Civil Service Leader, 1974 January 22

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Sewiee

EADER

Largest

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ewapaper ublic Employees

Vol. XXXIV, No. 43

Tuesday, January 22, 1974

Price 15 Cents

aSYIIUIUIsS

isting

— See Pages 8&9

tor of the mental hospital.

——.
Repeat This!
Ali Groups Interested

In Money Target On
Assembly’s Stephens

HE State Legislative

Law pays special rec-
ognition to the Senate Fin-
ance Committee and the
Assembly Ways and Means Com-
mittee. Under law these
committees serve throughout the

year and are empowered to
make, through their respective
chairmen, such Investigations of
the various activities of the State

as will ald them in their
(Continued on Page 6)

con

Solomon Bendet, president of CSEA's New York City Region,
gesticulates emphatically as he defends employees at Creed-
moor State Hospital against charges linking them to a high
crime rate. With him at the press conference in the CSEA
Manhattan offices are Terry Dawson, left, president of the
CSEA chapter at Creedmoor, and Dr. William Werner, direc-

crime at Creedmoor.”

‘The chief of the big mental
hospital In Queens came to the
CSEA New York City Region
offices at 11 Park Place on Jan.
18 to defend the reputation of
his 2,700 employees at a press
briefing. The late-morning gath-
ering was called by Region pres-

Suffolk Wins In Three

RIVERHEAD — This week, a CSEA complaint, Mr. Porter
Suffolk chapter Civil Service said Sheriff Philip Corso had
Employees Assn. president sareed to retitle employees at

the jail as correction officers.
Mr. Porter paid “special com-

E. Ben Porter announced an
agreement with the county elim-

inating a practigeg of pincing . mendats to the chapter's
Some employees on the prior labor-management committee for
year’s pay scale, and granting successfully resolving the griev-

increased allowances in cash for
nurses’ uniforms.

ances after "tedious negotiations
in which the county at first ap-

The agreement will advance peared unusually intransigent
about 300 employees one to two The committee is chaired by
grades. Ewa Reid, with Prank Randall

It also provides 4 reimburse-
ment to some employees whom
the cou had docked after
claiming they had been placed
on the wrong pay scale.

‘The uniform agreement affects

and Dominick Giordano as mem-
bers. They were assisted by Bill
Griffin, CSEA field representative

The pay scale agreement pro-
vides that all employees shall be
placed in the 1974 pay scale step

about 500 members. The cash applicable, and new employees
payment been sought by
employees, In addition, allow-

ances will be increased by $40
to $50 to maximums of $100 to
$160.

In another agreement settling

ident Solomon Bendet, who
sought to counter the effects of
highly publicized charges by
State Senator Prank Padavan
about the supposed high inci-
dence of crime at the hospital,
Senator Padavan's charges had
included allegations against the

Demands

will be hired in the proper step.
Step increments shall be effective
at the start of each year.

The misplacement of employ-
ees had affected only a sm
centage of county employees, but
the inequity had been a major
irritant to the CSEA

Creedmoor Director

Defends His Staffers
With Highest Praise

NEW YORK CITY — “We have the finest state employees,” Dr. William Werner, di-
rector of Creedmoor State Hospital, told a press conference at Civil Service Employees
Assn. Headquarters here, “but they are being demoralized by the blowup of charges of

employees for some of the crimes.
In the question-and-answer
period, Dr, Werner was question-
ed intensively about @ statement
he had purportedly made that
outsiders and insiders were re-
sponsible for the crime incidents
at Creedmoor. Dr, Werner ré-
plied that he never intended and
never did cast doubt on the in-
tegrity of the employees. A very
few members might be involved,
he said, but it 4s unfair to bal-
loon charges so that the whole
staff feels victimized.
The very great majority of
our employees are simply mar-
velous,” sald Dr. Wemer. “They
just don't get enough credit
for what they do. These civil ser-
(Continued on Page 14)

INSIDE THE LEADER

Improve Dental Service In

Syracuse, Buffalo Areas — See Page 3
CSEA Calendar — See Page 3

Latest State Eligibles — See Page 13

Plan SUNY Workshop — See Page 14

Statewide Officers Lend Support
For Acceptance Of Oneida Pact

(Special To The Leader)

UTICA — With Civil Service Employees Assn. executive
vice-president Thomas H. McDonough attending hear-
ings inside, and Ci racuse Region No. 5’s president

Richard Cleary and executive vice-president Loule Sunder-
haft among the informational

orderly demonstration on behalf

plcketers outside, Oneida County
legislators knew the employees
union meant business.

An average of 50 people a

day took part in the information-
al picketing during most of last
week as Oneida County's Legis-
lature met on @ fact-finder's re-
port on a contract settlement for
county workers,

Mr. Sunderhaft, who {s also
president of the Oneida Coun-
ty chapter, was joined by fellow
oMcers and chapter members, as
well as statewide officers Mo-
Donough and Cleary, during the

of the report’s acceptance.

‘The legislative hearing ts the
final stage in settling the dispute
between CSEA and Oneida Coun.
ty over terms of a new work
agreement for county employees.

Roger Kane, CSBA field repre-
sentative, said that negotiations
on contract provisions had be-
gun last July, but had ended
in an impasse when both sides
could not agree on @ settlement.
The CSEA representative said
thet, in his opinion, the County

(Continued on Page 14) and story begin on page 3.)

ON THE ISSUES — Samuci Grossfield, president of CSEA's Rochester chapter, emphasizes ad-
vantages of four-day work week during current energy crunch, This and other topics, such as cost of
living, agency shop and insurance, were discussed at meeting last week between representatives of chap~
ters of the Genesee Federation (an informal grouping of CSEA chapters in the northeastern area of
the union's Buffalo Region 6) and 11 state senators and assemblymen from the area. Among partiel-
pants at the session were, left, Kenneth Bennett, president of SUNY at Geneseo chapter. Huddled at
right are Edison O’Brien, Newark State School president, and Newark delegate Frank Napoleon. Thomas
Gartley, president of SUNY at Brockport chapter, is identifiable in background, (Additional photos
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, January 22, 1974

SERVICE PLAQUE — state Housing Commissioner Lee

Goodwin, right, presents the John T, Haugaard Jr, achievement
award to Meyer Poses, given annually to a Civil Service employee
for outstanding service to the Division of Housing and Commu-
nity Renewal. Mr. Poses is an associate attorney specializing in
public housing law, The award's namesake, who died in 1965, had

nearly 25 years.

Wanna be a go guy?
Give a pint of blo
Call UN 1-7200

The Greater New York
jood Program

Do Your Neeed A

h Scheol
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for personnel satisfaction

6 Weeks Course Approved by
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Write or Phone for
Information

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

Please write me free about the
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been Assistant Comissioner of Development and served the state for

Brady To Chair
Probation Study

ALBANY — Members of the
Special Probation Departments
Study of Local Governments
Committee of the Civil Service
Employees Assn. have been ap-

pointed by Theodore C. Wenzl,
president of CSEA
James Brady of North Ton-

awanda was named chairman of
the special CSEA committee.

Other designated committer
members are Allan Greenfield of
Monticello; James Frisina
Ogdensburg Peter —Grieco,
Watertown; Joseph Gilligan.
Center Moriches, and James
Mattel, Port Washington.

O'CONNOR DEPUTY

ALBANY — Former Syracuse
Police Chief John F. O'Connor,
hes been appointed a deputy
commissioner of the State De-
partment of Motor Vehicles, ef-
fective immediately. His annual
salary will be $25,592

For information on
Group Health Coverage write

GROUP HEALTH
INCORPORATED

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

Nine In HA
Win Awards

Nine employees of the New
York City Housing Authority
have been honored with cash
awards and certificates of merit
(including a posthumous award)
in the Authority's Employees’
Suggestion Plan program,

The top award of $50 went to
Joseph Merola, resident building
superintendent of Van Dyke
Houses, Brooklyn, for suggest~
ing an easier and safer method
for housing firemen to open and
close the rear boller doors of

Superior and Cleaver-Brookes
boilers.
Other awards were: Sylvia

Maiman, senior clerk, of Carey
Gardens, Brooklyn, $25; Patrol-
man Leroy L. Smith, of Lillian
Wald Houses, Manhattan, $25;
Antoinette Tuccio, supervising
clerk at Central Piles, $10; Sim-
on Kalinkowitz (deceased) hous-
ing assistant at Marlboro Houses,
Brooklyn, $10; Robert G. Thomp-
son, maintenance man at Gun
Hill Houses, the Bronx, $10; Al-
bert Madison, housing assistant
of Holmeés-Isaacs Houses, Man-
hattan, $10; Frances Gorman,
senior clerk at Central office,
$10; and Greta I. Agard, su-
pervising stenographer, Central
office, $10

KERN SUPERVISOR

ALBANY — Seymour Kern, of
Hartsdale, assistant supervisor of
the White Plains offices of the
State Tax Department since 1970
has been named supervisor of thé
Binghamton district tax office at
an annual salary of $25,133

Bricklayer Prom Exam

Twenty-six bricklayer candi-
dates have been called to take
the competitive written part of
promotional exam 3654 by the
city Dept. of Personne! on Feb, 2

17 Rec Sups Miss

Seventeen assistant supervisor
of recreation candidates have

been found not eligible for pro-
motional exam 3668, according to
the. bidd Dept

of Personnel

NEW YORK COLISEUM
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Police News

Subscription 0 Per Year
"etleidesl copion 130

HONORABLE MENTION

‘The following 22 members of
the Police Dept. were awarded
departmental honorable mention
recognition with 1.25 promotion
points, for extraordinary bravery,
intelligently performed in the
line of duty at imminent and per-
sonal danger of life;

Sgts. Stephen Gure and Ro-

bert O'Neill; Detectives Step-
hen DelCorso, Hubert Erwin,
Cleave Bethae, Philip Mogan,

Maurice Prescott, Dennis Dowd,
Richard Rossi, James Ward,
Woodrow Dury. Donald McNeill,
Alfred Genova, Harold Dice, Al-
bert V. Casella Jr., Melvin Betty,
William Hoy, Maximo Jimenez,
Cleotis Wright, Rudolph Prancls,
John Brown, Bobby Hardwick,

EXCEPTIONAL MERIT

The following 13 members of
the Police Dept. were awarded
departmental exceptiona] merit
recognition with 1 promotion
point for an act of bravery, in-
telligently performed involving
personal risk of life:

Sgt. Andre Alonge, Detectives
Dominick Amemdolare, John D.

Fiynn, William J Foley, Gerard
Marini, Neil O'Donnell, Thomas
Broderick, Joseph § Ranone,

James W. Green, Edward Wisne-
ski.

Police Officers Willis Krebs,
Carl Garritant, Carlo Antonino.

COMMENDATION

The following 19 members of
the Police Dept. were awarded
departmenta} recognition with
%4 a promotion point for acts in-
volving grave personal danger
in the intelligent performance of
duty or for a highly creditable
unusual police accomplishment

Deputy Inspector Francis X.
Smith; Capt. Thomas J. Gleason;
Lts. Gerard L. Drumm, Richard
H. McBride, Franklin Daniana;
Sgts. Patrick Bradley, Charles
Brereton, John M. Gambello,
Martin K. Stiastny

Detectives George Alleyne,
Frank Allen, Bruce Brennan, An-
gelo Garcia, Lawrence Gallagher,
William Toy, Victor Taravella,

Allen F. Elmore, Joseph K
Euglia; Police Officer Eugene
Meghmann.

MERITORIOUS

The following 60 members of
the Police Dept. were awarded
meritorious police duty, for half
&@ promotion point.

Capts. Martin Kost, William E.
Parrell; Lts. Frank Pepe, Henry
Pranklin, Nicholas Passero; Sgts
Thomas Cafferty, Henry J. Muer-
ner, Emidio Ponzi, Sylvester
O'Brien, Andrea Bottarl, James
Biatus, James T. McDonald;
Detectives Francis Kealy, Ed-
mond Sorgente, Irwin Vale, Leo-
nard Schniper, Robert Waters,
Victor Taravella, Donald Pal-
mer, George Moscardini, Neil
O'Donnell, Anthony Sanchez,
Rayomnd Casaburi, Catherine
Bertolino, John J. Dwyer, Don-
ald McNulty, Alfred Licata, Don-
ald Leadbetter.

Police Officers William Whit-
aker, Richard Miller, James
Burke, Robert Cianfrone, George
Leavey, John O'Shea, Michael
Mortak, Robert A, Eugenia, Ped-
ro Crescentl, George Youngman,
Paul Schmucker, Lawrence Boyle,
John P. Quinn, Walter Voss,
John McCarthy, Thomas Todaro,
John Hunt, Phillip Cerbini, Barry
Goldblatt, Joseph DeBratto,
Jerry Lipson, Robert Krosecky,
Richard H. Muller, Walter Hic-
key, Francis K. Clifford, James
M, Kennedy, Edward Witkowski,

Housing, Transit Cop
Eligibles Now Being
Certified For Feb.

Police Officer Class

Certifications for a Police
Academy class — now expected
to be Initiated the first week
in February — began last week.
Eligibles from the Police Dept.
and Housing and Transit Au-
thority lists were certified for
the class, which the Police Dept.
hopes will include about 400 ap-
pointments.

To date, a total of 57 patrol-
men, police trainee eligibles and
15 policewomen eligibles from
the Police Dept. have been cer-
tified. The patrolman eligibles
are from eight different lists and
the policewoman eligibles are
from list 9091, between the num-
bers of 194 and 170’

A total of 505 Transit Au-
thority patrolman eligibles from
lst 2225 have been certified so
far, They are between the num~
ber 175 and 2900, Forty-four
Housing Authority patrolman eli-
sibles have been certified from
list 2226, to date, between the
numbers 101 and 2293.

For more certification details,
see “patrolman, police trainee”
under “List Progress” on page
3 of this issue of The Leader.

Key Answers

EXAM 3611
PROM, TO GENERAL PARK
FOREMAN
Test Held Jan, 5, 1974
Of the 196 candidates who filed
for this exam, 174 appeared. Can-
didates who wish to file protests
against these proposed key an-
swers have until Feb. 8, 1974 to
submit thelr protests in writing,
together with the evidence upon
which such protests are based.

. D; 3, D; 4, B; 5, B;

A "t: 8, D; 9, C; 10, A;

, C; 13, B; 14, A; 15, B

+ 1%, D; 18, C; 19, C; 20, C;

21, D; 22, B; 23, C; 24, B; 25,

B; 26, C; 27, D; 28, C; 29, A; 30,

B; 31, B; 32, B; 33, A; 34, C; 35,

A; 36, C; 37, D; 38, B; 39, A; 40,
D:

41, C; 42, B; 43, C; 44, D; 45,
A; 46, D; 47, D; 48, B; 49, C; 50,
A; 51, B; 52, C; 53, C; 54,
C; 56, C; 57, A; 58, A; 59, B;
B;

61, A; 62, C; 63, C; 64, A; 65,
B; 66, D; 67, D; 68, C; 69, A; 70,
D; 71, D; 72, C; 73, B; 74, A; 75,
D; 16, C; 17, B; 78, C; 79,
c;

81, A; 82, B; 83, C; 84, B; 85,
C; 86, C; 87, A; 88, D; 89, A; 90,
A; 91, C; 92, C; 93, A; 94, B; 95,
C; 96, B; 97, D; 98, A; 99, B;
100, C.

SMITH, HOLOCOMBE SET

ALBANY — Governor Wilson
has named Ralph W. Smith, Jr.,
of Albany as district attorney of
Albany county. The Governor
also appointed Jon K. Holcombe,
of Syracuse, to be district at-
torney of Onondaga county, Each
will serve until December 31
‘The offices will be filled at the
November election.

Bricklayer OC Exam

A total of 159 bricklayer can-
didates have been called to take
the competitive written part of
exam 3053 on Feb. 2, according
to the city Dept. of Personnel.

Joseph Buono, Gerald Bogdan-
owles, German Colon Jr., Carlos
Emaral, Irvin Vardone, John T.
DElia, William W. John Jr.
Rochester Area
Retirees ToHear
Insurance Reps

ROCHESTER — Health,
life, accident and other
types of insurance available
to retirees will be the sub-
ject of a meeting of the Ro-
chester Area CSEA Retirees chap-
ter Feb. 6 at 1:30 p.m. at the
Marine Midland Bank — Ro-
chester, 1 Marine Midland Plaza.

John McManaman, senior in-
formation representative of the
Employees Retirement System,
will be available to answer ques-
tions, according to Melba Binn,
acting chapter president

She said a representative of
‘Ter Bush & Powell, the CSEA
insurance company, will speak
on in-hospital, accident, group
life, supplemental life, indem-
nity and other types of insur-
ance available after retirement.

‘The meeting {s open to all CS-
BA retirees from the eight coun-
ties served by the chapter.

Genesee Federation Of CSEA Chapters

Holds Dialogue With Area Legislators

Cost Of Living, Agency Shop
Among Key Topics Of Confab

ROCHESTER — State legislators from an ejght-county
area were warned here Jan. 12 that they'll have “a flood
of disgruntled state employees” if negotiations aren't re-
opened soon for a cost-of-living wage increase.

“This is our No. 1 priority,”
said Samuel Grossfleld, president
of the Rochester CSEA chapter.
He was moderator of an inform-
al, 2%-hour meeting attended
by 10 state senators and assem-
blymen, or their representatives,
and officers of 11 CSEA chap-
ters.

‘The luncheon-meeting, ‘held at
the Sheraton Gatehouse Motel
in suburban Henrietta, was the
first of a series CSEA represen-
tatives will hold with legislators
across the state, It also concern-
ed traveling expenses, the agency

shop, the Albany health Insur-
ance plan, civil service law, re-
tirement, the energy crisis, Tay-
lor Law revision and last-minute
legislative approval of contracts.

Lorna MoGuire, chairman of
the Craig State School chapter?
political action committee, said
state and county workers want a
cost-of-living adjustment be-
cause the 5% percent pay raise
scheduled for April 1 isn’t enough.

“The adjustment wouldn't be
for luxuries,” she said. “Prices
of necessities have risen so

TAX AND FINANCE NEGOTIATORS — Members of the Civil Service Employees Assn.’s
Taxation and Finance Department negotiating team meet in Albany to formulate demands for upcoming
departmental negotiations. Pictured clockwise from the bottom of the picture are: Flora Cushing, Mary
Carnibucci, Mary Brown, Jack Dougherty, Jack Daley, Jack Conoby, CSEA collective negotiating speci-
alist; Joseph Vollmar, Santa Orsino, Stanley Jarocs and Arthur Lakrits,

much since negotiations that we
can't even tread water any more.
T've already cancelled my va-
cation plans,”

Assemblyman Don W. Cook
(R-135th District), who also
serves as chairman of the Mon-
roe County Republican Party,
asked if public employees “would
be willing to take an increase
if the cost of livis continues
to go up and then give it back
if the cost of living goes down.”

“You're more optimistic than
the rest of us,” said Assembly-
man Thomas R. Frey (D-132nd
District)

CSEA field representative
‘Thomas Pomidoro sald the cost
of living adjustment should be
based upon Cost-of-Living Coun-
cil data from Buffalo and New
York City.

“This would be good, It would
take some of the pressure off us
(the legislators),” said State

Mechanicville
Pact Reached

MECHANICVILLE — The Me-
chanicville unit of the Civil Ser-
vice Employees Assn. and the
City of Mechanicville have reach-
ed agreement on a new work
contract covering employees of
the city.

Highlights of
agreement are:

A 16% percent salary increase:
10 percent in 1974, 64 percent
in 1975;

Guaranteed minimum death
benefit;

One additional week of vaca-
tion for most employees;

Seniority to be used to fill all
vacancies;

Use of personal leave for sick
leave after all sick leave credits
fhave been used.

