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L EADER Political Action Meeting
America’s Largest Weekly for Public Employees
See Pages 14 & 16
Vol. XXXII, No. 21 Tuesday, January 18, 1972 Price 15 Cents
“CSEA CALLS IMPASSE
IN STATE BARGAINING
Willowbrook, Others To Bonetit
Governor Adds More
Funds For Mental
Hygiene Staffing
ALBANY — A relentless year-long campaign by the Civil Service Employees Assn. to
dramatize the brutal effects of f
gs and budget freezes on patients and empl
ees in
the State Mental Hygiene Department bore fruit last week when Gov. Nelson A, Rocke-
feller announced he had included an extra $20,000,000 in his proposed budget to allow for
additional staffing In State men-
tal institutions
‘The amount is Uttle more than
half of the funds cut from
Mental Hygiene in last year's
@ecimation of the Governor's
budget by the Legislature. While
the money will not allow full-
gale rehiring in all institutions,
it will permit positions to be
filled as they fall vacant from
now on. In addition, special at-
tention will be paid to staffing
at Willowbrook State Hospital,
Letchworth Village and other
units, which means that more
attendants and other personnel
Will be hired tn so-called “crisis”
situations despite the general
freeze on hiring
Responsibility for allocating
the additional funds falls on Dr.
Alan Miller, Department Com-
lon
Repeat This!
The Student Vote—
‘Where’ May Be As
Significant As ‘How’
A law case, back for the
second time in the
State Supreme Court tn Suf-
folk County, may have a
more decisive impact upon the
November election returns in the
State than all of the leaflets,
bumper stickers, and campaign
oratory, That case, known as
Palla ¥. Suffolk County Board
f Elections, involves 64 stu-
__ sCentinued om Fase ©)
The CSEA campaign to call
public attention to the overbur-
dened staff in State institutions,
and the accompanying drop in
the quality of patient care, began
immediately after the State
closed down some hospitals and
reduced the work force In others,
mainly by not filling positions as
they fell vacant.
Some Risked Jobs
During this period,
many
CSEA members, working
institutions, risked their jobs by
carrying details of the plight of
patients to the press and other
media. The Leader covered in
depth the detertoration of work-
ing and patient conditions In in-
stitutions ranging from Long Is-
In these
land to Buffalo. As rece as
last Friday, Mental Hygiene
chapter presidents in the CSEA
(Continued on Page 14)
~ INSIDE THE LEADER
Thruway Units Prepare To Negotiate—See Page 3
Central Conference Welcomes Mobile HQ—See Page 3
Representation Election in Valley Stream—See Page 14
Latest State Eligible Lists—Scee Page 14
Ballots Mailed To Members
Accord Reached In Nassau
MINEOLA—After the longest and hardest negotiations In Nassau County history, the
Nassau chapter of the Civil Service Employees Assn. last week came up with a package
that provides a salary increase plus 24 new benefits for employees.
The one-year agreement, accepted unanimously by the 15-member negotiating com-
mittee, was being submitted to
® mali ballot among members
of CSEA, it was announced by
chapter president Irving Flaum-
enbaum, The settlement has al-
ready been approved by the 60-
member steering committee,
‘The agreement was topped by
a flat five percent pay increase,
with a minimum of $350.
‘This was in addition to grad-
ed-salary-plan increments aver-
aging five percent. About 70 per-
cent of the County's more than
13,000 workers are eligible for
increments this year,
A sirugle during 30 weeks of
negotiations over the County's
proposal to eliminate the graded
salary plan had triggered three
walkouts by the CSEA negotlat-
ing team.
Flaumenbaum sald that the 24
new benefits gained included
items of concern to the entire
range of County employees.
“This is," he stated, “a result of
the broad spectrum of interests
represented on the negotiating
committee”
Other major pointe included
© Starting salary upped wo
Walks Out on Talks
After State Fails
To Make Wage Offer
ALBANY — For the first time tn its negotiations with a
State Administration under the Taylor Law, the 200,000-
member Civil Service Employees Assn,, representing most
State employees, has declared an impasse.
Meeting late last week with State representatives, CSEA
Officiais called off bargaining talks after the State refused
to make an offer in response to CSEA's demand for a pay
raise for 140,000 State employees in four bargaining units
represented by the State's largest public employee union.
No Firings Called For In New Budget
The union has been negotiating with the State since
last fall. Their action occurred before the Governor had sub-
mitted his new budget proposals to the Legislature early
this week. Although his fiscal program did not call for any
further reduction in the State work force, It also did not
include any funds for a salary increase or any other ben-
efits. In addition, the Governor called attention to the fact
that the job freeze was still on, with certain exceptions
in Mental Hygiene and one or two other agencies, and said
that savings through job attrition would continue.
