "1975
Belinfame A Bx
None

Stewart FE By
Kelso A Bx

11 Bellamy M NYC
12 Wikoa G NYC

FXAM 39132

PROM. TO COMPENS INVSTGR

Ye Hebd Ape. 14, 1975

Lint Est, Sept. 1,” 1973
Zwicker W Island Pk

1
3

‘

5

6

?

‘

9

oe

u

n

is ?
rr
rt) 4
6 166
w Tt
18 Wallace a ee

19 Berant ?
Bhiyn ™.

nt Biunecin HH Freepon 24
22 Congedo EB Bhiya. : ma
EXAM
PROM. TO 5K vallNrion ENGR
‘Ten Held Mar. 24, 197
Lint den 978)
1 Glamer ly 96.5
H Treiber } pd mt
C “SS
4 Teumim’ P Wlaors 6

Drew H Kearny NJ 91.5
SA McGann ¥ Woodbridge NJ 915
6 Stenet G Glenidale 90.7
> Arnett Ho Biklyn 90.5

None
9 Navoll A Bimburse 89.5
10 Retin A Latham 89.5
11 Nadet J | Albany 48.5
12 Beach © faliston Lk BB
1) Petrones K Coxsackie 86.2
\4 Koblenz A Al "7.9
15 Soika R Mechanicvit a7s
16 Crimmins Ro Flushing 87.8
17 Keleger & Albany 46.7
Ik Powell R_ Loudonville 865
19 Sistarenik E Schenectady 86.5
20 Dynin § Baldwin 86S
2t Lucki J Albany 854
22 Pankowitx M = 49
2) Reorr Ro Surat 39
34 Ener C La Ferry NJ 835
28 Wincees W_ Latham Bd

Verma Y & Greenbush #29

Siles A. Rexford #25

Thiele Ro Bergenfid NJ 2S

Judson A Niverville ” 822

ivan R Bayside as
St Luke Ro Bkiyn RLS
32 Levy Charles 1 Albany ‘BLS
AS Stein B Watervliet 80.5
M Thoren © Albany a0.5
SS Agansky J Albany 79.9
46 Dugan F Finors 787
A7 Steinberg RAI 7S
38 Sennig D Watervtier TAS
39 Labeck F Rego Pk 716
40 Doyle © Rosedale 114
41 Gordon A Waterviier 765
42 Moynitan W Yonkers 73.7
43 Wager BR Albany 155
44 Fiberteld A Glendale Bs
43 Luny D Al 735
46 Burger M_ Seacen Is 72.0
4 Dvorky T Guilderland 70.8

EXAM 35079
SR. COMP. €

1 Mayo No Bhiyn aS5
2 Romi A Amsmerdam M4
\ Ridley M_ Bklyn 844
( Flyne EF Rensseluer wea
5 Vafukos L Bklyn 82.2
6 Kiwacr J Jackson Hee 82.2
7 Dagen W Bx 82.0
® Gonn M NYC BI
9 Simms C Bx 792
10 Phillips RK Flushing 792
1 Baier 1 7a2
12 Hatheld 8 7
13 Woodward F NYC 77
14 Futlo FE Bkiyn 773
15 McCullagh J Woodside 72,0
16 Duke J Bklyn 166
17 Witiame Josten 35.3
18 Parker EF 73.3
1b Borer © Greees 43
20 Epioceo P NYC 74.0
21 Bobinis J Avbura 73.0
22 Doty EW Henriette 22
24 Faulkner N_ Rochester 719

EXAM 35005
ASSOCIATE STATE ACCOUNTS
AUDITOR

‘Tes Held March 24, 1973

Tine Boe Aug 13, 1973
| Lockwood S P Bativton 69
2 Rammage R Albany as
+ Blo KF Albany a2
4 Puterman M Closter 06
5 Joyce PF Voorhees

6 Goodman H Albany

7 Brafman M Yonkers 765
#& Tyrretl G Waterford 9
9% Nowinski T Albany m4
10 Brennan J D Green ls 729
tt Ring K T Troy 724
12 Lindholm RL Canajohar 24
1h McClune K Albany 70.7

EXAM 35087
‘TRANS PLANNING AIDE 2
Tee Het March 24, 1978

1 Kling S$ J Guldrind Cor a9
2 Dingley R Cohoes a7t2
5 Brown M Coboes a1
4 Tenner M Albany 2
S$ Palmateer J Coxsackie 83.2
% Freiberger LC Ballston Spa Bl
7 Peeson T J Albany a2
8 Comeai A S Greenwich 80.2
9 Young C G Averill ark D4
10 Slawsky S Albany 75,
11 Mason J Valley Fir 7
12 Rusiecki R_ Cohoes 4,
13 Winch DoH Schenectady 743
1+ Wells HL Albany 73.2
15 Travis J C Batlwon Spe 72.2
16 Cronin M Albany 70.2

7

*

P

E Ms
w .

R Dd

4 wimeos appressers, ©
STENOTYPES
STENOGRAPH for sale S
ond rent, 1,000 others,
Low-Low Prices
ALL LANGUAGES
TYPEWRITER CO., Inc.