Members of the CSEA nego-
tating committee were John En-
nello, unit president, Gene Le-
Clair, and Mason Barber. The
team was sasisted by Aaron
Wagner, OSEA field represen-
tative.

the two-year

© CSEA calendar ©

Information for the Calendar may be submitted directly
to THE LEADER, It should include the date, time, place,
address and city for the function.

January

23—Statewide Board of Directors meeting: CSEA Headquarters,
33 Elk St., Albany.

24—Orange County es Board of Directors meeting: 7:30 p.m.,
chapter headquarters, Casa Fiesta Bldg., Middletown.

24.25—Workshop on negotiating procedures and tactics for SUNY
representatives: Hilfon Inn, Syracuse.

25-26—Buffalo Region No. 6 meeting: Lydecker Post VFW Hall,
Lydecker Rd,, West Seneca.

28—Albany Region No. 4 meeting: 5:30 p.m, Jack's Restaurant,
State Street, Albany,

28—Binghamton Area Retirees chapter meeting: 2 p.m. American
Legion Clubhouse, 76 Main St,, Binghamton.

31—New York City chapter executive committee meeting: 5:30 p.m.,
Barclay's Downtown, 57 Murray St.. Manhattan.

February

b—Rochester Area Retirees chapter meeting: 1:30 p.m., Marine
Midland Bank Building, Midland Plaza, Rochester.

8-9—Syrocuse Region 5 meetin

14—Contesl loin. Pate Hoecitel. chantinr: smelians @ cane Lecion
Hall, Central Islip,

16—Ceniral Islip State Hospital chapter annual dinner-dance: 8 p.m.,
Robbins Hall, Central Islip,

20—Buffalo chapter meeting: 6 p.m. Plaza Suite, Buffalo,

22—SUNY at Albany chapter meeting and diana: 5:30 pum. alin
Benevolent Assn, Hail, Exchange St., Albany.

Dental Aid Opens Wider;
Syracuse, Buffalo Added

ALBANY — Two new offices of the Dental Services Pro-
gram have been opened in Syracuse and Buffalo to provide
six-days-a-week dental service to employees represented by
the Civil Service Employees Assn, and their families, ac-

cording to ® spokesman for
CSEA.

Under the state program, CS-
BA-represented employees and
their families are covered with
@ $50 deductible per person or
$150 per family. There is no
other out-of-pocket charge ex-
cept for permitted charges on
posterior crowns and orthodon-
ture,

‘The program covers the full
range of dental services from
simple fillings and extractions to
root canal therapy and teeth
straightening (orthodontia)

Patients must call for an ap-
pointment and then have their
Health Services Card with them
to present to the receptionist,
‘The new offices are:

Buffalo; 523 Delaware Ave.
Delaware Professional Bidg., tele-
phone (716) 886-4430.
Syracuse; 500 South Salina
Blvd, Chymes Bldg. telephone
(315) GR 6-8340.

Other offices; New York City:
122 East 42nd St, Room 1410,
telephone (212) YU 6-4262.

Monticello: 10 Prince St,, tel-
ephone (O14) 704-1440,

Hempstead, LI: 131 Fulton
Ave., Room 103, telephone (516)
TV 3-2220,

Albany: 900 North
Bivd,, telephone (518) 463-3235.
Hauppauge, Lt; 111 Smith-
town Bypass, telephone (516)
724-0900.

Special Elections
ALBANY — Governor Wilson
has set Thursday, February 14, as
the date for four special elections
to fill legislative vacancies. These
are seats from the 14th Senate
District, Queens; 36th Assembly
District, Queens; 117th Assem-
bly District, Oswego/Onelda;
120th Assembly District, On-
ondaga

Senator Gordon J. DeHond
83rd District)

“If you ended up with a cost
of living adjustment alone, in the
long run you'd be better off than
going after a flat (wage) in-
crease,” he said

Assemblyman James L. Emery
(R-136th District) said if Gov-
ernor Wilson doesn’t agree to
re-open the contract, “there's
little we can do.”

“He'll pay attention to your
recommendations,” Mr. Gross-
field responded. “For example,
@ letter from the western New
York legislators to the govern-
or might be very effective.”

Bud Saunders, president of the
Rochester DOT chapter, sald the
state should increase its mileage
rate for employees who use their
own cars for work to 16.5 cents,
as recommended by the Ameri-
can Automobile Association,

He also asked for increases in
allowances for meals, which are
$1.65 for breakfast and lunch
and $5.20 for dinner and for dally
lodging and three meals: $26 in
New York City, $20 in the state
outside New York City and $25
outside the state.

Assemblyman James F. Hurley
(R-128th District), said the state
is considering an increase in the
number of state cars used by
employees.

“This will be especially im-
portant !f gasoline {s rationed
because it won't become a mat-
ter of money then,” he said

Kenneth Bennett, president of
the Geneseo SUNY chapter,
asked legislators to set up a
committee during the 1974 session
to consider some form of agency
shop where CSBA employees
work,

“We have seven grievances
pending now In the Sheriff's De-
partment and two of them are
for non-members," said Martin
Koenig, president of the Mon-
roe County chapter.

He agreed that Assemblyman
Frey made a good point when
he suggested that non-CSEA
members “might not object” to
paying for the costs of negoti-
ations and possibly grievance pro-
cedures because “they benefit just
4s much as members,”

“We're not trying to be puni-
tive to non-members and say
they must join the CSEA, as in
a closed shop,” Mr, Grossfield
said. “But non-members have
been taking advantage of us, and
the legislature hasn't done @ thing
about it.”

Assemblyman Cook asked how
many employees CSEA repre-
sents and was told 82 percent of
all state employees and 75 per-
cent of all Monroe County em-
ployees.

Every legislator at the meeting
was polled and agreed that they
favor an agency shop in which
negotiating and other CSEA costs
are pro-rated for non-members
and members alike,

‘The Genesee Valley Blue Croas-
Blue Shield Plan should replace

(Continued on Page 16)

(R

terms
ing July 1, 1981, and 1982, re-
apectively.

PLOL ‘Ze Aawnuel ‘Kepsony, “YACVTT ADIAWAS WAI
4

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, January 22, 1974

Latest State And County Eligible L
EXAM 5536 89 Delluomo $ Bkiya 86.8 181 Horan T Rockaway 84.2 326 Shulman § Tarryrown 79.0 $99 Kruk 160
SENIOR COURT 90 Kampe Hi Islip $6.8 182 327 Bruno P Broox 400 Cave 76.0
NEW YORK CITY 91 Davite K  Bilyn 568 0 328 Powell H 401 Boalt 760
1 Wieder H_Broox is Son Coy te mig ng S Jeo
2 Senan R Bklyn 0 32 Coosa © Seria Vi 86.8 331 Tarr D Bayside 404 Bows 16.0
h poene ard i295 Freeman W NY 46.7 532 Melotyre H Belle Har 403 Donovan 76.0
4 Weyne G Rockaway 94.0 96 Brown J NY. 46.7 334 Quinn E_ Amoria 406 Shea J Jackson H 160
SR rere BN ae 2% 97 Raywis W Maspeth 96.7 335 Priesely W Bronx 407 Marino J Vi 760
§ Rees '¥ Jus 1 $2) 98 Murshy P_NY 86.7 336 Grey A Broax 408 1 Rage Pak 760
7 Pasathos G Bhiyn 925 99 Guarion J Bronx 86.5 437 Galleri F Jamaica E 409 Griffin RE way 76.0
§ Meffecci_M Bross 925 100 Kacshowski T Bkiyn 86.5 338 Senken D Ozone Pack 410 Silver E Bkiyn 187
9 Zerkle M Bkiya 32:3 101 Galvin P Broox 86.5 339 Schwarz Hl Howard Be 411 Libeeti PSI 736
10 Dwyer B Bronx $22 02 Bellodi A Middle Vi 86.5 5 340 Reilly J_E_ Meadow 412 Matthews J Jamaica 73.3
oor BC $2} 103 Cecero F SI 86.5 3 341 Adolph Mineola 413 Vina A Biya 138
12 Connors W Bronx 20 et eee Sey $63 S ui tenee ee 414 Heller D Bklyn a
LA oemmge dota Sto 105 Langrin C Bhiyn 86.5 $343 Hill Bronx 415 Gebbia J Astoria ms
ie Besant: sate Bre 106 Levee D Baty 86.5 5 344 McPherson P Broox 416 McCann J Bhiyn 48
DD mrss iPod a: SES 107 Leeaski R Oxone Pk 86.5 (3 $43 Liguori A Bronx 417 Beiter ©. Jamtice is
16 Farley TS Onone P 13 eS ee Bes S 30p Gemeente ‘S418 Regina M. Astoria 467
17 Moncton & Betas 214 109 Woods J NY 865 ($347 Holmes G E Elmbarse "7 419 Shawah D_ Bkiyn 743
18 Rosi P Bkiyn 912 110 Logsis C Queens 56.5 ‘3 348 Bodie W Bronx ‘3 420 Butchen M_ Merrick 143
19 Tvede F St 91 Siva 5 (7 421 Cally T Bkiyn 745
Til Loggia V 86.5 349 Offen B Rego Park ie
ae ae oe St? 112 want R 86.5 5 776 422 Wellwead K 145
a eee eve 911 11} Marwusclella ¥ Bllyn 865 RR rays Par evil Q3 Foley D Bkiyn 743
3 teeta Ast dio Hf Barth Ft 365 13 $8 Green 8 Momcgomer Trg 424 Bitgeralt J. Bhiyn 145
: 425 Annis 4.
24 Katsavos G Jackson H na te ees “d ey '3 353. McAuliffe T Yookers 713 36 Rivers W eos
25 Ruggiero D. Bkiyn IN elo la roel ‘$354 Grane W Woodside So eames oa
26 Eogel L Bit 910 11g Alweng W Richand H 86.0 a an eeceee, ee T3428 Grom J Bkiyn 145
27 Vartian D Flashing 91.0 115 McNulty R #38 ce aee ae tye TF} 429 Schwartz S$ Bkiyn 143
28 Murphy RB 910 * get_B Bklyn co ieee aa Sh} 430 Garrett T Astoria 143
90.8 120 Jones W Bkiyn : 213 Bernstein $ Bklyn 5 Spee 373 431 Holley R Bronx 74.0
903. Th Come * ae S52 214 Alesi C. Bklyn PIS Ne age Pad tail T24 432 Heidecker A Lk Ronkon 74.0
90.0 122 O'Lesry T Bellmore B35 215 Hober H Woodside koa epee ere TES 433 Smalley W Bklyn 737
99.0 123 Hickey J Bklyn S33 216 Rochlord RF Quogue 1 BBR Sh a ove pegit coanasted T3434 Tenell C NY m7
99.8 124 Iannuzzi J Lynbrook $2217 Miller D Bklyn Ser Deve Bkie 373 435 Caines T NY 73.6
89.7 es aa 218 Nance H_ Bkiya 364 Havel M Baipn 33 436 Messing L Bkiyn 73.3
3 49.5 854° 219 Ranieri A Bhiyn 363 Jones M_ Bkiyn 23 437 Young A Bklyn 733
36 Zobrick N Elmhurst 89.5 R34 220 Keawiee A Bilyn 366 Dove J LIC 375 438 Michalski G_ Plainview 32
7 Daley M Astoria 89.5 ‘ey! $5.4 22! Miscooti © NY 367 Mi han G Bhiyi ns 439 ons J NY 732
34 Muldoon T NY 89.5 129 Terino M Rockaway S33 222 Maldon 1 Flushing 368 Cooper A Biya TP 440 Delbagno V_ LIC 70
39 Camaiore A Williston 89.5 130 Numenbies: A Bhiyn $3 223 Horley G Bhiyn Se hone bs Coe? TH3 441 Andreaccio W_ Flushing 73.0
40 Monastra J Bronx Deck W Jackson Hf S33 224 Zwing P Greentawn cae ae S42 Hdwards G LIC 30
41 Crowley G Bronx 85.3 925 Lemick M Bronx 370 Maxwell W. Bklye 77.5 443 Angalone F Bellerose 73.0
42 Higginson M_ Bkiyn 226 Tyws G Bronx 371 Hopkins W Broed Cha 775 444 Ford J Jamaica 730
43 Burkhardt Ho Merrick 227 Baez HSI 372 Marques A Amoria 75 445 Byrnes Hi Broax 73.0
44 Reber 'B Bkiyn 228 Regan D Bkiyn $373 Murray J Bklya 7S 446 Simpson T Bronx m2
45 Byrne E Fairlawn 229 Brodman L Bklyn $2.4 374 Fecrance PNY 77.5 447 Haccker E Bronx 718
46 Babuareo RK Bklya Sree: Baga: 230 Martino PJ Bklyn 824 77,5 448 Levell V New York 71.6
47 Leckler F Flushis Dello V_ Syosset 251 Allen J Rockaway 82.3 77.3 449 Sajkowski V TS
48 Chriniano M_ Bkiyn Epealine: %: chenaele 232 McLaughlin W Woodside 82.3 $50 Egan J Rockaway 715
49 Gregory J Bklyn Kraemer 233 Santi F Brewster 82.3 451 Krasevec F Ridgewood 7S
pik ecxoagiey 234 Bregenser_J Bronx 82.3 452 Franco $ Amoria 715
at Peele C kee Pe 235 Scoller Bklyo 82.3 453 Doball R Broax 3
qe ee Gane 236 Leporati_ A Astoria $23 454 Goldfaden L New York 3
53 Cardillo R Bronx bg 237 Webb H_ Roosevelt $2.2 455 Manna J Goshen 3
at ene Kelly N Me Vernon 238 Gallo HH Bkiyn #22 456 Favours L Jamaica 15
35 Jetirey V) Jamnica aoe 23 ye 239 Mano R Jamaica 82.2 457 Long E Biya 7s
56 Gronert G ‘Floral Park ? a eo , 240 Cronin T Bx 82.2 458 Bartana R Elmone TLS
57 Fogarty P Yonkers po a pag h 2.2 439 Marsfing J. Uniondale ns
58 Martin D Richmond Giasas I Rocewar 85.0 eno 287 Lacon 0 Hanes 460 Pardi J Bilyn 71.5
39 G Bklyn Cletko Lb Bkiyn 95.0 = : a0 388 A s 461 Kupylo G_ Amorin Vs
60 Wright K_ Yonkers b hry ‘akas V Flushing #20 eno A Bklyn 462 Forien C Bronx mS
G1 Keller B Bronx seta BR Nal a Rowen G Bklyn 82.0 390 Cephous M_ Bronx 463 Bender M_Bhiyn 04
62 Beuxo J §t Degeazia T Bkiyo 83.0 Gibson G Woodside 82.0 391 Barron D Broox 464 Dyckson A  Lindenhur 70.3
63 Cawley J Far Rockaway Cie ane 85.0 McLaughlin Woodside 82.0 392 Meaney M_ Bronx 463 Conn B Mc Vernon 30.2
€i Kolly 'G Lpntwook Beyrer_ G Sunnyside $3.0 Sullivan D Bronx 82.0 395 Frankel B Bklyn 466 Machi J Bronx 70.0
$ Sithen E Bklyn Benesing D. Gorena 83.0 Melendex L NY 82.0 394 Roberts R Floral Pa 467 Robinson J Bklyn 300
eeueeas PD ieeas wi ap Pecrelli_ R_ Glendale 82.0 395 Orbace P Broox 468 Lickun J Richmad HW 70.0
67 Murphy © Peutl Riv at Iatile R Mahopac 82.0 sears L. Bronx 469 Jensen A Bronx 70.0
8 Berancin J Bhiyn Hes Richards H Bronx 62,0 497 Fallon T Yorktown 76.0 470 Pena N- Broox 70.0
aa 3 — - saree, re 398 Somers J Far Rekwa 76.0 47! Finnegan P Bronx 0.0
i i 4 Shepard W Bkiyn )
me Diao Ve 2 Weitbecht W Glendale 83.0333 Sherman R_ Brows a0
Ti Laer Be Perno } Queens 83.0 336 Chesny J Anoria uo
2 homeo Be ily F Brows $3) 237 Thoma F kiya mo ane
i ik Sean aie 2 a a 7 C titiv
fe elte 3 Veskoes Morin J Bkiyn 850 260 Smith. Jamaica 820 pen ompe itive
Goodman § Bkiyn 7 V Ridgewood S45. set sieeenr fae m0 b ] d.
oe va x irthenbaum yn 82.0
2 Haas Re ti Ay HY det Sem a tate Job Calendar
J Woodside Seanis J Bklyn 863 266 Malligan R Bani 4
0 1 Floral Pk Fallon J ST 863 367 Moon L Bhiye ne *
Oi ‘Cn Pat A Hempnen a fs weer ie sat Applications Accepted To February 19;
ropennt 269 Price S Jamaica B12
Sry 0, re $32 Rhem 'w "Be 3 Written Exams March 23
3 amet ya ;
4 ae 5 pia oe eae . Fishing ae a7 Oden ig Jackaon i 80.9 Title Starting Salary Exam No,
ares Sean rena A ‘bi 80.7
Heckman $. Bkiyn to7 Assistant Building Construction Engineer ..........$14,142 24027
OAS wtlagion D Blve so Assistant Superintendent of Construction St 24-028
e ‘ 7 Man D. tenechen fo, Engineeri terials Technician . 23-990
City Open Continuous we, fumes fo Frasty Technician. 2091
fakin “ s
McKillop J. Middle Vi fos band Surveyor Trainee | 24-035
Job Calendar 28 Deberry 5 3: Aibete sos Gas Meter Tester 24.033
bbs 7 40.5 4-032
283 Goldman C Bhiyn 40.5 Gas Inspector oo
Hamkalo BR Flushing sos Park Engineer
Open Competitive Positions ce yg 403 Sonlor Park Engineer 23978
ec ogy AP be 80-5 Associate Park Engineer 23-983
ice 5
Title Salary Exam No, Simon M. Bhiye $03 Research Analyst (Transportation) 24-040
Assistant Civil Engineer 3041 ae ee fo Senior Building Construction Engineer $17,428 24-002
Assistant Plan Examiner (Bu 3048 Noort rd m0 ;
Chil Engineer 3058 Whaler TNT to
2 Wheller NY
Cra teveceeiog” Trace Pre King © dpe «; Oral Tests During February Or March
‘indsay J Queens
Dental Hygienist 3065 O'Reilly M Ridgewood wos Chief State Accounts Auditor $26,516 27-378
Landscape Architectural Trainee 3044 Sere eee 4% Educational Computer Services Coordinator $26,516 27-383
Occupational Therapist 3080 Merwik J Ridgewood aos Television Production Supervisor $14,880 27-387
Physical Therapist 082 Chiflord 1 ie nH i A 4/0 T i in A d
lic Health Nurse 3085 Betlock A Ben Hs tion And/Or Train n
Beriack A Bronx 90,5
Veterinarian 3118 Berwick W. Glen Onis m3 Educa 8
enola J Kew Garde #0.
er fentin ws Experience Evaluated
bite urelion 40.3
Civ Rete 7 NY 734 Associate Librarian marae ie $16,520 27-384
fs anol 3003 ree ve, 333 Director, Bureau of Hospital Certificatior
Destrion, tagieper - Donel ost" 35.4 Senior Industrial Engineer
Plan Exami m4
me Tot Additional information on required
OPEN COMPETITIVE — Additional information on required qualifying He
request: 792
‘sonnel, wt
the number sat
and title and, if requesting an announcement by mail, a stamped selt- 790
aidrnnsed envelope. to
PROMOTIONAL — These titles are open only to those already employ- 790
ed by the city in various agencies, 3
su 7, Bronx 190
lh M2 Meta eg 190

Part-Time Docs
Needed At Vet's
Affairs Division

Licensed physicians may
apply for part-time positions,
paying $14.10 per hour, with
the Mayor's Office for Vet-
eran Action, Division of Vet-
eran’s Affairs,

‘Those doctors interested in the
position should call the agency
‘at 582-2330 to arrange for an in-
terview. The job will be filled
on & non-competitive basis

The Division of Veteran's Af-
fairs is located at 300 West 43rd
8t., Manhattan

Fed. Gov. Needs
Utility Engineers

The federal government is re-
cruiting operating engineers
(general utilities) to work in
the General Services Administra-
tion in New York City and in
Newark, N.J. Salary, at the G-10
or G-11 grade level, is $5.02 per
‘hour or $5.20 per hour

Candidates need at least two
years of experience in heating
and/or refrigeration work. Candi-
dates must also be at least 18
years old and be U.S. citizens.