CSEA president Theodore C. Wenzl, said: “It’s obvious
to us that the State no intention of making any offer
at this time, thus it is futile for us to continue any dis-
cussions under these circumstances.”
Wenzl said the Administration “is using the current
fiscal situation as an excuse not to bargain. State employees
should not be deprived of a decent contract, particularly of
the raises and other benefits recently accorded Federal
workers and public employees in jurisdictions such as New
York City, which is faced with similar fiscal problems.”
Wenz noted that substantial pay increases have been won
by clerical workers, hospital aides, transit employees, fire-
(Continued on Page 14)
® Mileage allowance upped to
12 cents.
© Extra vacation day after 10
years,
® Conversion of accumulated
sick leave upon retirement upped
to 25 percent.
® Death benefit of $10,000 for
on-the-job accident in addition
to other benefits.
©@ Across-the-board revision of
nurses’ salaries to bring seales in
line with public and private pay
rates in the area.
® Seniority to be a major con-
(Continued on Page 16)
IRVING FLAUMENBAUM
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, January 18, 1972
C.S.E.& R.A.
WINTER AND SPRING PROGRAM
from Civil Service Education
And Recreation Association
FOR YOU AMD MEMBERS OF YOUR FAMILY
ST. LUCIA (British West Indies) 8 Days/7 Nights
RUN teeny. Feb. 18, returning Feb, 25. WASHINGTON BIRTHDAY
JDAY.
K-3080 Leaving March 31, seal: = 7. EASTER at the luxurious
HALCYON DAYS HOTEL a is
Taxes
LONDON 6 Days/6 Nights
KMA10 Leaving March 15, returning March 22 . . . at the first lass
Sherlock Holmes Hotel — — mat
ign ony $148
%-3055 March 30-April 8 at first class Sherlock Holmes waar” - 5289
ingle $ 44
Flight Only $155
Price includes Jet Transportation, Breakfast, Sightseeing
US VEGAS 4 Days/3 Nights
43620 Leaving Feb. 17, returning Feb. 20. WASHINGTON BIRTHDAY at
the luxurious INTERNATIONAL HOTEL $ise
Texts & Gratuities $12.50
Single $35
Price includes Jet Transportation, Dinner, Shows & Cocktails
NASSAU-BAHAMAS 3 and 4 Nights
K-3082 Leaving Feb. 11, returning Feb. 14. LINCOLN BIRTHDAY $142
K-3406 Leaving Feb. 14, returning Feb. 18. LINCOLN BIRTHDAY $142
3083. Leaving Feb. 21, returning Feb, 25, WASHINGTON BIRTHDAY __ $142
‘Above 3 leave from New in
$155
Same dates, from Syracuse
K-3407 Leaving March 20, returning March 24 (from Buffalo) ..
$14 TAX APPLICABLE TO ALL NASSAU TOURS
VENICE, FLORENCE and ROME 10 days/9 Nights
-3066 March 30-April 9. First Class Hotels.
VENICE — 3 nights at HOTEL LONDRES .
» FLORENCE — 3 nights
at HOTEL ESSO . .
ROME — 3 nights et HOTEL PRESIDENT .. $449
Single Supplement $ 54
Flight Only $188
Price includes Jet Transportation, Breakfast, Dinner, Sightseeing,
COLC “SIA 10 Days,9 Nights
K-325. Leaving March 31, returning April 9. BOGOTA — 4 nights at the
fabulous TEQUENDAMA INTERCONTINENTAL CARTAGENA — §
nights at the luxurious beach HOTEL DEL CARIBE $328
Taxes & Gratuities § 10
Price includes Jet Transportation, Breakfast, Sightseeing.
COSTA DEL SOL (Torremolinos /Tangier) 10 Days/9 Nights
K-2156,C Match 30-April 9. Via Jet Airliner — Deluxe Hotels .
TORREMOLINOS 7 nights MELIA TORREMOLINOS . TANGIER
2 nights RIF HOTEL $384
Price includes Jet Transportation, Breakfast, Dinner, Sightseeing
LAS PALMAS—GRAN CANARIA 9 Days/8 Nights
K-3155 March 30-April 8, Jet Airliner, First Class HOTEL DON JUAN $315
Taxes & Gratuities § 10
Price includes Jet Transportation, Breakfast, Dinner, Sightseeing.