119 W. 23 St, (W. of 6th Ave.)
NAY LY, CHelsea 3-8006

EXAM 35.303

1 Kelly P oT Athany on
2 Growman $ S Delmar 9
3 Page RA Latham 85.1
4 Mints K Albany 76.0
5 Bint M M Bayside 47
6 Bach J F Bayville 134
7 Sochocki FA Guilderinnd 75.0
& Wilton DG Albany 75.0
9 Glaser 1. Slingerlands 744
10 Wight FF Delmar 4
EXAM 3$032
PSYCHATRIC SOC WK ASST 2
Tem Held Feb. 24, 197%
Lise Est. Aug. #1975
1 Crupi 1 P Seaton Is 90.6
EXAM 34111
PHOTOGRAPHER §
‘Ten Held April 14, 1973

Lise Ese, Avg, 22,1975
4 Simms J Clareace Cre

1 Wobh 1 T Cr 93.2
2 Loewy M Voorheesvil 80.4
3 Averbach E NYC 73.0
EXAM 34096
SR SOC SEC DISABILITY FXMR
Test Held March 24, 1973
List Fat. Sepe. 3, 1973
1 Kolber RP Bronx 94.2
2 Becker M Bx 92.7
3 Miller D Brooklyn 92.7
4 Jennings A NYC "97
5 Tost C A Astoria SRS
6 Rios J M_ Brooklyn 87.7
7 Plasccia PA Brooklyn 86.9
& Pordy RJ Fax Meadow 5.2
9 Malvey T NYC a3.
10 Roccaforte J A Jamaice 83.7
11 Greenberg M NYC 83.7
12 Iwanysryn M NYC 82.3
13 Mason G NYC m2.2
14 Priewski FM Brooklyn 82.2
15 Levia D S Bayside 82.2
16 Bernsein EM Baldwin 82.2
17 Tyrrell ML Bronx 82.2
18 Bell G G Bison NJ 81.7
19 Logan B A NYC 80.8
20 Bucky BR NYC 80.7
21 Benson HG NYC 79.4
22 Schapiro R Bronx 792
23 Zeichner} Brooklye 79.2
24 Brickson K T Bronx 79.2
25 Sweeney P Brooklyn 178
26 Laterrern J Brooklyn 778
27 Net 8 F NYC 17
28 m7
39 Kurcrewshi F Moncvale NJ 15
30 Cox G E Brooklyn 35

M Aweiaza JR Scacen Is
4S Vivona SV Staten Is
M6 Harrison B NYC

EXAM 45119
ASST ARCH SEC WRITER
‘Tes Held Apeil 14, 1975
Lint Ex, Aug. 27, 1978
1 Hahn T P Schaghticoke 96.7
2 Edwards J J Dobbs Peery 833
3 Ryniec $ Albany 29.3
4 Gagtiaedo N_ Elmoor 760
3 Nicotina V Albany 73.7
6 Alwer D J Albany 73.1
7 Lefebure FE Waterford m1
& Hughes F J Waverviier 74.0
BA Gentile A F Schenectady 727
9 Terry RJ Albany 724
EXAM 45140

1 Angulo’ RG. Wentbury” 79.1
2 Schneller HW Hompacead 768
3 Bencrak G Onone Park 43

HIGH SCHOOL
EQUIVALENCY
DIPLOMA
= 5 WEEK COURSE $75 5

[LW Prepare 01 to pam N.Y, State

WS EQUIVALENCY DIPLOMA §}
ism in cles of Home feats.
Manee Charge accepee, FREE

PL 7-0300 l
ERTS SCHOOLS
| SAT Wen STch Street |
New York, N.Y, 10019

SCHOOL DIRECTORY

MONROE INSTITUTE — IBM COURSES Commons HRA

Sie PREPARATION
vast

Fe A UE

er EAST FORDHAM ROAD, ARONX — 955.700
Aoproved for Vets and Foreign Students, Accred, N.Y, State Dept. of Rdmeation,

st

£261 “OE 4q9RO “Aupeony “YACVAT AOAWAS WAND
16

73

19

Tuesday, October 30,

ADER,

CIVIL SERVICE LE

Nassau County Chapter Celebrates
25th

Anniversary

Theodore C. We: left, president of largest public employee union in the nation, and
Ralph G. Caso, second from right, chief executive of largest county government in nation,
join Ralph Natale, second from left, and Irving Flaumenbaum, right, first vice-president
and president, respectively, of largest single chapter in CSEA's statewide organization
Mr, Natale was general chairman of the event

Members of Nassau County Department of Public Works get
together for a group photo with chapter president Irving
Flaumenbaum, right

Plaque is presented to Helen Keck, retired social services worker at A. Holly Paterson Home, Nassau Chapter president Irving Flaumenbaum looks over
for her dedication to CSEA through the years. Chapter president Irving Flaumenbdaum, in citation just presented to chapter by County Executive

making the presentation above

had

Leader photos by Sulo Aalto)

Visitors
standing from left, are Fred Gurtowski and Emit

Pleszar,

ter. In
Wensl

praised Ms, Keck as

who came farthest distance, 260 miles,

executive

foreground

representative and president
respectively, of CSEA's Montgomery County chap-

is CSEA president

Theodore

‘one of the hardest workers we ever Ralph G. Caso. Citation recognizes chapter's growth from
100 members at founding in 1948 to its current membership
of approrimately 20,000, citing it as “foremost public em-
ployee union in New York State.”

Among the dignitaries attending 25th anniversary dinner-dance festivities last month at .Carl
Hoppl's Malibu Restaurant at Lido Beach were, from left, Nassau chapter second vice-president
Alex Bozza, chapter financial secretary David Silberman, Helen Natale, chapter first vice-presi-
dent Ralph Natale, Grace Caso, Ruth Flaumenbaum, Nassau County Executive Ralph Caso and
chapter president Irving Flaumenbaum, who ts also a vice-president of the statewide CSEA organi-
ation and president of its Long Island Region No. 1

a

Metadata

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Reel 13
Resource Type:
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Date Uploaded:
December 21, 2018

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