Por applications and further
information, contact the Person-
nel Office, General Services
Admin., 26 Federal Plaza, New
York, N.Y 10007 (telephone
264-8295)

Send Used Stamps
To Brooklyn Assn.
For Wounded Vets

All cancelled domestic and
foreign postage stamps are need-
ed to help sick and wounded vet-
¢rans, The Fourteenth St. Block
Assn, at 291 14th St., Brooklyn,
N.Y. 11215, collects these stamps
from citizens and distributes
them to disabled veterans through
the Veterans Admin. in the New
York area

The collection
throughout the year, Simply re-
move the top corner of a used
envelope, including the cancelled
stamp and the stamp showing
the city from which the letter
was mailed, and send it to Brook-
lyn, Telephone for the Block Assn.
is 499-0849

continues

Elevator Appoints

A total of 65 elevator mechanics
helpers have been appointed to
four city agencies, according to
the elty Dept. of Personnel, which
held a certification pool last
week, The last number appoint-
ed was 72 from the eligible list
resulting from exam 2082

Allen Adler Honored

Allen H. Adler, who
after 37 of city
be honored by the employees of
the Dept. of Personnel at a cock-
tall party to be held on Jan, 31
at 6 pan. in Miller's Restaurant.
233 Broadway, Manhattan

retiring
toe, will

Five candidates for supervisor,
(bus and shops), have been found
not eligible for promotional ex-
am 3581, reports the city Dept
of Personnel,

4 Bricklayers Miss

Pour bricklayer candidates
have been found not eligible for
Promotional exam 3664, accord-
ing to the city Dept. of Person-
nel. Thirty candidates applied.

ROSIER TO SERVE

ALBANY — Joseph M. Rosier,
of Albany, former news direct-
or at TV Channe) 13, Albany,
has been named director of radio
and television communications
for the State Assembly at an an-
nual salary of $20,000.

KATZ JUDGE

ALBANY — Harold W. Katz,
of Queensbury, has been named
Family Court judge of Warren
county for a term ending Dec.
31, He succeeds John G. Dier,
Who has been named Warren
county judge and surrogate,

fravel _

February Flights from $149
Packages from $179

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C) Portugal
6 Torremotioos
Northern Hemisphere and Howoli Packages

5 Mexico 2] Disneyworld ‘Trinidad Nasa
Acapulco , 5 West Coast St. Thomas
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Gustemaia —() San Juan 6 Curacao 2 Maweit

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Packages from $149

2 Dubrovnik Canary ts,
SS Amsterdam | Russia
Rome Majorca Athens

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Guatemala Ji

Ci Curacao i fab?

5 Disneyworld c 5 Mexico

B Acapulco 1 Los Angeles 5 San Francisco
5 Puerwo Rico 1 Freeport sa

Panama

Coming soon complete summer
Vacation Schedules. Watch for
them.

OTHER WINTER TRIPS AVAILABLE
My woe

‘Available only te Civil Service Actin
their immedian

0 London
© Paris

on dates ore

‘Anaciotion
fomilies

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\L “WSGVaT SOIAWAS TAD

PL6L ‘Zz Aswnues
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, January 22, 1974

Ciwil Sewier
LEADER

America’s Largest Weekly for Public Emp
Member Audit Bureau of Circulation:
Published every Tuesday by
LEADER PUBLICATIONS, INC.
Office: 11 Warren Street, New York, N.Y. 10007
iditorial Office: 11 Warren Street, New York, N.Y. 10007

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Kjell
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N. H. Mager, Business Manager
Advertising Representatives:

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Tee per copy. Subscription Price: $3.80 to members of the Civil
Sorvice Employees Association. $7.00 to non-members.
TU JESDAY, JANUARY 22, 1974 a>

The Agency Shop

ECENTLY an arbitrator issued a decision that provi-
sion for an agency shop be included in the bargaining

agreement for employees of the Ramapo-Catskill Library
System in Orange County.

This case, argued successfully by a field representative
of the Civil Service Employees Assn., is an exception to the
rule, unfortunately, as far as its relevance to other public
employee contracts in New York State. The legal ramifica-
tions are a bit complex, but, in essence, certain library sys-
tems in the state receive moneys from private sources as
well as from state funds, As a result, regulations of the
Taylor Law are not necessarily binding, but rather, there
is the option of negotiation under the state’s labor laws
for private industry. It was under the Labor Law that the
Ramapo-Catskill agreement was arbitrated.

Nevertheless, the agency shop is a subject dear to the
hearts of many public employee union leaders. At a meet-
ing of CSEA chapter leaders and state legislators in the
Rochester area last week, for example, the topic was again
discussed, In this case, the CSEA representatives urged that
legislation allowing for agency shop provisions for public
employees be given serious consideration by the Legislature.

The Leader stands firmly on the side of the agency shop
for public employees,

First, though, we would like to present the key ethical
point made by opponents of the agency shop: that no one
should be forced to join or provide financial support to any
organization against his will. This doctrine is commonly
known as “The Right to Work.” It presumes that if a majori-
ty of employees vote for union representation, the minority
has the right not to join,

It is on this key point, moreover, that we believe the
strongest argument exists in favor of the agency shop.

The CSEA field representative in the Ramapo-Catskill
case had argued that it is unjust for an employee to obtain
the benefits negotiated without contributing a fair share of
the expense involved in negotiating and then policing a col-
lective bargaining agreement.

Tt is a reality that what the union negotiates, state em-
Ployees right up the line also receive. Thus, when the
Legislature votes on a CSEA contract, the budget figure
is quite misleading to the general public, since not only are
rank-and-file non-members automatically given the same
wage improvements, but so are the judges, commissioners
and other government functionaries in management/con-
fidential positions who are prohibited by law from union
membership.

Thereby, the Employees Association 1s, in truth, nego-
tlating for everyone, whether it likes it or not, because that's
the way things are.

These are confusing times in many ways, as judges,
lawyers, commissions find themselves issuing opinions on
many controversial issues. Thus, every so often, someone
delivers an opinion that seems at odds with conventional
interpretations. Suddenly people realize that the times have
changed, and that it is now the moment to rethink some of
the standard answers,

We believe that the Ramapo-Catskill arbitrator, Bern-
ard Davis, has made just such a breakthrough in thinking.

The crux of the agency shop question for public em-
ployees, in our view, is that if an employee ts willing to ac-
cept the services of the union — and that includes negoti-
ated pay ralses and other so-called fringe benefits — that
he must be prepared to pay a nominal, fair share of the
expenses for those services.

If everyone is to be treated equally, then everyone
should contribute equally, Fair ts fair.

(Continued from Page 1)
sideration of the budget and
other appropriations proposed to
the Legislature.

Assemblyman Willis H. Steph-

ens, the chairman of the
Ways and Means Committee,
fills that important post with
rare distinction, but he is likely
to be the first to deny it, since
that post had once been held by
his late father, D. Mallory Steph-
ens. There is very little glam-
our attached to that office, be-
cause it deals with the nuts and
bolts of government, the financ-
ing of each government opera-
tion, and requires tie keeping
of a sharp eye on the expendi-
ture of every penny of State
money. These special responsi-
bilities make Assemblyman
Stephens one of the hardest
working legislators.
Mass Transit Aid

‘The significance of Stephens’
work surfaced last week with re-
spect to one of the most critical
issues before the Legislature,
improving mass transit facilities
throughout the State and main-
taining low transit fares on com-
muter rails, buses, and the city
subway system. The proposal rec-
ommended by Stephens would
provide a continuing subsidy to
local transit systems based on the
number of riders each system
carries — @ formula somewhat
similar to the one used to cal-
culate the distribution of state
aid to local school boards,

The Stephens program would
thus recognize state ald to local
mass transit systems as a long-

crisis that typically confronts
the city subway system, the Long
Island Railroad and the Penn
Central lines.

‘The recommendations made by
Stephens were worked out after
an Intensive four-month study
by sthff members of the Ways
and Means Committee and deal
creatively and imaginatively with
@ State transportation problem
that is likely to become worse,
in this period of a gas shortage
and skyrocketing prices for gaso-
line, without an affirmative pro-
gram like the one developed by
Assemblyman Stephens.

During the regular course of
the Session, Assemblyman Steph-
ens becomes the focus of at-
tention of all of those seeking
greater appropriations for the
causes they espouse — PTA's
for more money for schools; civil
service employee organizations
who want salary increases and
improved working conditions;
representatives of cities, towns,
and villages demanding improved
state ald formulas; the judicial
system asking better financing
for the courts, and a wide vari-
ety of other sources.

Pressure From Groups

At the same time, he ls also

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,

Takes Leave, Loses Seniority

A Long Island teacher has succeeded in winning rein-
statement to his teaching position in an Article 78 proceed-
ing. (Dreyfus v. Union Free School District No. 3, Town of
Huntington.)

The teacher and a colleague had been hired to fill two
French teaching positions in the foreign language depart-
ment in the school district. Both had been hired simultane-
ously, The school district concluded that they had identical
seniority status and, therefore, felt free to choose the teach-
er it preferred when the elimination of one of the two
French teaching positions necessitated a layoff. They chose
to retain the petitioner's colleague.

Dreyfus challenged the decision, claiming that his col-
league had lost seniority when he took a year’s leave of
absence to teach in Greece. He argued that when the po-
sition was abolished in 1972, the colleague who had taken
the leave of absence in 1969/1970 had only two years of
seniority, while the petitioner, Dreyfus, had five consecutive
years of service. The school board rejected this argument.
Supreme Court, County of Nassau, granted the petition in
an Article 78 proceeding and directed that Dreyfus be re-
instated.

. . .

THE COURT FOUND that Dreyfus’ colleague was in-
eligible for continued seniority during his leave of absence,
because at the time he had not been employed in the district
for a minimum of five years. At the time of his leave, the
teacher preferred by the board had been employed by the
district for only a two-year period.

The court cited Section 3005 of the Education Law,
which spells out the five-year minimum, The court said,
“The statute gives discretion to the school board to grant
teacher exchange leaves of absence with the specified ben-
efits of retirement protection compensation and service
credit in the local school system, but only for teachers with
at least five years’ service in the school.”

While the teacher was permitted to go and was even
accorded service credit for his year aWay, the court said,
he was ineligible at that time to receive the benefit of Sec-
tion 3005 of the Education Law, Relying upon this section,
the court rejected the school district's reasoning that it had
discretion outside of the statute to grant leaves of absence,
Particularly since in the instant case there had been no
compensation paid to the teacher taking the leave.

THE COURT CONCLUDED that Dreyfus’ colleague had
stepped out of the seniority line when he went abroad. It
said that there was no authority outside of complying with
Section 3005 for the board to have saved his place in line
ahead of others faithfully performing their duties In the
school district. The ruling further emphasized that such dis-
cretion is not accorded to a Union Free School District since
they “are creatures of statutes and are accorded only such
powers in the State Education System as are specified by
law.”

The court directed that Dreyfus be reinstated to his

full-time position with retroactive pay and benefits to Sep-
tember 1972.

New PERB Member Serves

and a law degree from George-
town University Law School,

ALBANY — Fred L. Denson,
of Rochester, ts the newest mem.
ber of the State Public Employ-
ment Relations Board,

He’ succeeds George H. Fow-
ler, who resigned from the 3-
member board to join City Uni-
versity of New York.

His term extends to May 31,
1975. Since May 20, 1969, he had
been a member of PERB’s Panel
of Mediators and Fact-Pinders,
and served in 55 disputes between
Public employees and schoo) dis-
tricts and local governments,

An attorney, Mr, Denson has
been active in labor relations,
community and human rights
programs in Rochester and
throughout New York State. He
4s a native of New Brighton, Pa,
and has @ bachelor's degree from
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

State Promotional
Job Calendar

Applications Accepted To Feb. 11;
Written Exams March 23

Title Salary Grade Exam No.
iate Librarian (Medicine) G23 35-446
Research Series G18 35-460 to
35-466
Senior Biostatistician G18 35-470
Senior Economist Series G18 35-474 to
35-478
Senior Statistician G18 = 35-471
Senior Personnel Examiner 618 = 35-423
Assistant Director Soil Mechanics G29 35-473
Assistant Soils Engineer G19 35-450
Associate Soils Engineer G27 = 35-451
Director of Soil Mechanics 633 35-474
Engineering Materials Technician 68 35-432
Principal Engineering Materials Technician G14 35-434
Principal Engineering Technician (Soils) G15 35-436
Research Analyst (Transportation) G18 35-467
Senior Engineering Materials Technician 6-11
Senior Engin Technician (Soils) Gil = 35-435
Senior Soils Engineer G23 35-452
Assistant Building Construction Engineer G19 635-499
Assistant Superintendent of Construction G15 = 35-455
Senior Building Construction Engineer G23 9 95-481
Senior Superintendent of Construction 6 35-454
Assistant Superintendent of Construction G15 35-453
Associate Park Engineer G27 = 35-396
Park Engineer G19 = 35-394
Senior Park Engineer 623 35-395
Senior Wursing Services Consultant G23 35-459
Supervisor of Health Dept. Office Services G23 (35-478
Driver Improvement Adjudicator 69 35-456
Senior Driver improvement Analyst 623 «35-457
Chief Gas Technician G19 = 35-480
Senior Gas Inspector Shhatvenen G14 = 35-472

Oral Tests To Be Held In February Or March

Traffic and Park Captain G21 35-482
Employment Security Superintendent 28 35-412

Application Accepted To March 4;
Oral Test In March

Chief State Accounts Auditor 631 35-417

Additional information on required qualifying experience and exam
subject can be obtained by requesting a job announcement from the
state Dept. of Civil Service or your state agency personnel office,

Regional offices of the Dept. of Civil Service are located at the
World Trade Tower 2, 55th floor, Manhattan, 10048, 488-4248;
W. Genesee

State Office Campus, Albany, N.Y., 1226; and Suite 750, 1
St, Buffalo, 14202.

Applicants may obtain announcements either in person or by send-
ing a stamped, self-addressed envelope with their request. Be sure to
specify the exam title and number,

TO HELP YOU PASS

GET THE ARCO STUDY BOOK

Railroad Clerk $4.00
Sanitation Man $4.00

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

ORDER DIRECT — MAIL COUPON E-

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Na ee a a ee a ee ed

- FIRE

im i

Anthony DeFalco got his
lungs of leather in Engine
37 while it was part of the
16th Battalion. Tony was a
fastidious dresser, thus earn-
ing the name “Don Juan.”
He was a “stand up guy”
where company matters
were concerned and if the
Mount Loretto Booster list
was lagging, it soon caught
up on it’s quota thanks to
him.

I remember the apple of his
eye, his lttle girl Dona whom he
would bring to quarters on pay-
day. She was seven or eight years
old then and cute as a kitten.
Tony used to kid me about the
fact that maybe I forgot to put

a
ANTHONY DeFALCO

film in the camera. A standard
joke between firemen and photo-
sraphers.

If one of the brothers ever
seemed down, Tony's hand on
his shoulder, a cup of coffee and
& heart to heart talk usually
put a smile back upon the face
of the downtrodden borther.
Rivalry in the cooking depart-
ment was enormous, There was

be

@ running battle

among Bill
Sohmer, Gene Auletta and Tony
DePalco to be the master chef
of Engine 37. There wasn’t much
doubt that Tony was the number
one chef.

When he worked, he took the
nozzle, period. There were times
when he heard of people trapped
in rooms beyond the fire. Mask
or no mask, water or no water
it was always the same. “Hey
Lou I'm going after them"
and false alarm or not, after
them he went

In 1965 he put in his
papers for Engine 298 in Queens.
Tt came through and Tony left
Harlem.

A few months ago-Tony ran
for UF.A. Company Delegate
and in accordance with the rules
was automatically placed in the
Captain's group. Had he Jost the
election he would most probably
be alive today because his normal
groups would not have been work-
ing that night, Between 6 p.m.
and 2:46 am. there were five
runs, the last of which was an all
hands where the company
was first due and got their brains
beaten in, At 2:46 a.m, Box 9892
slammed in and they were first
due at that one too,

‘The fire was out the windows
of the first floor on the side of
the building. Taking advantage
of the fact that he was first
due, Tony shunned the mask,
took the pipe, entered the first
floor, belted the fire down and
then stretched up the inside stalr-
way to the second floor of the
“Queen Anne” frame building
where the fire was spreading fast
and needed attention.

As the Truck opened up, Tony
hit the fire with the line —
standard procedure. Suddenly he
had a heart attack, He was the
second man in three days to

Federal News

Few Promotions

‘The federal Civil Service Com-
mission has told agencies it will
be monitoring thelr pro-
motion practices this year,
Budget and promotion fund cuts
through the Office of Manage-
ment and Budget will be made,
if necessary, to cut down promo-
tions.

A strict hold-the-line position
is expected within agencies and
promotions this year probably
will be hard to come by.

More Employment

President Nixon is not expect-
ed to propose major reductions
in government in his budget for
July 1, Agencies in energy, con-
servation and anti-pollution may
even be given funds to hire more
people

Executive Service

An effort to establish a grade-
less corps of career-political ex-
ecutives, with base pay in G6 16,
17 and 18, will again be tried by
the Nixon administration this
year. The President wants Con-
@ressional approval of the fed-
eral executive service (FES)
plan, which would mean new
rankings for most executives and
more flexibility for agencies to
transfer or trade employees,

The plan was dropped by Con-
gress last year.

die that way while operating at
8 fire.

He was a little guy. Wiry and
tough. If Tony couldn't make
it down the long hallway, no-
body could.

I think Saint Peter ts in for
several shocks upon the arrival
of Tony DeFalco, He's going to
find that you don't need a mask
when @ life is involved. And he's
going to learn new ways to cook
spaghetti a la dante and he bet-
ter believe it,

ZODIAC P

Introduces your

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PLOL ‘Zz Asenuef ‘depeony “YACVAT ANANSS WALD
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, January 22, 1974

Listing Of New York Congressmen And Legislators

Here is an official listing
of State Senators and As-
semblymen from the New
York City Metropolitan area,
printed each year as a ser-
vice to those public employ-
ees who write to their rep-
resentatives urging support
for measures that would af-
fect their jobs, pensions and
rights.

Also listed is the New York
State Congressional delega-
tion,

The (R), (D), (C) and (L)
represent the political party
of the office holder.

The addresses listed are
where these representatives
may be contacted in their
local area, You may also
write to them in care of
their respective legislative
houses in Albany and or in
Washington.

U.S. SENATE

Communications can also be
addressed to: Senate Office
Building, Washington, D.C.
20515.