GREECE 9 Days/8 Nights
K-3001 March 31-Aprit 8
Tour A — 4 days in Athens, 5 days Cruise to Greek Islands. From $439
Tour B — 6 days in Athens, 3 day Classical Tour to Corinth, a]
Epidaurus and Olympia
Tour C — 5 days in Athens, 4 days in Rhodes
Tour D — 5 days in Athens, 4 days in Istanbul
Price includes Jet Transportation, Breakfast and some meals,
Sightseeing and Cruise on Tour A.
ARSEA CRUISES 8 Days/7 Nights
Sailing from GUADELOUPE Jan, 22 and Feb, 22, SS DALMATIA. From $338
Sailing trom CURACAO Feb. 19, March 11, March 25, SS REGINA. From $316
Price includes Jet Transportation to port of embarkation, minimum rate
cabins. For ports of call and other details, ask for special brochure
EXTENSIVE DECORATION DAY PROGRAMS
London . . . Lisbon... Bermuda Paris
TOUR CHAIRMEN
K3620 and KISS: BLORAS FUSSFL, 111 Wi rep Ave.
Aibaaye NV. i208 Wek Gaia) 482537 Taller. 6
K-}000 aed R341; MRS. JULIA DUFFY, TO, Box 43, eum
Li, NY, Fel. ow Ses Vite & WSi jee Wee Dereot
K-3407; Buffalo MRS. MARY GORMLEY, yeas, Seneca
Beale NY. 14310, Tele Cie) TA 2:6009" Calter OP
K.3055: MR. IRVING FLAUMENBAUM, 25 Buchanan Street, Freeport,
Ne a eI: ee oy
K-3406: MISS NONI KEPNER, Box 275, West Sandiake, N.Y, 12196,
Tel, (518) 674-5539.
K-08): MRS MARY McCARTHY, 104 Farmingiow Drive, Camiltun
HY 13031. Tel (313) 487-1688 (alee PMCS
MR. VERACCHI. BR. 1, Box 134 Locum Drive Rocky
"Fai BE th, EA, Bite se tees RST.
3410, K-3082, K.5251, KS156, K-3001; MR. SAM EMMET, 1501
war, Suite 711, New York, N:¥, 10036. Vel (212) 86b-3700,
Alt CRUISES: MISE EMILY RIORDAN, 1501 Broadway, Sue 711, New
York, N.Y, 10036. Tei, (212) 868-2959,
Per Detailed Information and Brochure Write Te:
CSE&RA, BOX 772, TIMES SQUARE STATION
NEW YORK, N.Y, 10036
Amsterdam... Iceland
Slate February
Clock Repairer
Filing Period
The time for filing for
clock repairer has been
scheduled Feb, 3-23. A ten-
tative practical date of
March 3 is now planned.
Applicants are asked to have
five years of paid experience.
This must Include doing repair
work on both mechanical and
electrical clocks. The practical—
weighing 100—will be a demon-
stration of candidates’ skills in
adjusting time clocks, program
clocks and related electrical
equipment.
A physical test is pending, too.
This will consist of raising
dumbbells from shoulder posi-
ton to arm's length; then,
broadjumping a distance of
three feet from a standing po-
sition. Medical examination pre-
cedes the physical.
For a description of duties, ob-
tain Announcement No. 1146.
during the stated filing period.
Specifics on where to apply ap-
pear on Page 4 of The Leader.
Pollution Control
Engin. Jobs Placed
In Open-Cont. Status
Continuous filing has been
established for the title of
junior air pollution control
engineer, at $10,500.
Applications are accepted
‘Thursday mornings at Room M-
9, 40 Worth St., Manhattan.
Two possible options exist for
qualifying. A bachelor’s in air
pollution control, chemical, mec-
hanical or automotive engineer-
ing or a related field will be
adequate, as will possession of a
professional engineer's license.
‘The written test will be walved
for those holding professional
licenses. Those taking the exam
can anticipate questions on air
pollution control, math, physics,
combustion and related areas.
The bulletin, Announcement No.
1061, gives details.
Job responsibilities are also
spelled out in the announce-
ment specified above.
Took Oral Exam
Six candidates were recorded
taking the promotional for senior
Project coordinator, given at 56
‘Thomas St., Manhattan, The for-
mat was oral.
ANTIQUES
SHOW
By Raymond Gimmler
The
Fire
Officer
President,
Uniformed Fire
Officers Assn.
THE UNITED States Department of Labor has entered
into an historic agreement with the International Associa-
tion of Firefighters, which will help in the training and re-
cruitment of minority groups for Fire Departments in cities
across the Nation.