Jacob K. Javits (R), 110 Bast
45th St.. New York, N.Y. 10017

James L, Buckley (C-R), 60
Sutton Place S., New York, N.Y
10570.

CONGRESS

Communications can also be
addressed to: House Office
Building, Washington, D.C, 20515.

SUFFOLK
ist District—Otis Pike (D),
132 Ostrander Ave., Riverhead,
LI, NY. 11901
2nd District—James R. Grover,
Jr. (R), 185 Woodsome Rd,
Babylon, LI, N.Y. 11702,

SUFFOLK-NASSAU
3rd District—Angelo D. Ron-
callo (R), 226 Toronto Ave.,
Massapequa, LI., N-¥. 11758,

NASSAU
4th District—Norman F. Lent
(R), 48 Plymouth Rd, East
Rockaway, LI. N.Y. 11518.
5th District—John W. Wydler
(R), 63 First St, Garden City,
LI, N.Y, 11530

NASSAU-QUEENS
6th District—Lester L. Wolff
(D-L), 5 North Drive, Great
Neck, N.Y, 11021,

QUEENS

‘Ith District—Joseph P. Addab-
bo (D-L), 192-43 86th St, Ja-
maica, N.Y. 11417

8th District — Benjamin §.
Rosenthal (D-L), 88-12 Elmhurst
Ave,, Phishing, N.Y, 11373.

9th District—James J. Delaney
(D-R-C), 45-14 3ist Ave, Long
Island City, N.Y. 11103.

QUEENS-BRONX
District—Mario
(D-R-C), 100 East
Pkwy,, Bronx 10458,

QUEENS-BROOKLYN
1th District—Frank J. Bras-
co (D), 650 Autumn Ave., Brook-
lyn, N.Y. 11208.

BROOKLYN
12th District Shirley Chis-
holm (D-L), 1028 St, Johns PI.
Brooklyn, N.Y. 11213
13th District—Bertram L. Po-
dell (D), 153 Rugby Rd. Brook-
lyn, N.Y. 11226.
14th Distriet—John J. Rooney
(D-C), 217 Congress St, Brook-
lyn, NY. 11201
1ith District—Hush L. Carey
(Di, 44 Prospect Pk, West,
Brooklyn, N.Y. 11216.

10th Biagel

Mosholu

16th District—Elizabeth Holtz-
man (D), 1815 Ditmas Ave.,
Brooklyn 11226.
RICHMOND-MANHATTAN

11th District—John M. Mur-
phy (D), 150 Mada Ave., Staten
Island, N.Y, 10310.

MANHATTAN

18th District—Edward I, Koch
(D-L), 14 Washington Pl, New
York, N.Y. 10003.

19th District—Charles Rangel
(D-R-L), 74 West 132nd 8t.,
New York, N.Y. 10037,

MANHATTAN-BRONX

20th District—Bella S. Abzug
(D), 37 Bank St., New York, N-Y.

10014.
BRONX
21st District—Herman Badillo
(D-L), 405 West 259th St.,
Bronx, N.Y

Bingham (D-L), 5000 Indepen-
dence Ave, Bronx, N.Y, 10471,
BRONX-WESTCHESTER
23rd District—Peter A. Peyser
(R-C), W. Sunnyside Lane, Irv-

ington, N.Y. 10533.
WESTCHESTER
24th District—Ogden R. Reid
(D-L), Ophir Hill, Purchase,
N.Y. 10577,
WESTCHESTER-PUTNAM-
DUTCHESS-ULSTER-
COLUMBIA
25th District—Hamilton Fish,
Jr, (R-C), Millbrook, N.Y.
12545.
ROCKLAND-ORANGE-
ULSTER
26th District—Benjamin A.
Gilman (R), 10 Coolidge Ct,
Middletown, N.Y. 10940.
ULSTER-SULLIVAN-
DELAWARE-BROOME-
TIOGA-TOMPKINS-
CHEMUNG
27th District — Howard W.
Robison (R), RD No. 2, Candor,
N.Y. 13743,
ALBANY-SCHENECTADY-
MONTGOMERY
28th District—Samuel 8. Srat-
ton (D), 244 Guy Park Ave.
Amsterdam, N.Y. 12010.
COLUMBIA-GREENE-
ALBANY-RENSSELAER-
WASHINGTON,
SARATOGA-WARREN-
ESSEX
29th District — Carleton J.
King (R-C), 126 Nelson Ave.,
Saratoga Springs, N-Y. 12866.
ESSEX-CLINTON-FRANKLIN-
ST. LAWRENCE-LEWIS
JEFFERSON-OSWEGO
30th District—Robert C. Me-
Ewen (R-C), RPD No. 2, Og-
densburg, N.Y. 13669.
SCHENECTADY-
SCHOHARIE-OTSEGO-
MONTGOMERY-FULTON-
HAMILTON-HERKIMER-
ONEIDA
Bist Distriet—Donald J. Mit-
chell (R-C), Shell's Bush Rd,
Herkimer, N.Y. 13350.
DELAWARE-OTSEGO-
MADISON-CORTLAND-
ONONDAGA
32nd District—James M. Han-
ley (D), 316 Coleridge Ave.
‘Syracuse, N.Y, 13204
ONONDAGA-OSWEGO-
CAYUGA-TOMPKINS-
SCHUYLER-SENECA-
ONTARIO-YATES-STEUBEN
33rd District — William F.

Walsh (R-C), 4954 Albart Dr.,
Syracuse, N.Y. 13215.

WAYNE-MONROE
34th District — Frank Horton
(R) 2123 East Ave. Rochester,
NY, 14610.

MONROE-ONTARIO-
LIVINGSTON-WYOMING-
GENESEE
35th District—Barber B, Con-

able (R), 10532 Alexander Rd.,
Alexander, N.Y. 14005.

MONROE-ORLEANS-
NIAGARA-ERIE
36th District—Henry P, Smith
TI (R-C), 253 Christiana St,
North Tonawanda, N.Y. 14120,

ERIE
37th District — Taaddeus J.
Dulski (D-L), 50 Peace St., Buf-
falo, N.Y. 14211.
38th District—Jack F. Kemp
(R-C), 50 Idlewood Ave., Ham-
burg, N.Y. 14075,

CHEMUNG-STEUBEN-
ALLEGANY-CATTATAUGUA-

CHAUTAUQUA-ERIE
39th District—James F. Hast-

ings (R-C), 124 North Second
St., Allegany, N.Y. 14706.

NYS LEGISLATURE
STATE SENATE

Communications to State Sen-
ators may also be addressed to
State Capitol, Albany, N.¥.

SUFFOLK

ist District —Leon E. Gluf-
freda (R), 15 N. Coleman Rd.,
Centereach, LI, N.Y. 11720. 2nd
District—Bernard C. Smith (R),
Franklin St,, Northport, L.., N.Y.
11768, 3rd District — Caesar
Trunzo (R), 105 Washington
Ave,, Brentwood, LI, N.Y. 11717.

SUFFOLK-NASSAU
4th District—Owen H. John-
son (R), 6 Learner St. West
Babylon, LI, N.Y. 11704.

NASSAU

Sth District—Ralph J. Marino
(R), 3 Lea Court, Muttontown,
Syosset, L.1., N.Y. 11791. 6th Dis-
trict—John R. Dunne (R), 109
Fifth St, Garden City, LI, N.Y.
11530, 7th District — John D.
Caemmerer (R), 11 Post Ave.
East Williston, LI, N.Y. 11596.
Bth District—Norman J. Levy
(R), 666 Shore Rd., Long Beach,
LI, N.Y, 11561.

NASSAU-QUEENS
9th District—Karen 8, Bur-
stein (D), 1015 Cedar Lane,
Woodmere, N.Y. 11598.

QUEENS

10th District—John J. San-
tucel (D), 11-29 116th St, Ja-
maica, N.Y. 11419, 11th District
—Frank Padavan (R-C), 83-15
248th St, Jamaica, N.Y. 11426.
12th District—Jack E. Bronston
(D-L), 184-37 Hovendon Rd., Ja-
maica, N.Y. 11492, 13th District
—Emanue] R. Gold (D-L), 68-59
136th St., Plushing, N.Y. 11367
14th District—to be determined
by special election Feb, 14, "74.

QUEENS-BROOKLYN
15th District—Martin J, Knorr
(R-C), 6146 Palmetto St., Brook~
lyn, N.Y. 11227

BROOKLYN

16th District — A. Prederick
Meyerson (D), 14 Van Siclen Ct
Brooklyn, N.¥. 11207. 17th Dis-
trict—Chester J, Straub (D) 676
Manhattan Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y.
12202, 18th District-—-Vander L.
Beatty (D), 671 St. John's Place,
Brooklyn, N.¥. 11216, 19th Dis-
trict—Jeremiah B. Bloom (D)
350 Sterling St, Brooklyn, N.Y
11225. 20th District — Donald

Helperin (D), 151 Mackenzie 8t.,
Brooklyn, N.Y. 11235, 2ist Dis-
trict—William T. Conklin (R-C),
7905 Colonial Rd., Brooklyn, N.Y.
11209, 22nd District—Albert B.
Lewis (D), 123 Bay 25th St.
Brooklyn, N.¥. 11214. 23rd Dis-
trict—Carol Bellamy (D), 278
Henry St., Brooklyn, N.Y. 11201,

RICHMOND-MANHATTAN

24th District—John J. March!
(R), 79 Nixon Ave., Staten Is-
land, N.Y. 10304.

BROOKLYN-MANHATTAN

25th District—Paul P. BE.
Bookson (D), 215 Park Row, New
York, N.Y. 10038,

MANHATTAN

26th District—Roy M. Good-
man (R-L,) 1035 Fifth Ave., New
York, N.Y. 10028. 27th Distriet—
Manfred Ohrenstein (D-L), 215
West 90th St, New York, N.Y.
10025, 28th District—Sidney A.
Von Luther (D-L), 600 West
1lith St, New York, N.Y. 10025.
29th District—Joseph Zaretzki
(D-L), 160 Cabrini Bivd., New
York, N.Y. 10033.

MANHATTAN-BRONX

30th District—Robert Garcia
(D-R-L), §40 Concord Ave.,
Bronx, N.Y, 10455.

BRONX

Bist District — to be determ-
ined by special election, 32nd
District—Joseph L. Gallber (D-
R-L), 800 Concourse Ville W.,
Bronx, N.Y, 10451, 33rd District
—Abraham Bernstein (D-L), 660
Thwaites Pl., Bronx, N.Y. 10467.
34th District—John D. Calandra
(R-D-C), 88 Beech Tree Lane,
Bronx, N.Y. 10803.

BRONX-WESTCHESTER

35th District—John E. Flynn
(R-C), 15 Huron Rd, Yonkers,
N.Y, 10710

WESTCHESTER
36th District — to be determ-
ined by special election Feb. 14,
‘74. 37th District — Bernard G.
Gordon (R-C), 1420 Riverview
Ave., Peekskill, N.Y. 10566.

WESTCHESTER-ROCKLAND

38th District—Donald R. Ack-
erson (R) 63 Hickory Hill Rd.,
Tappan, N.Y. 10983

WESTCHESTER-PUTNAM-
DUTCHESS-COLUMBIA
39th District—Jay P Rolison,

dr. (R-C), 150 Kingwood Pk.,

Poughkeepsie, N.Y, 12601

ROCKLAND-ORANGE-
ULSTER
40th District — Richard E.
Schermerhorn (R-C), 12 Idle-
wild Pk. Dr., Cornwall-on-Hud-
son, N.Y, 12520,

COLUMBIA-RENSSELAER-
SARATOGA
41st District—Douglas Hudson
(R), 116 Green Ave. Castleton-
on-Hudson, N.Y, 12033.

ALBANY-GREENE
42nd Distric. — Walter B.
Langley (R), 225 Jay 8t., Al-
bany, N.Y. 12210

WASHINGTON-WARREN-
ESSEX-CLINTON-FRANKLIN-
ST. LAWRENCE
43rd District—Ronald B. Staf-

ford (R-C), Peru, N.Y, 12972

SARATOGA-SCHENECTADY-
MONTGOMERY-FULTON-
HAMILTON

44th District Mary Anne
Krupsak (D-L), Shaper Ave
Ext,, Canajoharie, N.Y. 11317

ST. LAWRENCE-
JEFFERSON-OSWEGO-
CAYUGA
45th District—H. Dougias Bar-
clay (R), 7377 Bentley Rd., Pul-

aski, N.Y. 13142.
ONEIDA-LEWIS-HERKIMER
46th District—James H. Don-
ovan (R-C), 9409 Elm St., Chad-
wicks, N.Y, 13519.
BROOME-CHENANGO-
TIOGA
47th District—Warren M. An-
derson (R), 34 Lathrop Ave.,
Binghamton, N.Y. 13905.
DELAWARE-SCHOHARIE-
OTSEGO-HERKIMER
48th District—Edwyn E. Ma-
son (R-C), Main 8t., Hobart,
NY. 13788.
MADISON-ONONDAGA
49th District—Martin 8. Auer

OR), 809 Crawford Ave. Syra-
cuse, N.Y. 13224.

ONONDAGA-CAYUGA-
CORTLAND
50th District—Tarky J. Lom-
bardi, Jr. (R-C), 99 Burlingame
Ra., Syracuse, N.Y. 13203,
TIOGA-TOMPKINS-
SCHUYLER-CHEMUNG-
STEUBEN
Sist District — William T.
Smith (R-C), 3047 Olcott Rd.,
Big Flats, N.Y. 14814.
WAYNE-SENECA-YATES-
ONTARIO-MONROE
Sand District — Frederick L.

Warder (R), 100 Lewis 8t., Gen-
eva, N.Y. 14456.

MONROE
53rd District—Gordon J, De-
Hond (R-C), 21 Mount Maylane,
Rochester, N.Y. 14620, 54th Dis-
trict—Pred J. Eckert (R-C), 141

Ledgewood Circle, Rochester,
NY. 14815,

&
55th District — Joseph A.
Tauriello (D), 713 Busti Ave.,

Buffalo, N.Y. 14213, 56th District
—James D. Griffin (D-C), 420
Dorrance Ave, Buffalo, N.Y.
14218,

ERIE-CHAUTAUQUA-
CATTARAUSUS-ALLEGANY
57th District—Jess J. Present

(R), 41 Chestnut St., Jamestown,
N.Y. 14701.

ERIE-WYOMING-
LIVINGSTON
58th District—Thomas P. Mc-
Gowan (R-C,) 117 Huntley Rd.
Buffalo, N.Y. 14215.

ERIE-GENESSEE-MONROE
59th District—James T. Mc-
Farland (R-C), 21 Grosvenor
Ra., Kenmore, N.Y. 14223

NIAGARA-ORLEANS
60th District—Lioyd H. Pater-
son (R-L), 1234 87th St, Niag-
ara Falls, N.Y. 14304

ASSEMBLY

Communications to Assembly-
men may also be addressed to
State Capitol, Albany, N.Y.

SUFFOLK

1st District—Perry B, Duryea,
dr, (2), Old Montauk Hwy.,
Montauk, LI, N.Y, 11954, and
District—Peter J, Costigan (R),
154 Old Pield Rd., Setauket, LI,
N.Y. 11785, 3rd District—Icilio
W. Bianchi, Jr. (D), 36 Bellport
Lane, Bellport, LI, N.Y, 11713.
4th District-Robert C Wertz
(R), 37 Bethany Dr., Commack,
Li, NY. 11725. 5th District—

(Continued on Page 9)
Their Decisions Can Affect Lives Of All New Yorkers

(Continued from Page 8)
Dennis O'Doherty (R), 105 Cleve-
land Ave., Sayville, LI, N.Y.
11782. 6th District—John C. Co-
chrane (R), 80 Concourse East,
Brightwaters, L.L, N.Y. 11718. 7th
District—John J. Flanagan (R),
52 Dunlap Rd, Huntington,
LL, N.Y. 11743. 8th District—
John G, McCarthy (R), 8 Pin Oak
Court, Huntington Station, L.I,
N.Y. 11746, 9th District—william
L. Burns (R), 23 Whitney Dr.,
Amityville, Lit, N.Y. 11701,

SUFFOLK-NASSAU
10th District—Stuart R. Le-
vine (R), 42 Burton Ave., Beth-
page, Plainview, LL, N.Y. 11714.

NASSAU

11th District—Philip B, Healey
(R), 32 Prankel Rd, Massape-
qua, LI, N.Y. 11758. 12th Dis-
triet—George A. Murphy (R),
3556 Bt, Seaford, LI.
N.Y. 11783, 13th District—Milton
Jonas (R), 1854 Zana Court,
North Merrick, L.I, N.Y. 11566.
14th District—Joseph M. Reilly
(R), 7 Hickory Lane, Glen Cove,
LL, N.Y. 11542. 15th Distriet—
John EB. Kingston (R), 97 Ward
St, Westbury, L..., N.Y. 11590.
16th District—Irwin J. Landes
(D), 8 Merielees Circle, Great
Neck, LL, N.Y, 11021. 17th Dis-
trict—Joseph M. Margiotta (R).
844 Bedford Court, Uniondale,
LI, N.Y. 11553, 18th Distriet—
Armand P. D'Amato (R), 15 Os-
tend Rd., Island Park, LI, N.Y.
11558, 19th District—John 8.
Thorp, Jr, (D), 92 Voorhis Ave.,
Rockville Centre, L.I., N.Y. 11570.
20th District—Arthur J. Kremer
(D), 81 Kerrigan St. Long
Beach, Ll, N.Y. 11561. 21st Dis-
trict—George J. Farrell, Jr. (R),
116 Carnation Ave., Floral Park,
LI, N.Y. 11001.

QUEENS

22nd District—Herbert A. Pos-
ner (D), 21-07 Elk Dr. Par
Rockaway, N.Y. 11691, 23rd Dis-
triet—John A, Esposito (R-C),
222-01 101st Ave., Jamaica, N.Y.
11429, 24th District—Saul Wep-
rin (D), 160-16 Jamaica Ave,,
Jamaica, N.Y. 11432. 25th District
—Vineent F. Nicolosi (D), 50-19
211th St, Flushing, N.Y. 11360.
26th District—Leonard P. Stavisky
(D-L), 162-21 Powells Cove Blvd.,
Flushing, N.Y. 11357, 27th Dis-
trict--Arthur J. Cooperman (D-
L), 60-22 169th St. Jamaica,
NY, 11432. 28th = =—-—dDistrict
— Alan G. Hevesi (D), 67-64
Selfridge St., Flushing, N.Y,
11375, 29th District—Guy R.
Brewer (D), 107-35 170th St.,
Jamaica, N.Y. 11433. 30th Dis-
trict—Herbert J. Miller (D), 100-
11 67th Rad. Forest Hills, N.Y.
11375, Sist District—Alfred A.
Delli Bovi (R-C), 114-13 111th
Ave., Jamaica, N.Y. 11420. 32nd
District-—-Edward Abramson (D),
163-39 130th Ave., Jamaica, N.Y.
11434. 33rd District—John T.
Plack (R-C), 78-14 64th Place,
Glendale, N.Y. 11227, 34th Dis-
trict—Joseph FP, Lisa (D), 56-12
Van Doren 8t,, Corona, N.Y
11368, 35th District—John
Lopresto (R-C), 87-18 30th Ave.,
Flushing, N.Y, 11369. 36th Dis-
trict—Joseph 8. Calabretta (D),
24-15 35th Ave. Long Island
City, N.Y, 11106. 37th Distriet—
Rosemary R. Gunning (R-C),
1867 Grove St, Brooklyn, N.Y.
11237

QUEENS-BROOKLYN

48th District—Vito P, Battista
(R-C), 290 Highland Blvd,
Brooklyn, N.Y, 11207

BROOKLYN

39th =District—Stanley Pink
(D), 2249 East 70th St. Brook-
lyn, N.Y. 11234, 40th Distriet—

Edward GriMith (D), 710 War-
wick St, Brooklyn, N.Y. 11207.
4ist District—Stanley Steingut
(D), 1199 Bast S3rd St, Brook-
lyn, NLY. 11234. 42nd District—
Brian Sharoff (D-L), 3303 Pill-
more Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y. 11234.
43rd District—George A. Cincot-
ta (D), 96 Maple 8t., Brooklyn,
N.Y. 11225. 44th District—Mel-
vin Miller (D), 301 Rugby Rd.,
Brooklyn, N.Y. 11226. 45th Dis-
trict—Stephen J. Solars (D-L),
241 Dover St., Brooklyn, N.Y,
11235. 46th District—Howard L.
Lasher (D), 2634 West Bt.
Brooklyn, N.Y, 11223. 47th Dis-
@),

(D),
Pkwy,, Brooklyn, N.¥, 11230. 49th
District—Dominick L. DiCarlo
(R-C), 1345 83rd 8t., Brooklyn,
N.Y. 11228, §0th District—Chris-
topher J. Mega (R), 1022 80th
St., Brooklyn, N.Y. 11228, 5ist
District—Vincent A. Riccio (R-
C), 375 16th St., Brooklyn, N.Y.
11215. 52nd District—Michael L.
Pesce (D), 113 President St.,
Brooklyn, N.Y. 11231. 53rd Dis-
triet—Woodrow Lewis (D), 1293
Dean St,, Brooklyn, N.Y. 11216.
54th District—Charles T, Ham-
iiton (D), 15 Stone Ave.
Brooklyn, N.Y. 11233. 55th Dis-
trict—Thomas R. Fortune (D),
190 Ralph Ave., Brooklyn, N.
11233. 56th District—Calvin Wil-
Mams (D-L), 467 Macon St,
Brooklyn, N.Y. 11233. 57th Dis-
triet—Harvey L. Strelzin (D), 59
Penn St., Brooklyn, N.Y. 11211
68th District—Joseph R. Lentol
(D), 229 Monitor 8t., Brooklyn,
N.Y., 11222, 59th District—Peter
G. Mirto (D), 180 Irving Ave.
Brooklyn, N.Y. 11237.

RICHMOND
60th District—Luclo F. Russo
(R-C), 82 Romer Rd. Staten Is-
land, N.Y, 10304, 61st District—
Elizabeth A. Connelly (D), 94
Benedict Ave. Staten Island,
N.Y, 10314,

RICHMOND-MANHATTAN

62nd District—Louis DeSalvio
{D), 90 Beekman St., New York,
NY. 10038,

MANHATTAN

63rd District—Anthony G. Di-
Falco (D-L), 103 East 10th St.,
New York N.Y. 10003. 64th Dis-
trict—William FP. Passannante
(D-L), 72 Barrow St,, New York,
N.Y. 10014. 65th District—An-
rew J, Stein (D-L), 440 East 57th
St., New York, N.Y. 10022. 66th
District—Antonio G. Oliviert (D-
L), 112 East 74th St, New York,
N.Y. 10021, 67th District— Ric-
hard N. Gottfried (D-L), 165
West 66th St., New York, N.Y.
10023. 68th District—Peter A.
Berle (D-L), 530 East 86th St,
New York, N.Y. 10028. 69th Dis-
trict—Albert H, Blumenthal (D-
L), 90 Riverside Dr, New York,
N.Y. 10024. 70th District-—Jesse
Gray (D), 113 West 114th 8t,,
New York, N.Y. 10026, Tist Dis-
trict—Frang 8, Lelchter (D-L),
600 West lllth St, New York,
NY. 10025, 72nd District-—
George W, Miller (D-L), 25 West
132nd St, New York, N.Y. 10037,
73rd District—Edward H. Leh-
ner (D-L), 680 Ft. Washington
Ave., New York, NY. 10040, 74th
District—-Mark T. Southall (D)
345 West 145th St, New York,
NY. 10031

RONX

75th District—Eugenio A, Al-
varez (D), 532 Eust 149th St.
Bronx, N.Y, 10455. 76th District
—Seymour Posner (D-L), 1100
Grand Concourse, Bronx, N.Y
10456. Tith District—Armando
Montano (D-R-L), 634 Manida

8t., Bronx, N.Y, 10474. 78th Dis-
trict—Estella B, Diggs (D), 592
East 167th St., Bronx, N.Y, 10456.
‘79th District—Louls Nine (D),
1424 Wilkins Ave., Bronx, N.Y.
10489. 80th District—Guy V. Ve-
lela (R-C), 1240 Rhinelander
Ave., Bronx, N.Y. 10461.
District—Alan Hochberg (D-L),
2040 Bronxdale Ave., Bronx, N.Y.
10462, 82nd District—Thomas J.
Culhane (D-L), 2533 Grand Ave.,
Bronx, N.Y. 10468, 83rd District
—Burton G, Hecht (D-L), 2715
Grand Concourse, Bronx, N.Y.
10468, 84th District—G. Oliver
Koppell (D-L), 3124 Henry Hud-
son Pkwy., Bronx, N.Y. 10463,
85th District — John C. Dearie
(D), 1735 Purdy 8t., Bronx, N.Y.
10462, 86th District — Anthony
J, Stella (D-L), 2527 Radeliff
Ave., Bronx, N.Y. 10469.

WESTCHESTER

87th District—Bruce F. Caputo
(R-C), 250 Pondfield Rd., West,
Bronxville, N.Y. 10708, 88th Dis-
triet—Richard C. Ross (R-C), 24
Palmer Ave, Mt. Vernon, N.Y,
10552. 89th District—Alvin M.
Suchin (R-C), 269 Broadway,
Dobbs Ferry, N.Y. 10522. 90th
Districte—Gordon W, Burrows
(R-C), 65 Harvard Ave., Yonkers,
N.Y. 10710. Gist District—Ric-
hard E. Mannix (R-C), 11
Beach Ave, Larchmont, N.Y.,
10538. 92nd District — J.
Edward Meyer (R-C), 47 Haights
Cross Rd. Chappaqua, N.Y.
10514, 93rd District—Peter R.
Biondo (R), Oak Hill Terrace,
Ossining, N.Y. 10562.

WESTCHESTER-PUTNAM-
DUTCHESS
94th District—Willis H. Step-

hens (RB), RD. 5, Brewster,
N.Y. 10509.
ROCKLAND

95th District—Eugene Levy (R-
C), East Place, Suffern, N.Y.
10901.

ROCKLAND-ORANGE

96th District—Harold K. Grune
(R-C), 33 DeHalve Maen Dr.,
Stony Point, N.Y. 10980.

ORANGE

97th District—Lawrence Herbst
(R), 8 Leicht Pl., Newburgh, N.Y.
12550.

ORANGE-SULLIVAN

98th District—Louls Ingrassia
(R), RD #5, Ingrassia Rd, Mid~
dietown, N.Y. 10940.

DUTCHESS-ULSTER

99th District—Emeel 8. Betros
(R-C), 67 Grand Ave, Pough-
keepsie, N.Y, 12603,

DUTCHESS

100th = District—Benjamin P.
Roosa, Jr, (R), Hickman Dr.,
Hopewell Junction, N.¥, 12533.

ULSTER

1Wist District—H. Clark Bell
(R-C), P.O, Box 734, Woodstock,
N.Y. 12498.

GREENE-COLUMBIA-
ALBANY

10and District—Clarence D.
Lane (R), Windham Arms, Wind-
ham, N.Y. 12496.

ALBANY

103rd District—Pred G. Field
(R), 16 Bast Newton Rd., New-
tonville, N.Y. 12128. 104th Dis-
trict—Thomas W. Brown (D),
5 Holmes Dale, Albany, N.Y.
12208.
ALBANY-SCHENECTADY-

MONTGOMERY-

SCHOHARIE-DELAWARE

105th District—Charles D.
Cook (R), 19 Prospect 8t., Delhi,
NY, 13753

RENSSELAER
106th Distriot—Nell W. Kelle-

her (R-C), 406 Sixth Ave., Troy,
N.Y, 12182.
SCHENECTADY

107th Distriet—Clark C. Wem-
ple (R-C), 1760 Van Antwerp
Rd., Schenectady, N.Y. 12309.

SARATOGA

108th District—Fred Droms,
Jr, (R), Droms Rd., Rexford, NY.
12148,

HAMILTON-FULTON-
MONTGOMERY-FRANKLIN
109th District—Glenn H. Har-
ris (R-C-L), Canada Lake, N.Y.
12030.
RENSSELAER.
WASHINGTON-WARREN

111th District—Andrew W.
Ryan, Jr. (R-C), 43 Grace Ave.,
Plattsburgh, N.Y, 12901.

ST. LAWRENCE-FRANKLIN

112th District—K. Daniel Haley
(D-L), St. Lawrence Ave., Wad-
dington, N.Y. 13694,

HERKIMER-OTSEGO

113th District — Peter 8S.
Dokuchitz (R), 1 Main St., Un-
adilla, N.Y. 13849.

JEFFERSON-LEWIS-ONEIDA

114th District—Donald L. Tay-
lor (R-C), 117 Ward St, Water-
town, N.Y. 13601.

ONEIDA
115th —District—Willlam —R.
Sears (R-C), Bear Creek Rd,
Woodgate, N.Y. 18494. 116th Dis-
trict — Nicholas J. Calogero
(R-C), 10 Proctor Bivd., Utica,
N.Y. 13501.

OSWEGO-ONEIDA
117th District — to be determ-
ined by special election Feb.
14, "74,

ONONDAGA

118th District—Leonard F. Ber-
sani (R-C), 128 Rugby Rd., By-
racuse, N.¥. 13206. 120th District
— to be determined by special
election Feb. 14, '74. 121st Dis-
trict — Thomas J. Murphy (R-
C), 314 Broadview Dr., Syracuse,
N.Y, 13216.

ONONDAGA-MADISON

19th = District—Hyman M.
Miller (R), 56 Lyndon Rd., Pay-
etteville, N.Y. 13066.
MADISON-CHENANGO-

DELAWARE

122nd_ District—Clarence D.
Rappleyea, Jr. (R), 11 Ridge-
land Rd., Norwich, N.Y. 13815.

{OOME-TIOGA

123rd District—James W, Mc-
Cabe (D), 127 Massachusetts
Ave., Johnson City, N.Y. 13790,

BROOME
124th District—Prancis J. Bo-
land, Jr. (R-C), 65 Orchard Rd,
Binghamton, 13905,

CAYUGA-CORTLAND

125th District—-Lioyd 8, Rif-
ord, Jr, (R-C), W. Genesee Rd.
Box 681, Auburn, N.Y. 13021

CHEMUNG-TIOGA

126th = District-—L, Richard
Marshall (R-C), 7 Strathmont
Park, Elmira, N.Y. 14905.

STEUBEN-SCHUYLER-

CHEMUNG

127th District—Charles D, Hen-
derson (R), 39 Chureh 8t., Hor-
nell, N.Y. 14843,

YATES-SENECA-TOMPKINS
128th = District—Constance E.
Cook (R), 200 Coy Glen Rd,

Ithaca, NY, 14850.

WAYNE-SENECA-ONTARIO

129th District—James F. Hur-
ley (R-C), 28 High St. Lyons,
N.Y. 14489.

MONROE
130th District—Thomas A.
Hanna (R-C), 1680 Lake Rd.,

Webster, N.Y. 14580, 131st Dis-
trict—Raymond J. Lill (D), 31

‘Thomas
R. Frey (D), 308 Merchants Rd.,
Rochester, N.Y. 14609. 133rd Dis-
trict—Frank A, Carroll (R-C),

lam M. Steinfeldt (R-C),
Weston Rd. Rochester, N.Y.
14612.

MONROE-WAYNE
135th District—Don W. Cook
(R-C), 1508 Lehigh Station Rd.,
Henrietta, N.Y. 14467,

ALLEGANY-LIVINGSTON-
ONTARIO
136th District—James L. Em-
ery (R), 5477 Lakeview Rd.,
Geneseo, N.Y. 14454.

MONROE-ORLEANS-

GENESEE-WYOMING

137th District — Stephen R,
Hawley (R), 8249 Bank 8t, Road,
Batavia, N.Y. 14020,

NIAGARA
138th District—John B. Daly
(R), 430 Dutton Dr, Lewiston,
N.Y. 14092, 139th District—Rio-
hard J. Hogan (R-C), 8648 Grif-
fon Ave, Nisgara Falls, N.Y.
14304.

ERIE

140th District—John J. La-
Palce (D-L), 252 Delaware Rd.,
Kenmore, N.Y. 14217, 141st Dis-
trict—Chester R. Hardt (R-C),
107 Oakgrove Dr., Williamsville,
N.Y. 14221, 142nd District—Step-
hen R. Greco (D-C), 795 Rich-
mond Ave., Buffalo, N-Y. 14222.
143rd District—Arthur O. Eve
(D), 14 Celtic Place, Buftalo,
N.Y. 14208. 144th Distric'—Al-
bert J. Hausbeck (R-C), 315
Dartmouth Ave., Buffalo, N.Y.
14215, 145th District—Prancis J.
Griffin (D-L), 56 Morgan Rd.,
Buffalo, N.Y. 14220, 146th
District —- Alan J, Justin
(R-C), 102 Lou Dr., Depew, N.¥
14043, 147th District—Ronald H.
Tills (R-C), 43 Union 8t,, Ham-
burg, N.Y. 14075.

ERIE-WYOMING
148th District—Dale M. Volker
(R), 31 Darwin Dr. Depew,
N.Y. 14043.

CATTARAUGUS-

CHAUTAUQUA

149th ‘District—Dantel a.
Walsh (D-L), Rt, 16, Franklin-
ville, N.Y. 14737,

CHAUTAUQUA
150th District—John W. Beck-
man (R-C), 98 8. Portage St,
Westfield, N.Y. 14787

To Assist Governor

ALBANY — State Mediation
Board member Richard H, Nolan
will resign that position to ac-
cept a $15,000 post as special as~
sistant to Governor Wilson for
labor affairs. Nolan was execu-
tive vice-president of the Inter-
national Union of Operating En-
giners until his retirement in
1969. He was named to the Me-
diation Board in 1072

TO SUNY-ALBANY COUNCIL

ALBANY — Dr, John P. Filip-
pone, of Albany, has been re-
appointed to the Council of
SUNY at Albany for an unaal-
aried term ending July 1, 1982

PLOL ‘ZZ Arenueg *dupsony ‘YACVAT ANAWAS TALIS
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, January 22, 1974

This Week's City Eligible Lists

EXAM 3076
LAW CLERK

‘This list of 284 eligibles, estab-
lished Jan, 16, resulted from Nov.
oral testing for which 487 can-
didates filed, 468 were called and
285 appeared. Salary is $14,000.

No. 1 — 107.0%

1 Jeffrey E Schanback, Rene
Ramirez, Ralph J Cohen, Nichol-
as H Cobbs, Sandra B Goldsmith,
Steven C Decosta, Richard J
Stratford, Marc R_ Leventhal,
Martin Jacobson, Gabriel Taus-
sig, Thomas C Grebel, Diane R
Elsner, Israe] Schechter, Paul J
Lane, Henry R Deutsch, Eileen
F Shapiro, Edward A Friedman,
William L Scheffler, Robert 1
Kurtz, Robert J Miller,

No, 21 — 95.0%

21 Stephen H Rappoport, Jon
L Besunder, Harry L Sheinfeld,
William J Leininger, Stephen H
Klausner, Stanley C Hunterton,
James P Griffin, John C Bren-
nan, Marvin Grey, Roy Warner,
Terrance J Nolan, Donald Mal-
Jo, Morrell I Berkowitz, Nancy A
Serventi, Larry H Hecht, How-
ard F Daniels, Virginia M Ed-
wards, Mary E Lupo, Mark 1
Schlesinger, Jan I Gellis.

No, 41 — 93.80%

41 Joseph A Calvaruso, Robin
W Weiner, Thomas G McKeon,
Bruce A Siegel, Barry Strom,
Joseph P Sherer, William S Lieb-
man, Peter H Jacoby, Kevin M
Ryan, Kathleen H Casey, Tullo
R Prieto, Philip J Levine, John
A Sotirakis, Michael C Marlin,
Robert W Kaufmann, Jeffrey A
Reiner, Mona D Shapiro, Leon
2% Mener, Norman 8 Hatt.

No. 61 — 92.50%

61 Eliot Norman, Robert 1
Piedelman, Mark 8 Borten, John
B Pitzpatrick, Freddy P Yalkow-
sky, Devora B Cohn, John L
Araujo, Gary D Gruber, Thom-
as M Kennedy, John M Manos,
Deborah E Abramson, Erie K
Tarlow, Michael Kopcsak, Daniel
E Greenburg, Antonetta Gub-
itosi, Marianne G Regitsky, Ric-
hard M Cohlan, Arnold L Bart-
feld, George M Donahue, Charles
N Tetunte

No. 81 — 91.0%

61 Ira Z Kevelson, Samuel J
Freund, Mary J Hammer, Amy
E Topiel, Joel A Mintz, Irving
D Alter, Norman L Greene, Joel
D Leiderman, Stanley R Chesler,
Betty J Santangelo, John Kelly,
Irving M Punk, Charles C Shain-

berg, Joan M Levy, Kenneth W
Malamy, Barry M Goldstein,
James P Ragio, Jeffrey I Rich-
man, Belvyn § Jacknowitz,
Thomas J Farrelly,

No. 101 — 90.0%

101 Jeffrey A Juster, Alice A
Collins, Franklin D Tell, How-
ard J Peyser, Susan W Sciacca,
Paul D Shur, Sharon L Mirsky,
Marilyn G Rinsler, John L Cuff,
Charles W Segal, Robert J Hind-
man, Susan E Goldenkranz, David
A Goldenberg, Robert A Mans-
bach, James L Stern, Alan D
Rubinstein, Barry S Port, Joseph
Samet, Margaret O'Neill, Jacob
Laufer.

No, 121 — 88.50%

121 David Aronson, Richard W
Breslin, Carol Noymer, Kay R
Back, Samuel M Krelger, David
Werchen, George G Irving, John
P aMccoon, Abraham Boren-
stein, Robert L Fleischman, Har-
old M Shultz, Frank T Sime-
one, Joseph L Rinl, Lillian B
Richman, Steven G Friedman,
George R Heaton Jr, Michael D
Blutrich, Stephen M Schultz,
Joel M Traube, Sharon G Silver-
smith.

No, 141 — 86.80%

141 Sheldon J Halprin, Barbara
J Prager, Harvey Feldmeier,
Renee Sacks, Eileen C Budno-
vitch, Jonathan I Rapaport, Step-
hen J MoGrath, Alfred E Page
Jr, Neil M Parsoff, Helen R Neu-
borne, Edward Friedenthal, Paul
E Kay, Gerald I Angowitz, Vir-
ginia W McMahon, Joseph J
Borenstein, Jane Waites, Cary
M Feldman, Jonathan Strong,
Marilyn B Cane.