OUR ONLY regret ts that New York City ts not one of
the 14 municipalities chosen to begin the $425,000 program,
AT THE CONTRACT signing ceremony held at the
Labor Department last November, IAFF President William
Howard McClennan said:
We feel that this project will go a long way toward
increasing minority representation in the fire service.
At the same time, this project will help to maintain
vitally needed professional standards In the fire service
and to continue to provide first class fire protection to
our urban areas.
UNDER THE program, firefighter recruiters and in-
structors, serving under the direction of a full-time Project
Administrator, will prepare applicants for civil service exams,
oral interviews and physical exams, which make up the
firefighter selection process.
THIS IS the sensible, safe way to achieve greater minor-
ity group participation in the Fire Department. The New
York City Fire Department has had a long history of suc-
cessful integration In the work force, basically because
every man was truly equal to the task, and we worked as
a close-knit team.
BUT THE UFOA Is dead set against these schemes put
forth by the Lindsay Administration to achieve greater min-
ority participation by lowering standards. That isn't good
for the Fire Department. It isn’t good for the minority group
members being brought in, And It tsn’t good for the people
of the City.
THE MAYOR, the Fire Commissioner, and the City Hall
aides who have so much to say about the operation of the
Fire Department should examine carefully this new
IAFF-Labor Department program in cities like Washing-
ton, Los Angeles, Buffalo, Chicago, Cleveland and Jackson-
ville, Fla.
NEW YORK CITY needs this program, and !t ts a shame
that it was not Included tn the first year of operation. The
Lindsay Administration should be pushing hard In Wash-
ington to expand the program to include our own City, and
at the same time working to improve it even more.
ONE SUGGESTION would be to place heavy emphasis
on recruitment and training of returning Viet Nam veterans,
Statistics show that more than half of this City’s veterans
live in disadvantaged neighborhoods, and one in four is
unemployed.
STEPS COULD be taken by the Federal Government,
in cooperation with the City, to improve the prospects for
veterans who want to apply for the Fire Department. One
such step would be to permit special examinations for en-
trance to the Department on military bases, under super-
vision. Another would be special military examinations for
discharged vets. We have these special military examina-
tions right now for promotions. Why not for entrance too?
As the law stands, the next test for firefighter in this City
will be 1975. Is that fair to a young man who has given sev-
eral years of his life to his country in hazardous service?
IF MAYOR LINDSAY ts sincere tn his pledge to listen to
the forgotten voices of America, he can begin here in our
home City, where the Viet Nam veteran is being shamefully
neglected. Only 19 percent of these young men are pres-
ently taking advantage of G.I. bill educational opportunities,
mostly because $175 a month can’t pay for the cost of a
college education, That's basically a failure of our Federal
Government, I know, but there are a great many things the
Chief Executive of New York City can do to improve the
opportunities for veterans to join the Fire Department,
IT 18 NOT being done, It should be done,
Puen nn et Amt ep ne ee
, Two Thruway Units
" Prepare To Negotiate
ALBANY — Negotiators for
maintenance, toll and cleri-
eal employees of the Thru-
way Authority, who are rep-
resented in bargaining unit I by
the Civil Service Employees
Assn., will meet with Authority
Tepresentatives in Albany on
Jan. 19 to set ground rules for
negotiations and submit demands
for a CSEA-Thruway contract.
Several pre-negotiating ses-
sions were held in the capital
city in December, CSEA collec-
tive negotiating specialist John
J. Naughter, Jr., told The Leader,
Members of the pre-negotiat-
ing committee, with alternates
for negotiations, are:
Buffalo Division chapter—Al-
bert Sibilio, committee vice-
chairman; Ed Kiedrowski and
Louls Taylor (alternate);
Headquarters Division chapter
—Jean Gray, Helen LaPierre
and Jim Coleman (alternate) ;
Albany Division chapter—Vito
Dandreano, committee chatr-
man; Paul Frances, Vincent
Policano and Benny Benequista
(alternate);
New York Division chapter—
Jerry Scapperorl, Ed Bartuslak
and Jerr’ Squillin! (alternate);
Syracuse Division chapter—
Patsy Venditt!; Richard Badger
and Jerry Puller (alternate).
6 New Officers
Head Plainview
CSEA Chapter
MINEOLA—A new slate headed
by Robert Short has taken of-
flee to serve the Plainview Divi-
sion of Nassau County Medical
Center unit of the Nassau chap-
ter, Civil Service Employees Assn.