No. 161 — 85.30%

161 Mark I Brecker, Barry M
Vucker, Ralph Pernick, Fred L
Shapiro, Harvey N Casper, Barry
L Aaron, Moise E Hendeles, Max
C Dorian, Michae} Devlin, Thom-
as C Devlin, Joyce 8 Kornbluh,
Martin L Price, Gayle A Yeo-
mans, Joseph P Burden, George
N Garin, Floran L Fink, Joseph
C Bierman, Anne M Tannen-
baum, Carol Mellor, Henry Fer-
raloll

No, 181 — 84.50%

181 Richard W Gleeson,
Michae!} Paskowitz, Ira J Gross-
man, Jeffrey M Marcus, Lawrence
Parkash, Mary M Welch, Alan
W Gitter, Bernard Haber, An-
drew E Goldstein, George S
Locker, Mitcel H Perkiel, Jared
-_Brown, ‘Theodore D Kaufman,

to you

to your job

the Job you want,

scription now.

were n

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1) Werren Street
New York, New York 10007

T enclose $7.00 (check or money order for @ year's subscrip-

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Robert J Soffientini, Joshua D
Rosenberg, David Golomb, Kathy
R Peeker, Richard 8 Kesten-
baum, Elliot R Warren, Barnett
Silverstein.

No. 201 — 82.80%

201 Paul W Mackey, Kevin
F McMormick, Carol A Feinstein,
Kent T Stauffer, Hannah K
Famenbaum, Gerald L Garfinkle,
Lawrence Kanterman, Christophe
Hoge, Aric J Press, Bruce Meller,
Steven E Gunderson, George T
Griffith, George Harris Jr, Alan
B Leibowitz, John S Pereira, Mi-
chael A Gary, Carol A Calhoun,
David A Kellman, Joel M Sch-
warts, Jesse A Hecht.

No, 221 — 81.0%

221 Robert S Klothe, Abra-
ham M Akselrad, Richard N
Petrocelli, David L Linden, Thom-
as S Finegan, Michael J Prior,
Joseph Aronauer, Stanley Kane,
Isaac Klepfish, Daniel Nobel, Mi-
chael 8 Emen, Wayne N Outten,
Rosalind A Kochman, Paul E
Kowtna, Victor M Tanenbaum,
Gerald M Pleischman, Richard B
Lind, Eugene V Natale, Jac-
queline Maloney, Danie! J Bern-
stein,

No, 241 — 79.0%

241 Dennis Bellovin, George R
Green, Lenore § Birnbaum, Mar-
jorie Q Printz, Jane H Gran-
de, Mark E Siegal, Robert M
Simels, Joel I Sosinsky, Regina
M Sarnese, Ormond N Smith,
Jonathan P Blucher, Leonard A
Davis, Frederic R Mindlin, Sally
Weinraub, Gail D Rothstein,
Barry L Kluger, Burt Grayman,
Joel B Rubin, Jerome L le-
vine, Barbara T Zimet.

No. 261 — 76.50%

261 Leonard R Wizmur, Mi-
chael J O'Connor, Scott M Sch-
warts, Elliot Stein, Ronald 5
Melynk, Phyllis B Davis, Carol
N Kriesberg, Courtney D Ed-
wards, Roseanne M Lippman,
Gary R Tarnoff, George E Hag-
erty, Antonio I Brandveen, Jo-
seph J Arata, Roni N Schnitzer,
Harvey S Sander, Ronald Turbin,
Demetria B Lu, Steven L Rosen-
thal, Stecen M Ingis, Mark W
Alexander.

No. 281 — 15.0%

281 Jeffrey L Chase, Helen D
Johnson, Jimmy Weathersbee,
Stuart C Levitas.

EXAM 1681
PROM TO SR INVESTIGATOR,
REVISED LIST
‘This list of 86 eligibles, pub-
lished here as a ‘revised list”
established fept. 12, 1973, for
use by seven city agencies, re~
sulted from written testing in
Nov,, 1972, Of the 332 candidates
who filed, 296 were called and
151 appeared. Salary ts $10,600.
Bd, of Ed,
No, 1 — 15.35%
1 Grace L Spano,

Finan Admin
No. 1 — 96.55%

1 Raymond F Bechmann, John
W Miller, Gerard J Rose, Har-
old F Callaghan, Julian Bell,
David Astor, Milton P Meisner,
Anita Pieffer, Robert L Sing-
rossi, Charles J Venezia, Sau) L
Jacobowitz, Seymour Siegel, Ric-
hard L Katz, Harold Hood, Ro-
bert S Fuchs, William H Art,
Pauline Strausberg, Lela M Val-
vera, Teeny Marchese.

Housing Auth
No. 1 —~ 79.55%
1 Sam Guberman.

Hous Devel Adm
No, 1 — 85,075%
1 Charles N Valenti, Saul T
Black, Joseph T Loring.
(Continued on Page 11)

Federal
Job Calendar

Detailed announcements and applications be received
calling, writing or visiting the Job Lala of the U.
Civil Service Commission, New York "rete ‘trig 26 Federal Plaza,
Manhattan 10007, one: 264-0422. je living upstate (north
of Dutchess County) si contact the Syracuse Area Office, 301
Erie Bivd., West , 13202. Toll free calls may be made

Application: be received until further notice, unless a clos
ing date is specified. Jobs are in various Federal agencies through-
out the country unless a agency or location is indicated.

Use Application Form whenever the indicates a writ:
ten test is required. For others use Standard Form 171 and CSC Form
‘5001-ABC; the announcement will tell you if any supplementary forms are

Agricultural

Title Salary Grade Exam No.
Agricultural Commodity Grades (Fresh Fruit
and Veg., Grain, and LEAS errs GS-5to9 CH-1-06
Agricultural Commodity 6 (Meat)
(Dept. of Agriculture) .............. GS-5 WAO-14
Inspector — Meat and Poultry (Consumer and”
Marketing Service, Dept. of Agriculture) ...... 655 pee ;
)
Meatcutter . 65-8 Lhe pode
Warehouse Examiner (Dept .of Agriculture) ..... . GS-5,7 CH-0-02
(written)

Business
Accountant, Auditor and Internal

Computer alist’
Tax “slaps
Treasury Enforcement Agent

Engineering And Scientific

Carrers in Biological and Agricultural Sciences .GS-5 to 15 phd
ie)
Engineering, Physical Sciences and ,
Related Professions . 68-5 to 15 424
Health Scientist ouiicssdede and
Grants Associate GS-12t015 = WA-T-11
(0.C, area)
Industrial Hygienist GS-5 to 13 230
Journeyman in Skilled Trades . GS-9 to 12 WY-1-11
Meteorological Technicians .. - GS-6, 7,9 wena
Photographers and Licata wi
(Laboratory)... - GS4,5,7 ree
Technical Aid (Medical, Science and Lgleiig
Engineering Fields) i , &5-2,3 NY-0-22
Technical Assistant S4 ae
Technicians in Engineering and
Physical Science GS-5 to 12 WA0-04
General
Air Traffic Controller Led . 65,7 418
Deputy Marshall... GS-5 WA3~03
Fod. Service Entrance Exam GS-5 to9 : 410 94
(writes
Frieght Rate Specialists GS-7,9 wel
.c.
Hearing Examiner (Administrative Law Judge) . GS-15 to 16 10
Mlustrator -., @85,7 anne
Junior Federal Assistant 08-4 bal
Mid-Level Positions , 68-9 to 12 413
Office Assistant ; oo B82 to H “ WA01-02
Senior Level Positions Peery iene
Technical Assistant Lp ay Data Processing,
oa Med, Sci and tate vo SS4
Worker Trainee . BS1 WY-1-08
(NYC & St)
Medical
Aids, Assistants, Technicians O55 tod WA-8-13
Audiologist, Speech ig =n =
and Audiologist Speech GS-8 to 12 pd
Autopsy Assistant 6S-4,5 ones
an
Dental Hygienist, Dental Laboratory
qT . B55 t07 WY3-03
(NYC & St)
O'Hagan Tries To Halt PO Is Seeking Jr. Stenos
25% Cut Of Probies

As of Leader presstime
Friday the Fire Department
was continuing to urge its
recommendation against re-
ducing the classes of proba-
tionary firemen from 152 to
112 appointments. Final de-
cision on the size of classes
was expected to be made by
Jan. 21,

If the effort fails, only 112
eligibles will enter the fire train-
ing session Jan, 26.

Fire Commissioner John O'Ha-
gan told The Leader the Depart-
ment “needs the probles” and
would like to be able to comply
with a court order which set the
number of appointees at 152.

The move to reduce the classes
by about 25 percent came from
the city after studies showed the
actual attrition rate of the Fire
Dept, was lower than projected.

The civil service ist from
which fire eligibles will be ap-

pointed was split into two groups
— one of minorities and one of
non-minorities — when a federal
judge said the exam was racially
discriminatory. The two lists
would be used to make appoint-
ments at the rate of three white
per each black or Hispanic, not to
exceed a total of 152, the court
sald.

If the class of 112 1s approved,
no. 7,736.5 will be the last minori-
ty appointed, and no. 1,954 will
be the Iast non-minority, The
class would consist of 84 non-
minorities, and 28 minorities
This will be the third class to
be hired under the court order,
and the next class is expected
to be appointed March 23.

45 Cement Masons Miss
A total of 45 candidates for
cement mason have been found

not qualified or not eligible for
promotional exam 3516 by the
city Dept, of Personnel

Anyone with one year’s
general office experience or a
commercial high school dt-
ploma may apply for a jun-
jor stenographer examin-
ation being offered by the
New York City Regional of-
fice of the U.S. Postal Ser-
vice, There are presently
five junior steno vacancies
and more are expected. The
position pays $8,851 to $11,-
441,

Candidates will be summoned
to a written test and must type
At least 40 words per minute for
five minutes with no more than
two errors and take a dictation
test in shorthand or on a steno-
type machine requiring 80 words
per minute.

All applicants will be notified
by the Postal Service when and
where to appear for the teats.

Candidates must be U.S. citi-
zens and must be at least 18
on the date they file, except for
high school graduates, who must
be at least 16, There is no mini-

mum age limit,

Form 2479 AB may be ob-
tained from the Job Information
OMice, jobby of the Church
Street Station, 90 Church 8t.,
New York, N.Y. 10007; or at
the General Post Office, 380 West
33rd St., Room 3508, New York,
N.Y. 10001.

Completed applications may be
filed in person at those loca-
tions or may be mailed to the
Post Office Examination Sec-
tion, 90 Church St, New York,
N.Y. 10007, Room 1505.

Plumber Appoints

Nineteen plumbers helpers have
been appointed to five city agen-
cies following a certification pool
by the city Dept. of Personnel
last week, The last number ap-
pointed was 26 from the eligible
Ust resulting from exam 2122

Wanna be a good guy?

Give a pint of blood.

Call UN 1-7200

The Greater New York
Blood Program

you won't
believe how

g00d it tastes.

until you

taste it!

serve
with club soda

or on the rocks
with a kiss of lemon

e Imported by the Sidney Frank Importing Co., Ine. NY
cece e eee eee eee eee EE OOOH ES OEHEEEEEEseseseeeesee®

Peeeceseceveseseseseee

Don’t Repeat This!

(Continued from Page 6)
his Senate counterpart, Senator
John Marchi, chairman of the
Senate Finance Committee. Both
must work closely with Governor
Malcolm Wilson, Budget Director
Richard Dunham and their staffs.

Despite the constant pressures
on him, Assemblyman Stephens
is typically affable, never at a
loss for finshes of wit, and cour-
teous to all who besiege him.
‘Through his hard work and
diligence, Stephens has won the
admiration and respect of his
colleagues and the public rep-
resentatives he must deal with.

Eligibles

(Continued from Page 10)

Law Depart
No, 1 — 81.20%

1 Charles Slater, Horace W
Elliott, Ralph L Melady, Ed-
ward J Conroy,

Personnel Dept
No, 1 — 83.60%

1 Andrew R Horn, Harold R
Carney, Michael A Gentile, Ed-
ward T Dunn, Martin Prince,
Ralph J Bova.

Social Services
No. 1 — 86.0%

1 Elizabeth Mitzner, Jerome
8 Herman, Richard H Parkas,
Richard P Barcia, Willie Stuckey,
Neal B Preuden, Kenneth 8 Le-
vin, Frank T Olton, Edward
A Yowell, Josephr J Magavero,
Marjorie Agger, Robert J Cohen,
Michae] A Garfinkel, Joseph P
Murray, Gary A Feigenbaum,
Leonard M Arak, Edward Grandt,
Michael T Schmidt, Bernard A
Nicholas Duczak,

No, 21 — 78.50%

21 Robert J Baron, Richard
N Wahl, John M Gargano, Shel-
don J Mermelstein, Harold G
Malament, Herbert M Hersch,
Jan G Schneider, Michael R
Deprino, Eugene 8 Goldin, Ro-
bert A Becker, Amy A Pamp-
hile, Jean A Kline, James N
Mehmet, John J Kelly, Wolfram
D Techapka, Charles M Floyd,
Barbara J Brown, Salvatore Buc-
cellato, John J Redmond, 8te-
phen C Hull.

No. 51 — 173.506%

41 Joseph C White 3rd, Lou-
{s & Cappellino, Morton L Jan-
is, Bruce K Sheriff, Sally R
Malamud, Enzo Bercari, Flora
Newsome, Annette BSferuma, Ni-
cholas C Zubrick Jr, Joan Slot-
nick, Erich Klein, Michae] Kahan,

NEW YORK CITY HEALTH
& HOSPITALS CORP
PROM TO FOREMAN

ELECTRICIAN
List Estab, Jan, 10, 1974

1 Charles R Benson, John L
Tuogwolo, Angelo Tagarelli, Nich-
clas R Delouiss, Louls M Squiti-
eri Michae) A Basta, John C
Coen.

Prom, to Storekeeper

Filing for promotion to store-
keeper, exam 3623, will reopen
Feb. 4 and continue for one week.
‘That filing must be done in per-
son at the clty Dept. of Per-
sonnel, 49 Thomas St., Manhat-
tan. In addition the oral exam
for promotion to storekeeper
candidates has been changed
from March 21 to April 25, and
will include the New York City
Health and Hospital Corporauon.

La

PLL ‘Zz Azenues ‘supsony, “YACVAT FOAWAS TAL
12

IVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, January 22, 1974

Correction Officer Jobs Open

Correction officer jobs with
New York State are still
available. Men between 20
and 37 years old with a high
school diploma and in good
physical condition may apply
to take an exam for correc-
tion officer (male) from now
until further notice.

Starting salary is $10,155 to
$10,355 for a job in one of the
various correctional facilities,
correction youth camps or cor-

rection hospitals throughout the
state

Candidates must compete in
the examination for the region in
which they live and the state has
been broken into seven regions (1
through 7) with exam numbers
20-541 through 20-547, respec-
tively, Region 7, which is exam
no. 20-547, encompasses Bronx,
Dutchess, Kings, Nassau, New
York, Orange, Putnam, Queens,
Richmond, Rockland, Suffolk,
Sullivan, Ulster and Westchester

REAL ESTATE VALUES

Kingsview
Homes, Inc.

Co-op Apts.
5 bldgs. — 2% to 5% room
apartments, 10 min.

from
downtewn Brooklyn. All conveni-
ences including private park,
indeor and outdoor parking,
tight security and other facili
ties. Applications now being ac
cepted with small down pay-

nt for resi of apts. Call
TR 54088 — 9 to 3 PM.

TM nthe
CAMBRIA HEIGHTS

$37,990
BRICK ALL THE WAY
AROUND
Ranch . . , all rooms on t Aloo
3 bedrooms — beautifully
out — modern eatin kitchen
ranch sized living room — con.
ventional dining room — finished
basement playroom — 40x10
landscaped grounds — aucomatic
heat — refrigerator — wir con.
didoned — screens/storma, many
extras. Near schools, shopping
centers, bus/subway  teanspor
tation, Low ‘down payment can
be arranged for Gls o
buyer. Ask for Mr, Soto.
ST. ALBANS

$38,990
BRICK HI-RANCH

conventional sized
room, finished reatable
basement, with extra bath, Gar
age, 50x100, landscaped grounds,
ausomatic gase heat, wall to wall
carpeting and s lon,
extras, Gl, FHA
al mortgages avai

ne tT ee

down payments,
mond Rogers.

BUTTERLY

& GREEN
168-25 Hillside Ave.
JA 6-6300

MM

for Mr. Ray

TU UG A

Farms, Country Homes
New York State
WINTER Catalog of Hu

CAMBRIA HTS $28,500
BRICK COLONIAL

hitch & baths,
Call for an

All lige rms, mi
Garage. Many a
appint 10 se

LAURELTON BRK TUDOR
7% MTGE TAKE-OVER

Lvly home with all Ig rm. Fin
bsmt & gar can be yours for only
$255 mo to bank incl peins, incest,
taxes, ins & escrow. Only $7,000
needed, No credit check

LAURELTON $46,900
SUPER-SPECIAL HOUSE

1S ye young legal 2-fam
bi gle, 2 extra Ixe S-em
jue nite clubs bss

Garden grounds Am

Queens Homes Sales, Inc.
170-13 Hillside Avenue
Jamaica, N.¥ OL 8.7510

ST. ALBANS $31,990
MOTHER & DAUGHTER

Located in top area on private mreet
his fine B rm home featuring 3
full baths, 5 full kitchens & double
garage, Vers need only $1500 tocal
cash, Vacant, We have keys

MORTGAGE MONEY AVAILABLE

CAMBRIA HTS § All Brick
Ultra mod 7% rm home with mod
Sitch, 1}4 baths, enclosed screened
patio, double
fin ban,

rage, eat-in kitchen,
wood-burning fireplace.

We Have Mortgage
Money Available

Many other | & 2 Family fine bomes
im Lanrelion & Queens Village

Bimston Realty Inc.
229-12 LINDEN BLVD.
CAMBRIA HTS., QUEENS
TEL: 723-8400
Open 7 Dayy A Weed

Counties.

See page 15 of The Leader for
where to apply for this job, Date
of exams will be announced to
candidates through the mail.

‘The written exam for correc-
tion officer is designed to test
candidates’ knowledge, skills
and/or abilities in such areas as
using good judgment, following
directions and understanding and
interpreting written material

Those who pass the written
test will undergo a medical exam
and investigative character
screening. Candidates must have
at least 20/40 vision in each eye
(glasses permitted), be at least
5°", weigh at least 145 Ibs. and
have satisfactory hearing. They
must also be legally eligible to
carry firearms

BUY
U.S.
BONDS!

Help Wanted M/F

WANTED — REPRESENTATIVES
TO LEARN TRAVEL INDUSTRY—
fo experience necessary — Commis
sion plus travel beneits — Full or
parttime — Hours open — Call for
information berween 2:00 P.M, aod
9:00 PAM.

212 $36 1000 or 516

72 3111

...alll it takes is
a little Confidence.

Lives Depend On It
DONATE BLOOD
Call UN 1-7200

ESSE

Florida

Your Future Is In A
FLORIDA HOMESTIE

Call:
ART ZIMMERMAN

Seles Representetive
GENERAL DEVELOPMENT CORP.

516 - 432-1205

Highland Meadows

Offers you the good way of life
5 Star Park with a 5 Year

with homes priced from
$7,995.00,

HIGHLANDS MOBILE HOME
SALES, 4799 MN. Disle Hwy,

Pompano Boach, Fla, 33064.

"SAVE ON
YOUR MOVE
TO FLORIDA
Compare our com per 4,000 Ibs. to
St. Petersburg from New York City
$504.40; Philadelphia, $477.20;
Hartiord, Cons, 4,000 tbe, $530

For aa estimate to any destination
in Florida,

Write
SOUTHERN TRANSFER

and STORAGE CO., INC.
Tel (813) 822-4241

JOBS
FLORIOA JOBS? Federal, State,
County, City, FLORIDA CIVIL SERVICE
BULLETIN. Subscription $5 year. 8
Issues.
7.0, Box 046 1,
N. Miami, Fie, 33161,

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

DAM 8 WIARD- GEORGE ROY HAL
TONY BILL, MICHAEL

MABSTOA Cleaner Jobs

Open For Filing

To January 25,

No Experience, Education Needed

No formal education or ex-
perience is needed for any-
one at least 18 years old in-
terested in becoming a clean-
er with the Manhattan and
Bronx Surface Transit Op-
erating Authority (MABS-
TOA). Applications may be
filed to Jan. 25 for the po-
sition, which pays $4.69 an
hour to start and $4.82 an
hours the second year.