The new unit president will
be assisted by Doris Scherer,
vice-president; Gertrude Frutz,
treasurer; Margaret Vessalico,
recording secretary; Marie
Brady, corresponding secretary,
and Thomas Fitapatrick, ser-
geant-at-arms. Gradon Knott,
who served for many years, re-
tdred from office,
Syracuse Chap. Sets
Dinner Dance Feb. 12
In conjunction with the 26th
anniversary of the Central Con-
ference of the Civil Service Em-
ployees Assn., the Syracuse chap-
ter of the CSEA will hold its
annual dinner dance on Feb. 12.
This 35th annual event will be
held at the Sheraton Syracuse
Motor Inn in Liverpool, and is
scheduled to begin at 6:30 p.m.
LORETTA
ROCHESTER — Loretta
Farrugia, wife of Carmen
Farrugia, president of the
Civil Service Employees
Assn. chapter of the Btate Agri-
cultural and Industral School at
Industry, died Deo, 13, 1971,
Mrs. Farrugia, who was 61,
suffered a heart attack while
working in one of the school's
cottages, where she was a house-
mother
Bhe and her husband had plan-
ned to retire to the home they
own in Retsof, N.Y., this year,
Mrs. Farrugia, who was &
CSA member for her entire 43
Unit Il
ALBANY—Professional, su-
pervisory and technical em-
ployees of the New York
State Thruway Authority
(Unit ID have submitted their
contract demands to Authority
officials, according to the Civil
Service Employees Assn, bar-
gaining representative for the
more than 300 workers,
Highlights of the CSEA de-
mands are:
A 16 percent across-the-board
salary ralse; compressed salary
schedule; longevity increments
every five years based on years
of service with the Thruway; ex-
tension of minimum salary in-
creases;
Also, negotiations for specific
situations regarding salary m:
ters, 20-year, one-half pay re-
tirement at 1/40th, computed on
highest single year's salary; no
minimum age or service require-
ment for retirement; cost-free
retirement credit for employees
who served in World War II,
Korean Conflict, Berlin Crisis or
Vietnam Condlict;
Also, full loan privileges from
the annuity savings reserve; ex-
tension of all temporary bene-
fits; privilege of changing retire-
ment option after retirement;
fully noncontributory health in-
surance; greatly improved dental
plan; dental insurance for re-
tirees;
Also, increases in maternity
benefits; increases in Major
Medical coverage; Welfare Fund
of $500 per year per employee;
three additional holidays per
year—Good Friday, the day after
‘Thanksgiving, and the employ-
ee’s birthday or his anniversary
date with the Authority; in-
crease in vacation to 24 days
adter five years, instead of 20
days after seven years;
Also, % elck day credit earn-
ed for every bi-weekly pay pert-
od; accumulation of sick leave to
200 days; cash for unused sick
leave at time of separation, re-
tirement or death; increase to
eight personal leave days; cash
for unused personal leave at sep-
aration; improvements in work
day, work week and overtime,
CSEA collective negotiating
specialist Paul T. Bureh, who
will assist the Thruway Unit It
negotiating team, sald other de-
mands cover employee rights,
discipline, grievance procedures
and other matters,
Members of the negotiating
team are: Frank Lewis, presl-
dent of the Unit I chapter; Art
Sampsen, John Sepello, Karl
Bennett, Gerald Watson and
Lambert Duffy,
FARRUGIA
years of State service, was usu-
ally at her husband's slide at
chapter and Western Conference
meetings,
She was born tn Groveland,
N.Y., and was graduated from
Groveland High School. She
worked as a Moensed practical
nurse for 27 years at Craig Col-
ony School and Hospital in Son-
yea before golng to work mt
Industry, which she served for
16 years.
Surviving with her husband are
& son, James, m home, and «
daughter, Mrs. Judy Ann Mink
of Coral Cables, Fla
COUNTY V.P. — arthur
Bolton, Sullivan County chapter
representative on the statewide
Board of Directors of the Civil
Service Employees Assn., has
been named vice-chairman of
the Board's County executive
committee. Bolton is a senior
case worker with the Sullivan
County Department of Social
Services, He replaces Robert
Young of Erie County, who is
Joining CSEA's field staff.
Federal Funds Reinstate
Laid-Off Employees Of
Binghamton State Hosp.
(From Leader Correspondent)
BINGHAMTON — The president of the Binghamton
State Hospital chapter of the Civil Service Employees Assn.,
Leo Weingartner, says that the implementation of a Federal
program designed to reduce
“impacted” area has resulted in
the hiring of at least 14 of the
24 persons laid off during State-
wide job cuts last June.
Binghamton has been desig-
nated eligible to participate in
the Emergency Employment pro-
gram created by Congress re-
cently to ald communities with
an unemployment rate of six
percent or more.