Applications for the Feb. 9
exam may be obtained only in
person from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at
room 407, 84 Fifth Ave, (at
14th St.), in Manhattan, or at
MABSTOA, 7th floor, 605 W.
132nd St.. Manhattan.

Cleaners are assigned to clean,
sweep and wash buses and other
automotive equipment as well as
shops, garages and other MAB-
STOA facilities. The work Is
both indoors and outdoors and
cleaners may be required to
work day, evening or night shifts,
including Saturdays, Sundays and
holidays.

“BEST PICTURE
OF THE YEAR!”

Judith Crist, N.Y. Magazine

Produced by MARTIN BREGMAN
Owectes by SIOMEY LUMET

Bosed oF Lye book by PETER MAAS:
Mase by MNCS

THEODORAKIS
oor by TECHINICOLOAT A

GOURMET’S GUIDE

MANHATTAN
PERSIAN — ITALIAN

After

45 WEST 44TH ST. MU 2.6588. No. 1 Cocktail place for free
hors @osuvres, Howard Hillman, a top authority in New Guide
Book Inside N.Y. Famed for Seafood — a
Curtain time dinner theatre cocktails.

—~ Persian and italian specialties.
ies of 400 — Luncheon —

The written exam on Feb. 9,
will cover general maintainer and
mechanical knowledge and apti-
tude, including basic job-related
arithmetic, Those successful on
the written test must then pass
qualifying physical and medical
tests and background inveatiga-
tion before appointment,

‘The qualifying physical test will
consist of two sub-tests, In one
sub-test, eligibles will be re-
quired to do a free-style broad-
jump of 4 feet, taking off with
both feet at one time. In the
other sub-test, eligibles will be
required to lift a dumbbell from
@ stop position at the should-
er to a full arm vertical exten-
sion above the head, raising a
minimum of 35 pounds with each
hand and a combined total of at
least 80 pounds.

In evaluating the medical
qualifications of eligibles, special
emphasis will be given to the
following: vision of less than
20/30, each eye separately, rejects
(eyeglasses allowed, contact or
tinted lenses not allowed); peri-
pheral visual flelds of less than
140 degrees, reject: color vision,
inability to hear a whisper-
ed and conversational voice,
(hearing ald not allowed), hernia,
epilepsy, varicose veins, as-
thma, presence of chronic an-
emia, diabetes, alcoholism and
drug abuse — all rejects,

Heart condition, lung condi-
tion, hypertension, hypotension,
impairment of back or extremi-
ties, paralysis, history of mental
or nervous allment — may reject,

Any disease, injury or abnor-
mality which in the opinion of
the medical examiner would pre-
vent performance of the duties
of the position — rejects.

For more information call the
MABSTOA Examining Board at
691-1054

FARMER IN POST
ALBANY — Bernard W. Pot-
ter, a Truxton dairy farmer, has
been appointed deputy commis-
sioner of Agriculture and Mar-

kets at an annual salary of
$36,542
Pass your y of
The

r
on to @ non-member.

AMERICA’S
AWARD WINNING

MUSICAL!"
*WINNER OF
24 LOCAL AND
NATIONAL AWARDS
FOR MUSIC, LYRICS, DIRECTION,
PERFORMANCES AND BEST
BROADWAY CAST ALBUM

DoNT BoTHER
i GaNT COPE

i f
EXTRA PERF. EVERY SAT. at 10 P.M.

Brown C Cambele Hts Sullivan G Monroe 5
F d ral pg Mead $ Canty NYC 4 GS porote a onantete 83 s
e e Conlon J NYC
‘COURT ASSISTANT Ti, 18 Joshua, 4 ot He eee A behing $32
hes Th Maniocro “Biya (94.2 165 Ferrari G Semen Is 83.2
Carhart DW Babylon 9 Cereecl E Bkiyo 94.1 166 Poo HM Bkiyn ‘4
Leppla 9.6 1 Tiakeaherss Kesting H Kew Gdos His 83.0
(8) Pia $3$ 20 Hartigan M 939 167 W Kew a9
+ oo ge $21 Laferty J Staten Is 95.8 168 Allman #30
Gowb V Melville 96-7 39 Marin Bkiyn 93.8 169 Leone J Yonkers o
Basile E Lindenhurst 47 Great Neck 93.7 170 Behan E Islip 83.0
23 Connolly ) 82.9
| dical ny on 333 24 Torres A Seaten Is a3 Soon ¢. frespore. 4
fax M_ Commack x ‘Chester
. ket — lg ON
Keves jauppauae *¢ 27 Davis A Bx i p
(Continued from Page 10) 0 Stewart Brentwood at ot iagnes Hollie 222 173 Uyren F Rego Pk m4
11 Felice C Parchogue 29 Corcoran I teaven .
Salary Grade Exam No. 12 Taecs & Neetauin 5 335 39 Balistio 1) woodhaven 919 177 Lake Charl Be m3
1 on 31 Daly B Commack erste 7 Prashi i
, GS-5 to 12 WAB10 14 Stewart C Brentwood 89.7 3) Clnmean W Batya 31s 179 ck J Flashing a3
GS-5 to7 WAEIO 16 May ‘> "aqucborve ae i tomer 5 Wises 31S It Goldene A. Skin a2
16 May 6 34 Mochi
GS9 to 12 WAS10 17 Romano K 89.5 3S Nesburpee Mi Forest Hits 914182 Sera Pg ai
WY3.02 19 French J°e ‘Northpor 1 et en, Bhs IM Woods KLE Chey 2.1
-f 9 57 Kalogin ha ‘
Medical Machine Technicians GS-5 to8 (NYE ESt) 20 Kiclimen 11 Bay’ shove tS 3, Sten ar 313 18) Seviewel 5 Be a
21 Carley & Commack 87-349 Herman B Jamaica a eek weoe a9
Medical Officer os - BS-11t015 = WABO2 22 Bokins BB Peconic 872 {6 Polissno L NYC o12 8 j 4
Medical Radiology Technician 34 Stnmelder A Bay there ws ie aa He 0
Schmeider 3 4
(Diagnosis or Therapy) 6S-5,6 NY-0-25 25 Giansman B Commack 864 13 Meleer J Bkiyn 910 m4
(NYC & St) 26 Darcy L- shirley 86.0 43 Buckley -) Bayside O10 sg
"27 Price M_ Commack 86.0 45 Reich W Sea Clift 91.0 a
Medical Record Librarian GS-5 to 12 331 28 Patrick M_ Brentwood 85.1 46 Murphy T Pearl River 909 ‘
7 WAG Bere Sn 85 47 Duna EB Jamaica 90.8 3
Medical Technician GS-5 to 40 Perlich € Lindenburse $4.1 4g Caballero B NYC 90.5 J
(NYC &St) ost Broniecki D Hemapon Bays Bi 49 Wilton J Balyo 905 3
$2 Akscin ‘ 50 Stone M. Bhlyo . 2
Medical Technical Assistant \3 Decarlo L Wathmpen Beh S17 $y Eeasucle C klyn 90.3
355 54 MeMeckan M Westhampton 80.1 D Br 90:3 2
(Public Health Service) 636 $4 MeMechan 801 52 Deloughey . :
r Ermotovich ME Northport 9.9 $3 Fields LBs 90.2
Medical Technologists GS-5 to 11 NY9-02 1 Calcara A. Brentwood 393 35 Howard R Bx 90.2 Lt
(NY& NJ) 47 Felice F Patchogue 79.1 55 Rowe G Bayside 89.7 0 &
6S-2,3 WY-1-16 38 Barratien 7 Noethpaet 786 56 Dworkin L Cel Islip 89.7 203 R New Hyde Pk 80.9
Nursing Assistant f 39 Levy H Huntngen Ste 785 $7 Schuler G_Bklyn 89.5 204 McGittigan E Bklyn 909 &
(NYC RSL) fo Nonmenmacher € Cir Moriches 78:1 $8 Cusick TBs 994 205 Tait © NYG ne 8
7 si 7.7 BoA Karsavos
Orthotist, Prosthetist GS-6 tot Lit MS en th Td fesse Bes 52 207 Sawiaky M Seaford 40.6
Pharmacist GS-9 to 11 WAB08 43 Gerbino R Commack 764 61 Jacoby $§ Queens Vill 89.0 208 Schwager M Bx 80.6
Physician's Assistant GS-7 to 11 428 44 Barker B Huptngrn Sta 16 62 Honing A Bhiyn io 209 Gaines tog Holla ss fo
's Assis! 9 45 McGrath J Bobemia 75.4 63 Gattuso L Bkiyn ‘ (Kenna o .
6 Talbbi 1, Ronkonkoma 751 64 Dewion \D Avoria 47 211 Simmons T Jamaica 50.5
ane brea Penne 65-4 to 15 418 i Viicc) Mk "Honkomimm 244 3 Kener 4, Bkiyn We 212 O'Rourke W NYC sas
{8 Halpern D Huatingrn ys :
ets adm) ee si WAS-17 umareso 1 Cel Islip 67 Hassell A St Albans #85 214 Jedlowski. 2 Baiye, 903
ully BD Brightwaters 68 Kauget 1 Bx i le .
i i Mk ‘ E Bx 80.3
Therapist: sical, Occupational, Corrective 1 Koenig G F Northport 69 Lederer J Bx 88.5 216 Moyna
i $2 Smish Riverhead 70 Travers J Staten I 88.4 217 Zerrenner R Northport NY 80,3
Educational, Manual Arts GS6to9 WACO3 3) Plothn E keoge Pe Ge k tee 88.4 218 Isaacs $ Spring Val 80.2
Veterinarian Trainee 54 Campolang L Smithrown 72 Kessler R Massapequa 884 219 Giscalone M Glendale 80.2
35 Roach FE Smithtown 73 Diamonds V Bellmore B44 220 Fishkin D Commack 80.2
(Dept. of Agriculture GS-5 to7 WAG-OT 30 Trendor §. Smithtown 74 Coveney G NYC BRA 221 Grey M NYC 80.2
bia calla d pam mace teenies Dict gat Ha akc mmaet wa
EXAM 55304 77 Polik F foi mt 224 Pollack be rani bad
ee, TR Stephens W vn 225 Cardo: lye sf
79 Crowley D Long Beach 48.1 326 Tally z Woodakde ;
iitary C 80 Cemioni H Astoris 88.0 227 Reaves R Be
i ‘ormac 9.2 Bi Conetio D_ Bk 87-9 324 O'Doanell J Bx
Air Reserve Technician (Administrative, foros 1 NYC * wa 82 Walter R Ozone’ Pk 479 329 Clancy W Bx
sitions: GS-5to15 AT-OSSART § Dagostinn P Bhiyn jus 83 Villante T Rosedale 8T.9 350 Sherman H_ Queens Vill
lerical/Technical po: j Rompres F. Seroatid 75.) 84 Abeara W Nesconset 87.8 231 Gaines C Bklyn
Army Reserve Technician: 5 Dawn BD Bklyn qa) 3 eee Woodside 232 Gormley F Flushing
, : My br patirel ss Sakoutis J Richmond 233 Gilday G Seaford
Aircraft Pilot GS-12 NY-3-06 (NY & NJ) Armatrong Ro Bkiyn 02: | Se eae: nan ay Stary i jimi
: 4a Carney J Bronx 25 Staten Is
Flight Instructor = i SBI eomarnanek 49 Ruwell R Jackson Ho 236 Hone nL Sinan Ls
% # Lafaro © Glendale 237 Pugliares J Richmo
phaeeeSl ga cenay COURT ARSREANE Ut 91 Rihacek CE Seraukes 356 Patenlo EF Bhiya
‘Army Reserve Technician: Wistchiestrn co 92 Frangipane A. Bkiyn 259 Gels V Far Rockaway
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Sewer—Hand Machine 6S: 5 Brindley D- Pt Chester 111 Rotenberg D Bilyo 85.9 958 Goldstein 1 Howard Beach 78.2
6 Natoli M_ Yookers 112 Letties: R Seaten In 85.9 359 Erotnl H Be 182
7 Edeluein R Yonkers 113 Flypn O Bkiyn 2 260 Contessa J} Howard Beach 78.1
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Punch Operato 682.3 1 EXAM $9312 143 Zonta ® Queees Vii Mens : “pee
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on Page 15)

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, January 22, 1974

Elmira Water Board Cited ©

For Improper Practices

ELMIRA — The Chemung County chapter of the Civil Service Employees Assn. has
filed three improper practice charges with the State Public Employment Relations Board
charging the Elmira Water Board with breach of contract.

At the same time, CSEA has begun State Supreme Court proceedings connected

with one of the three improper
practice charges.

Richard E. Miller, Chemung
County CSEA chapter president,
delivered the notices of the im-
proper practice charges to Water
Board Manager Edward Consi-
dine and City Manager Joseph
E. Satori, The city was named
in the actions because it is the
water board's legal superior.

CSBA has asked PERB to force
Mr. Considine to adhere to
grievance procedures contained
in a signed contract with CSEA
covering 1973 and 1974.

Employees Fired

Two of the charges involve
employees who were fired, the
third case deals with an employee
who is not receiving a shift dif-
ferential. In all three cases C8-
EA states that Mr. Considine has
refused to hear grievances, grant
hearings to explain dismissals,
or attend Elmira Civil Service
Commission or Elmira Grievance
Board meetings dealing with the
charges.

Mr. Miller's charges accuse the

Plan Workshop

. , %
1

Water Board of previously “re-
fusing on three separate occas-
sions to honor grievance proce-
dure.”

In one case, Mr. Miller ex-
plained, Mr. Considine was or-
dered to reinstate an employee
fired in April, to grant him back
pay and write a letter of apology
for the dismissal. This was ac-
complished in August by order
of the Elmira Grievance Board
and the Elmira Civil Service
Commission.

‘The second case sought the re-
instatement of a second employee
fired from the Water Board in
April, who has not been rehired
although the Grievance Board
had ordered the Water Board to
do 90.

Not Exempt

Mr. Miller said, “The Water
Board is clearly in violation of
the contract and Mr. Considine
has been told that a number of
times. We don’t see how Elmira
can be exempt from the state
civil service laws, but apparent-

For SUNY Reps

SYRACUSE — State Uni-
versity chapter represen-
tatives will sponsor a ne-
gotiation Workshop at the
Hilton Inn, Syracuse, on Jan, 24,
and 25, 1974, according to Al-
bert Varacchi, chairman of the
Civil Service Employees Assn.’
State University committee

The sessions are being planned
with the cooperation of Cornell
University's School of Industrial
and Labor Relations, and are de-
signed to equip members of ne-
gotiating teams to function
more effectively in negotiating
local contracts. Resources con-
sultants from Cornell — will
offer guidance.

ly Mr, Considine thinks he is
exempt.

Tm all three cases local rul-
ings have been in favor of Ca-
EA and against the Water Board.
But according to CSEA the
Water Board still refuses to
acknowledge ‘that they have an
agreement to live by or even any
jaws to obey.” Mr. Miller explain-
ed that the Water Board does
not even acknowledge the fact
that the city, which created
the Board, has the right to di-
rect it in any way.

CSEA believes that the PERB
decisions will be in CSEA's favor
and that the State will enforce
its decisions as necessary,

(Continued from Page 1)
vants who work in our mental
hospitals are generally under-
paid, but they really put them-
selves out to do the job, Now
at. Creedmoor they are begin-
ning to feel demoralized because
of this.”

He said that the incidence of
crime at the Creedmoor grounds,
which cover 238 acres in Queens
Village and are freely open to
access by the public, is compar-
able to any similar institution
or complex.

Mr, Bendet, who was accom-
panied by Terry Dawson, pres-
ident of the CSEA Creedmoor
chapter, began the press confer-
ence with a statement, in which
he said, “I frave conducted my
own independent investigation
Nowhere do I find any evidence
incriminating state employees."

After pointing out that CSEA
has jong been asking for more
security guards at the institu-
tion, Mr. Bendet noted: “We
agree with the honorable sen-

Flaumenbaum Vs. Pugliese
As Nassau Picks Nominees

MINEOLA — The nomination committee of the Nassau chapter, Civil Service Em-
ployees Assn., has proposed 50 names for election to chapter offices in the spring.

The committee proposed chapter president Irving Flaumenbaum and Car! Pugliese,
president of the Health Department unit, for president.

For other chapter positions,
the committee proposed;

Ralph Natale and Kenneth
Cadieux for first vice-president;
Nick Abbatiello and Howard
Quann for second vice-president;
Beatrice Jeanson and Augie Lau-
ailotto for third vice-president;
Alex Boma and Edward Logan
for fourth vice-president, and

Oneida Pickets

(Continued from Page 1)
failed to negotiate in good faith,
“The County has not submitted
any documents to support its po-
sition,” he said,

A fact-finder, appointment
by the State Public Employment
Relations Board following the
declaration of impasse, prepared
® ten-page report with recom-
mendations for # settlement. This
report has been accepted by CS-

but

Tom Stapleton and Ruth Brav-
erman for fifth-vice president,

Also; Mary Calfapietra and
Esther Phillips for secretary;
Sam Piscitelli and Anthony Gian-
nett! for treasurer; Dave Silber-
man and Edward Ochenkoski
for financial secretary; Sally
Sartor and Molly Falk for cor-
responding secretary, and Dud-
ley Kinsley and Carmine Santoli
for sergeant-at~arma,

Mr, Abbatiello, Mr, Flaum-
enbaum and Mr. Natale were
nominated to run for two posts
of executive representative.

Named for delegate were: Mr.
Abbatiello, Mr, Bozza, Ms. Brav-
erman, Mr, Cadieux, Ms, Calf-
apietra, Kenneth Darby, Ms, Palk,
Mr, Flaumenbaum, Mr, Gian-
nett, Ms, Jeanson, Mr, Kin-
sley, Mr. Natale, Mr, Silber-
man, Ann Rehak, Blanche Reuth,
Mr, Stapleton and Rita Wallace.

For the board of directors,
representing the county, they

named Salvatore Abbey, Virginia
Baglin, James Callan, Tom Gar-
glulo, Frank Grif_in, ‘Thomas
Healey, Doris Kasner, Ms. Reuth,
Pauline Gzymanski and Ms. Wal-
lace.

For the Town of Hempstead,
they named: Bob Campbell, Win-
{fred Pranks and John Cozellino,
who declined and is to be re-
placed,

For the Town of Oyster Bay:
Pasquale Gialisio and Thelma
Powell

For the School Districts: Ruth
Grimmer.

Por combined areas:
Darby.

And for Glen Cove: Gertrude
Schwind,

Ms. Reuth headed the com-
mittee, which included:

Kenneth

\

PUBLIC SPIRITED — A check for $500 toward funding of »
center for handicapped persons is presented by Charles Peritore, left,
president of the CSEA chapter at Craig State School. Accepting the
chapter's contribtuion is Michael Roche, Livingston-Wyoming Voca-
tional Rehabilitation Project Coordinator. The sheltered workshop/
activities center for multi-handicapped persons Is to be established at
the Livingston County Campus in Mt. Morris.

Creedmoor Director Lauds Staff

ator that there has been and
is crime at Creedmoor State Hos-
pital. We resent his unsubstan-
tated charge that state employ-
ees are involved Where has
the Senator been all these years
when we requested adequate ap-
Propriatons from the Legisla-
ture?”