Under the program, the 14
persons rehired, all psychiatric
aldes, are being paid by the Fed-
eral Government,
Weingartner sald there are in-
dications that others who were
furloughed, except those In sup-
porting departments such as the
dining hall, etc., will be rehired
from a preferred list as ¢unding
Buffalo SUNY Chapter To Host
BUFFALO — Dr. Charles
HV. Ebert will be the prin-
cipal dinner speaker at the
Western Conference of the Civil
Service Employees Assn. Jan. 21-
22 at the Regency Motel in Ham~-
burg, 8 Buffalo suburb.
Dr. Ebert, dean of undergrad-
uate studies at the State Uni-
versity of Buffalo, will speak on
the misconceptions and facts
surrounding UB's planned cam-
pus in Amherst.
A geologist interested particu-
larly in volcanic lava studies,
Dr. Ebert has undertaken nu-
merous expeditions to far points
of the globe, including Russia
and the lost Inca city in Peru
More than 100 representatives
of various chapters in the West-
ern Conference are expected to
take part in the two-day meet-
ing in the motel on Milestrip
Rd, off New York State Thru-
way Exit 56.
The SUNY at Buffalo chapter
of the CSEA ts hosting the meet-
ing. Edward G. Dudek 1s chapter
president and June W, Boyle and
Dorothy Haney are co-hostesses.
‘The actual Western Conference
meeting will be at 1:30 p.m.,
Jan, 22, following s luncheon
break. A County Workshop is
scheduled that morning at 10.
Education Program
For Jan, 21, Margaret Anas-
tasia, chairman of the Confer-
ence's education committee, has
On Statewide Tour
unemployment in a so-called
becomes available.
Weingartner sald the hiring
began some two months ago with
seven of those rehired being re-
tained within the past two weeks.
Commenting on the develop-
ment, Weingartner sald, “I feel
good that these people are get-
ting their jobs back, not only
for them but for those of us
here who are forced to assume
an increased burden of patient
care when these people were
originally let go.”
Weingartner added, “Anytime
you can get people back on the
job to help where help ts badly
needed and off the public as-
sistance rolls, it's a victory for
everybody.”
Western Conf.
lined up a three-pronged pro-
gram to educate chapter mom~-
bers on various subjects.
From 7:30-8:15 p.m., Thomas
B. Christy, CSEA field represen-
tative in the Buffalo area, will
conduct a discussion on griev-
ance and arbitration procedures.
From 8:15-9 p.m., Ernest Wag-
ner, CSEA Capital District presi-
dent, will speak on the State's
employees retirement system.
Rounding out the program at
9 p.m, will be a panel discussion
on employee benefits with Wil-
liam Parry of Blue Cross-Blue
Shield; Erhard Krause, Buffalo
area representative for Group
Health Insurance, and George
Burch of the New York State
Workmen's Compensation Board.
Mobile HQ Rolls To Binghamton
(From Leader Correspondent)
BINGHAMTON — Leaders
of the Binghamton State
Hospital and Binghamton
chapters of the Civil Service
Employees Assn, have hailed as
highly successful the visit to
Binghamton last week of the
CSEA’s mobile headquarters
unit,
Unit manager Kirby Hannan
and his partner John Trela took
up thelr position in a special
area in front of the Bingham-
ton Regional Office's head-
quarters at the Security Mu-
tual Building in Binghamton
last week as Binghamton chap-
ter president Stan Yaney, and
field representatives Theodore
Modrzjewski and Rick Sroka
stood by as an informal wel-
coming committee.
The unit, which has been on
the road since July of last year,
remained at the downtown Bing-
hamton site for a day, then
moved to & one-day stay at the
Binghamton State Hospital.
Unit representatives Trela and
Hannan joined Modrajewski
and Sroka in answering ques-
dons for CSEA members and
visitors at both sites dealing
with virtually every aspect of
CSEA mobile unit manager Kirby Henan is welcomed by
Binghamton chapter president Stanley Yaney and field reps
Ted Modrzjewski and Rick Sroka on arrival in Binghamton,
public employment, Trela sald
this function was one of the
most important tasks carried out
by the unit,
Hannan sald the questions
ranged from inguiries on insur-
ance, retirement and other prob-
lems, to directions to the proper
source of reference where the
answer to ® problem might be
found. The unit, he added, tre
(Continued on Page 14)
ZL6U ‘RT Saenuep Mepsony, YaCVAT ADIAUAS TAT)
are: Joseph D, Lochner, OSEA executive director;
THE PEOPLE OF NEW YORK WHO NEVER FINISHED
HIGH SCHOOL
are Invited to write for Free Brochure. You can really earn
your Diplome as fast as you can do the work—all books
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, January 18, 1972
urnished. Approved for Veterans Training,
AT HOME IN SPARE TIME
AMERICAN SCHOOL, Dept. 2AP-06
Offi
(516) 483-1984
AGt
“ROMAN POLANSK?'S
"MACBETH IS MIND
SHATTERINGLY
EXCITING!”