Both Mr. Bendet and Ms.
Dawson expressed apprehension
about the future, since the wave
of publicity has shown that
Creedmoor is very open to out-
siders and the employees feel
vulnerable.

Mr, Bendet said appeals will
continue to be pressed in the
Legislature for more funds for
security, and he hoped that Gov.
Malcolm Wilson might help,

Following Is the text of Mr.
Bendet's statements to the press,

“IT have been listening to the
comments and reading the com-
munications of the State Sen-
ator regarding intolerable crime
conditions at Creedmoor State
Hospital. As president of the Civil
Service Employees Assn. New
York City Region, which includes
Creedmoor, I have conducted
my own independent investi-
gation. Nowhere do I find any
evidence incriminating state em-
ployees.

“Unsubstantiated buckshot
charges will not cure anything.
For years, the Civil Service Em-
ployees Assn., which represents
the majority of employees at
Creedmoor State Hospital, has
been making public statements

A Reminder

that more security guards and
measures are required at the in-
stitution. The 300 acres of
grounds as well as the thou-
sands of inhabitants and em-
ployees cannot be adequately
guarded around the clock by ap-
proximately 23 security guards.
The City of New York Police do
not patrol the state grounds.
‘They come in when called.

“We agree with the honorable
Senator that there has been and
is crime at Creedmoor State Hos-
pital.

“We resent his unsubstantiated
charge that state employees are
involved. We, as well as the
Senator, desire to have crime eli-
minated. The situation becomes
more critical now since the crim-
inal element has learned from
the Senator's unsubstantiated,
well publicized statements that
the institution and its inhabi-
tants, as well as the employees,
are at their mercy.

“Where has the Senator been
all of these years when we re-
quested adequate appropriations

orable Senator that he reserve
‘his speeches for the floor of the

Maternity Leave Is Considered
Comparable To Disability Leave

ALBANY — The Civil Service Employees Assn, reminds
state employees that, as the result of an agreement negot!-
ated by CSEA with the state during last year’s contract
talks, maternity leave is now considered to be comparable

to disability leave under clivi ser-
vice rules,

Under the provisions of the
memorandum of understanding
between the State and CSEA, a
pregnant employee shall be al-
lowed to perform the duties of
her job as jong as her doctor
says she is medically able to

report her condition, she la not
Latest State And County Eligible Lists

(Continued from Page 13)
306 Tavbert H Woodside
307 Murray E Pearl River
308 Mescall J Hickwvitle
509 Fitzmaurice T Woodside

a

415 Bookglio S Bklyn
314 Needleman | Bklyn
S15 O'Reitly D Pearl River

Uibeeeceoo

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 $:30
a.m, to 5:30 p.m,

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

By subway, applicants can
reach the filing office via the
IND (Chambers St.); BMT (City
Hall); Lexington IRT (Brooklyn
Bridge). Por 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 tndivid-
ual schools; non-faculty jobs are
filled through the Personne] 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 their request.

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

Judicial Conference jobs are
filled at 270 Broadway, New
York, 10007, phone: 468-4141
Port Authority jobseekers should
contact their offices at 111
Eighth Ave, New York, phone
620-7000.

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

Federal entrants living upsta
(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
unless otherwise indicated.

INTERGOVERNMENTAL
The Intergovernmental Job In-
formation and Testing Center
supplies information on N.Y
City and State and Federal jobs.
Tt ta located at 90-04 st Bt,
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

US. Civil

S16 Sehlachter_$ NYC
317 Victory BE Syosset
318 Tomlinson Bo NYC
419 Brown C Bx
320 Gokibers M_ Bkiyn
521 Morena A. Eimon
$22 Jaeger D Cel Islip

34 — T Bkiyn

335 Sena NYC
336 Kelly D Bx
437 Pligsim 1

Bklyn
$38 Spadorto R_ Bkiyn
539 Carman B Bkiyn
340 Brandes E Jericho
441 Fitesimmons T Bkiyn
442 Barkan § Levittown
343 McDonnell J Woodside
444 Kerby J Val Stream
345 Digus O Mr Vernon
346 Digas O Bayside
M47 Added JN Merrick
Ma Geffocr D_ Elmhurst
$49 Fieegerald J Staren Is
350 Mandracchiy M Bkiyn
$1 Dix §
$32 Dalewlo A Be
353 Meltzer C Rego Pk
354 Johnwion R Camby
355 Sullivan J Flu
356 Homasino MB
H Jamaica
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339 Hawheld P slmont
360 Su
X61 Gi

1 Stein RK Bkiyn 99.9
2 Mirler §_ Flushing 99.0
§ Sadowski $ Bkiyn 98.9
4 Kesler A Bklya 96.6
5 Schwalb D New Hyde Pk 96.6
6 Motley $ Bx 26.0
> Fells L Bx 947
& Kober J Flushing 94:7
9 Rosenbergs A. Bkiyn 942

10 Hofman M Bkiya 93.7
LL Schwares $ Bklyn 93.6
12 Shulman F  Bellerove 93.2
1S Pappas 1. Bklyn 932
14 Kiein J Rego. Pk 9.1
15 Troyanos 1 Bx m1
16 Johmon J Bx 919
17 Lazarus R_Bklyw OLS

18 Langsam ¥ Bklyn 912
19 Bale D_ Bklyn 903
0) Finnell FE Bklyn 89.6
21 Barth L_ Flushing 49.7
2 Winters P Flushing 99.6
4 Bastone M Yookers 89.5
24 Curcio M_ Bkiyn 88,7

88.6
aa
a4
884
44.3

ALBANY
BRANCH OFFICE

FOR INFORMATION 4 ads
vertisement. Please write

week a. neil Faget
ausany

31 Gumenik § Par Rockaway
32 Schneider $ Li City

Hilt D Bhlyn

Friedman B Bs

Miller D Bkiyn

are
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Chibor HH Bkiyn

42 Taliento Ro cSacen ty a5.
43 Mucha R Balyn aS.
“ S Glend ne

Cohes

Simon § Bkiyn
48 Geier L NYC

49 Zambretli E Bklyn
40 Crerwinski F Wood

31 Moores WNYC

42 Meli J Bklya
53 Heokin $ Bkiyn

6 Nabut J Amoria

12

s ait

78 Goldsmith R_ Bkiyo 80.8
79 Alford K Bklyn 80.7

40 Coles Lo Bx
St Dunphy A Bx
2 Hershkowitr A Bx
43 Peser Bs
44 Silver HF
45 Pore V E
BG Berger 1 NYC
87 Sambuco L Bx
8H Engler M Staten fy
89 Gulino R NYC

96 Zimmerman 1 Bkiyn

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98 Abrano D Bklyn 79.9
99 Wetien A. Bkiyn 789
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101 Romanarzi A Bx 788
102 Summerteld G Bhlyn 787
103 Braham M Bkiyn 78.3
104 Ranauro J Staten ts 78S
105 Phillips B Yonkers 78S
106 Camaioni © Bklyn 78.4
107 Flis EB Bklyn 784
108 Mannarino A Bx 782
109 Murphy T Bx 782
HO Trice A Bkiyn 78.0
111 Cameron E Staten ts 777
112 Tierney A Ridgewood 177
113 Bowman V_ Bkiyn I
114 Partie A. Bklyn 777
115 Gitrens © Se Albans 78
116 Deodati M Staten Is 77S
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118 Giordano F Bayside 73
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12 Fauci P NYC

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MARCH

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Prep Course given by the

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CONTINUING EDUCATION DIVISION
of St. Francis College. Evenings and
Saturdays beginning week of January 27th,

Ee hone H For further intormasion, contact CSL bead
costs ond muddy Dean of CONTINUING EDUCATION
anata) | ST, FRANCIS COLL

DEPOSIT Vy 180 Keamen &., Bkiyn 11201 @ 212-522-2300
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2,1974

special Sanitation Exam

a
rags 7 EXAM $5313 ™
122 Barbagalio A NYC 2
125 Apicella D Floshiag 72 CLERK I, FAMILY COURT
124 Peterson ya Fi Or rae SSTATE (OF NEW YORK,
125 Wolf M nye 2h)
126 Lom E Jamaica Ss eam’ Bt patties
127 White BD  Bkiyn 2 Koster C Baldwin
128 George M Bx
129 Galizia EF Bklyn EXAM 45279
130 Daniel E Bx COURT ASSISTANT Il,
131 Babb L NYC ALBANY COUNTY
mr jaster
133 Sate sips oma
Leff meee Rep gg sa 4 Stillwell R Albany
135 Bermadex L Flushing Teese § Alseoy
pared Or mest ro
157 Sor o 55:
tied Row ES COURT ASSISTANT n,
140 Fabelo ada He mers %
141 Pekuly lyn ‘Albany :
142 Gilliam § NYC a roelt bs
143 Walsh T Elmburee EXAM 4521
144 MacLane E Yonkers couRT po tt,
146 Flohman: ot Bh bag oro geal 3
46 Fishman 4
147 Obes T Bklyn UE adit
148 McDevitt M Bkiyn EXAM 55318
149 Sperling J Bkiyn COURT CLERK I, NASSAU COUNTY,
150 Peterson U_ NYC COUNTY COURT
151 Travis FE Bklyn Ps
> ssi 1 Knapp W Merrick 86.8
133 Bader IC Jes 1 Geneon P Mampeqee Ph 86.7
en eee 4 Bianchi E Malverne 85.0
154 Fey 8 Balve 4 Wald J Val Scream 82.7
Al ma $ Bateman D Beach 25
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157 Woodard J Cambria Hes [eee LT ee ee
1 aaa 8 Draghi F Levittown 76.8
159 Adams D St Albans 5 whan MB bees 168
ee eee 10 Onseicher R Plainview 39 we
Morea C Elmhurst K Levi 7
Machowhl N Rowndale Senta Mau a 8
racy z
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yulee dyn
Barrert A Jackson Hts EXAM. 33318
Pollack M’ Bktyn
Palmer E Bx
Rogers L Bklya
Schmirs M_ Bkiyn
Wallace C Bx 5 Campbell 'W Mamapequa

1

For Information Only, Not for Appt. Put
55.295

2
3
4
5
6
7

EX,
COURT CLERK HI,

puacws

COURT CLERK I, DISTRICT COURT
NASSAU COUNTY.

Waddell B Bklyn
Piazza M Cambria Ho
Maneellino M Bx

% Sco C New Hyde Pk
$3 Hershman H Plainview
6 Butler H Hempocad

Moore M_ Bkiyn 7 Burkle E Syosset
Schwarce 8 Bkiyn § Fagan $ Garden Cio ai
Riner M Bx 9 Masino F Farmingdale 40.
Roherty L Staten Is 10 Lumia J Hempsead 89.
Marshak RK Bkiyo 11 Moser G_ Levittown 78.6
Mazurkiewicr H_ Bklyn 12 Shanoon F Lynbrook 76.0
Duis § NYC 13 Wilson C_Wantagh 76.0
Molnar N Bx 14 McGuire ‘T_E Rockaway 75.6
15 Damato J Bellmore 5.0
EXAM 55306 Grom H Hempstead 14.0
COURT ASSISTANT II, ‘Weinstein W Syosset 14.0
CIVIL, COURT, NYC 18 Shea P Garden City 73.6
Fitzpatrick L Bx 73.0
EXAM $5356
OFFICE OF PROBATION, NYC ASSOC SOC SERV PLANNING SPEC
McGarry FP Bx 76.3 ‘Tex Held Oct, 1973

EXAM 55297
ADMNSTRTR_ IL
SUFFOLK CO, DIST COURT
O'Rourke EF Kings Park TS

JUDICIAL CONFERENCE

SENIOR STENOGRAPHER,
NYC

Collins K Staren Is 89.0 9 Spreter _F Auburn
Feinstein $ Flushing $1.7 10 Cameron J Auben
Haddock M Springfeld Gds, 81.0 11 O'Dell V "\ouny
LaViscount Vo Bkiyn 79.0 12 Levemson 1 Bkiyn
Phillips M_ Bayside 78.1 1} Schreiber B Albany
‘Tanzet $ Bkiyn 713 14 Kaminsky J Albany
Loreto V Staten Is 71.0 15 Kleinman M Flushing

55313
COUNTY COURT,
NASSAU COUNTY
Sanford G Farmingdale

88.6 20 Brews

Stone J Lynbrook 875 21 Reilly | * Nee
Smith J Oceanside $4.8 22 Wellman B Gallupville
Miahauer G Freeport $1.0 23 Wallace C Staten Is
Mauceri W Wenbury 76.6 24 Robb J Guilderland
Walker G Hewlett 728 25 Robb J Albany

EXAM 55519

Formato ¥ Glen Cove

2 Dantsone 8 N Bellmore wo 3
4S Attanasio F Val Scream 80.5
4 Echcermeyer W Hempstead 75.0
T
Y
Pp
4 A
w o
R .
1 aL?
T MIMEOS ADORESSERS,
r STENOTYPES R
R STENOGRAPH for sale S
and rent. 1,000 others.
Low-Low Price |
ALL LANGUAGES t
TYPEWRITER CO., Inc.
119 W. 23 St. (W. of 6th Ave.) |
MY. MY, CHelsee 32-8086

2 Miller G Broax

6 Urling F Delmar
8 Margulies M_ Albany

Lin Est, Dec. 3, 1973
Revised

1 Carrera J Detmar
3 Hickey J Troy
4 Doring A Troy
$ Carrera L Delmar

7 O'Connor J Schenectady

George F Gleamoat
Koechley M Raven
Sherman J Orchard Pk
Johnson R Schenectady

Hallock A Hensacrois

1 Brown C White Plains

HIGH SCHOOL
EQUIVALENCY
DIPLOMA
$ WEEK COURSE $75 J

Prepare you (@ paw N.Y. Stue
EQUIVALENCY DIPLOMA

ferme ln claw or Home Siady.

Maner Charge accepted. FREE

BOOKLET "L.”
PL 7-0300 1
ROBERTS SCHOOLS

517 Went S7ch Stree
New York, N.¥, 10019

—— oe oe!

SCHOOL DIRECTORY

MONROE INSTITUTE —

SHY SL

11S EAST FORDHAM ROAD, BRONX — 955-6700
Approved (or Vets and Foreign Students, Acorad, N.Y. State Dept. of Education,
16

CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, January 22, 1974

High-powered political line-up of legislators gives thought to brainstorming
session with CSEA leaders in Genesee area, From left are Assemblyman
James Emery, legislative assistant Gary Mervis (representing Assemblyman
Don Cook), and Assemblyman Frank Carroll, Mr. Cook, Thomas Frey and

Raymond Lill

Other legislators at the meeting, besides Assemblymen Cook, Frey and
Lill, who are first three men at left of picture, are Gordon DeHond,
William Steinfeldt, James Hurley and Fred Warden. The legislators en-
gaged in frank exchange of opinion with CSEA delegates, often expressing
different viewpoints even among themselves.

ONFRONTATION: GENESEE STYLE

(Continued from Page 3)
the Albany plan in the Roches-
ter area because doctor and hos-
pital fees are much higher here,
said Carmen Farrugia, former
president of the Industry chap-
ter

“We must make up the differ-
ence, and it's a big difference,”
said Michael Alletto, of the Ro-
chester State Hospital chapter's
political action committee.

He said his son had knee
gery in Rochester, where
surgeon charged $250 and the
semi-private haspital room cost
$58 daily, Under the Albany plan,
Mr. Alletto received only $146
for the surgeon's fee and only
$46 daily for the hospital

T don't think it's legal for
them to pay @ rate from an area
where you don’t live,” Mr, Prey
said. "Maybe we can correct this

sur-
the

by 2 Blue Cross and Blue
hield to obey the law
Assemblyman Hurley confirm-

ed that legislat too, were

belng affected since the change-
over to the Albany plan, and
cited fis own experience after

& recent operation

Assemblyman Cook agreed that
the pres arrangement “hurts
us just as much," and he and
the other legislators agreed to
work for a change.

Under Civil Service Law, said
harles Peritore, president of the
Craig State Schoo} chapter, state
employees who are suspended
must be the job 90 days after

they return to work to be éligi-
ble for the death benefit
‘We should receive coverage

the day we return,” he said
Senator DeHond said ‘co

tions are on the way."
Melba Binn, president of the

Rochester Area Retirees chapter,

asked that the supplemental pen-
sion be available for all retirees,

Because “inflation is eating up
our pension,” she asked for a
permanent cost of living escala-
tor clause instead of one that
is dependent upon annual legis-
lative action
‘We also want the Taylor Law
amended so CSEA can represent
all retired employees,” she said.
She also asked that retirees’
health insurance credit paid by
unused sick leave be transferable
to the spouse or another depen-
dent.

Mr. Grossfield asked legislators
to consider a four-day week of
nine hours a day. “The state
would save fuel, and production
might even improve because
People are tired on the fifth day,”
he

CSEA representatives
recommended a Taylor Law
amendment to penalize public

ployers as well as employees

for a strike

manager or chief
exee is an employee just
like anyone else,” Mr. Pomidoro
said,

“You fine a mayor $1,000 and
next year the council raises his
pay by $1,000," said Assembly-
man Emery

Mr. Frey said binding arbitra-
tion might be the answer.

Mr, Grossfield said contracts
no longer can wait for “last-
minute approval by state leg-
islators.

I'd like to vote on the con-
tract by March 1, but it’s up to
you people how soon we receive
it," said Assemblyman Raymond
J, Lill (D-191st District)

“Once we get the contract, tt
doesn't take long to vote on it,
Assemblyman Cook said.

Se
State Senator Gordon DeHond, left, shares dinner table with Newark State School chap-

Other legislators attending the
meeting were Senator Frederick
L. Warder (R-52nd District), and
Assemblymen Thomas A. Hanna
(R-130th), William M. Stein-
feldt (R-134th) and Prank A.
Carroll (R-133rd)

Representatives came from the
Rochester, Monroe County, Ro-
chester State Hospital, Roches-
ter DOT, Genesee Valley Armory,
Newark State Hospital, Roches-
ter Retirees, Industry, Brockport
SUNY, Geneseo SUNY and Craig
State School chapters.

legislators’ consideration

ter president Edison O'Brien, center, and legislative aide Harry Taylor, who represented

Assemblyman Thomas Hanna

=

Craig State School chapter president Charies Peritore, who

also serves as a Mental Hygiene representative to CSEA’s
Board of Directors, reviews a key point, as Lorna McGuire,
chairman of the Craig State School chapter's political action

Rochester DOT chapter president Bud Saunders takes floor to contribute suggestions for

committee and Craig delegate Daniel Donovan listen.

Maternity Leave Is Considered
Comparable To Disability Leave

(Continued from Page 14)
vice rules,

Also as @ result of the change,
an employee may continue to use
any or all leave she has ac-
cumulated while on maternity
Jeave.

And, at her request, an em-
ployee may be granted a leave
of absence without pay from
three months to two years.

‘This agreement was negotiated
during the Administrative Ser-
vices Unit negotiating seasiona
ast year, but applies to state
employees in all four units repre-
sented by C&BA.

John Conoby, CSEA collective
negotiating specialist for tne Ad-
ministrative Unit, sald that the
maternity leave provisions were
being restated at this time be-
cause of several recent inquiries
on the subject received at CS-
BA Headquarters.

AGRESTA NAMED TRUSTEE
ALBANY — Governor Wilson
has appointed Edwin A, Agresta,
of Schenectady, as a trustee of
Schenectady Community College
for a term ending June 30, 1975.
Members serve without salary

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Resource Type:
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Date Uploaded:
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