“Yetoiek!A BEAUTIFUL
WE STORY"
“AN HONESTY AND
INTELLIGENCE RARE TO
THE SCREEN!"
os IO)
Serres
CSEA INSURANCE COMMITTEE — Meeting recently at Civil Service Employees
Assn. Headquarters in Albany to discuss recent changes and additions to CSEA Insurance plans are
members of the CSEA Statewide Insurance Committee and CSEA staff members. From left to right
Dr. John Gardiner;
Michael Del Vecchio, chairman; Edward Sorensen, and John M. Carey, CSEA assoc. program specialist,
Marian Wakin; Carl Behr;
Architect Jobs
Come Into View
To land a position as a
landscape architect, you
must have a bachelor’s de-
gree in this branch of archi-
tecture. Possession of State reg-
istration as an architect will also
be considered okay,
Supervisory experience is an
added plus. Credited, too, will be
graduate work leading to a mas-
ter's.
Salarywise, junior architects
start at $10,100; the assistant’s
title offers $12,100. Those who
have State registration may vie
for the full title, which provides
$14,100 upon entry
No written test is conducted,
but a rapid referral evaluation
fs set every Thursday, starting
9 am
The place to apply ts 40 Worth
St. Manhattan. Go immediately
to Room M-9. No preapplications
are needed, but evidence of li-
cense or registration may be re-
quired.
Court Officers
Seize Suspect
For Homicide
Two Local 832 uniformed
court officers became heroes
last week when they appre-
hended a man leaving a
Queens parking lot where a lab-
or leader had just been shot
to death.
The shooting, outside of the
vietim's office, occurred in 148th
St. in Jamaica.
Although several shots were
fired, Edward Victory, a Supreme
Court officer on his way to work
in the Supreme Court Building
& block away, drew his gun and
ordered the alleged assailant who
was running toward him, gun in
hand, to drop his weapon, As
the gun was dropped, Bernard
Weisfeld, promoted to the Su-
preme Court from the Criminal
Court only a few days previously,
ran into the ¢ray and aided
Victory in subduing the suspect.
William McDonnell, president
of the Uniformed Court Officers
Union, s Local 8% affiliate,
praised the men as the type that
“were typical of all court of-
ficers” and again called for po-
ice status for all uniformed
court officers.
In speaking of the arrest, Mc-
Donnell sald that the men act-
ed in the true spirit of peace
officers and the Mayor could do
no less than “personally reward
these brave court officers in a
fitting City Hall ceremony." Mc-
Donnell sald that the suspect
was booked for homocide, illegal
possession of a pistol with the
serial number filed off, and at-
tempted murder of a second per-
son.
McDonnell also said that spe-
cial praise should be given to
Chief Court Officer Al Wlichins,
who personally went to the pre-
cinct station house to make sure
that “his boys" were credited
with the arrest.
Suffolk Seeks More Therapist Personnel
Physical therapist posts exist in
Suffolk at the biweekly starting
wage of $353. Moreover, no writ-
ten test will be required.
Evaluation of entranta rests
on having # bachelor's degree in
physical therapy or a high school
diploma plus graduation from an
approved school in this field
Local residence won't be required
but State Ucensure to practice is
& must,
For further details, get the
relevant bulletin ¢rom the Suf-
folk Civil Service Dept., County
Center, Riverhead, LI. 11901
Continuous exams have been set.
On, [if you want to know what's happening
International
Camper
& Trailer Show
Jan. 22 thru Jan. 30
DAILY 12 NOON -10 P.M. -
ADMISSION - $2.50
madison square garden center
exposition rotunda
Pennsylvania Plaza, Th Ave. 211 10 337d Ste,
SUNDAY 1 P.M.-7 P.M.
to you
to your job
the job you want.
scription now.
Make sure you don’t miss « single issue, Enter your sub-
‘The price 1s $7.00, That brings you 52 issues of the Civil
Service Leader, filled with the government job news you went
You can subscribe on the coupon below:
| to your chances of promotion
to your next ralse
and similar matters!
FOLLOW THE LEADER REGULARLY!
Here ts the newspaper that tells you about what Is happen-
ing in civil service, what ls happening to the job you haye and
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER
a Street
New York 10007
T enclose $7.00 (eheck or money order for a year's subscription
to the Civil Service Leader, Please enter the name listed below
‘Zip Code
—
Where to Apply
For Public Jobs
‘The following directions tell
where to apply for public jobs
and how to reach destinations In
New York City on the transit
system,
NEW YORK CITY—The Ap-
Plication Section of the New
York City Department of Per-
sonnel is located at 49 Thomas
8t., New York, N.Y. 10013. It is
three blocks north of City Hall,
one block west of Broadway.
Applications: Piling Period —
Applications issued and received
Monday through Friday from 9
a.m. to 5 p.m., except Thursday
from 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Sat-
urday hours have been sus-
pended.
Application blanks are obtain-
able free either by the applicant
in person or by his representa-
tive at the Department of Per-
sonnel. Telephone 566-8700,
Matlled requests for application
blanka must include a stamped,
self-addressed business-size en-
velope and must be received: by
the Personnel Department at
least five days before the closing
date for the [lling of applica-
tions.
The Personnel Dept. Applica-
tion Section on Thomas St. is
two blocks north of Chambers St.
Those lines having Chambers 8t.
stations are Tih Ave. IRT and
8th Ave. IND. The closest Lex-
ington Line stop ts at Worth St;
for the BMT, at City Hall.
Several antonomous City agen-
cles do recruiting directly.
‘They include: Board of Edu-
cation, 65 Court St, Brooklyn;
Board of Higher Education, 535
E. 80th St,, New York; Health &
Hospital Corp., 125 Worth St,
New York; NYC Transit Auth-
ority, 370 Jay St, Brooklyn. In-
quire at their personnel offices
for more information.
STATE — Department of Civ
Service has regional offices at:
1350 Ave. of Americas, N.Y.
10019, phone 765-3811; The State
Office Campus, Albany 12226;
Suite 750, 1 West Genessce Bt,
Buffalo 14202; these offices are
open on weekdays only.
Judicial Conference jobs are
filled at 270 Broadway, New
York City.
After 5 p.m, telephone (212)
765-3811, give the job title im
which you are interested, plus
your name and address.
Candidates may obtain appli-
cations only in person at the
offices of the New York State
Employment Service.
FEDERAL —New York Region,
U.S. Civil Service Commission,
Pederal Plaza at Duane and La-
fayette Sts, New York, N.Y.
10007, Take the IRT Lexington
Ave. Line to Worth St. and walk
two blocks north, or any other
train to Chambers St, or City
Hall stop. Federal titles are
usually open-continuous.
Monday through Friday hours
are am. to 6 pm, and
offices stay open Saturdays, 9
m. The telephone ie
879. Member of Audis
Subsce! Price $7.00
"iedfrideal “coplon
Sear ae s en te
us
Court Promotionals Set
For Sr Clerk, Sr Steno
Promotional opportunities to the posts of senior clerk
and senior stenographer have been announced for employees
of the unified court system. Deadline for filing application
ADVANCE IN RANK — stousing Au-
thority chairman Simeon Golar, extreme left,
recently swore im seven new HA police captains
and seven lieutenants at @ ceremony at 250
Broadway, Manhattan. Housing police chief Daniel
J. Daly, near Golar, looks on, New captains are
im front row; lieutenants in rear, Front row from 1,503 housing police throughout the City.
left are: Alan Regan; Marvin Krivitzky; Desmond
B. Eaton; Harold Rosenthal; Michael Racioppo;
Jeremiah O'Leary; Jack Weisel. In back row:
Vincent Pizro; Rollo Mancuso; Joseph Royall;
Robert King; Charles Phillips; Richard MeInnis;
Alfredo Williams, Missing from line-up is a new
Heutenant, Gerald Massa. Presently, there are
HiP
BULLETIN:
The Federal Health Plan Re-Opener has been
extended to January 31st.
Dollars count in making a choice. So does
your health.
Remember. The most expensive plan avail-
able to you does not compare to H.I.P. bene-
fit-wise.
Remember. The cheapest plans do not pro-
vide meaningful protection.
This is what you need to know to protect
your family’s budget and health.
H.I.P. membership gives you fully covered
health care. Fully covered, fully prepaid
health care.
H.I.P. means unlimited office visits. Unlim-
ited specialist care.
Compare H.I.P. to other plans.
The time to join H.I.P. is now, before Janu-
ary 31, 1972.
HEALTH INSURANCE PLAN OF GREATER NEW YORK
625 Madison Avenue, New York, N. Y. 10022
“TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF SERVICE TO NEW YORKERS”
falls on Feb. 25.
To qualify to take these ex-
ams, candidates must be perm-
anent court employees in one of
the following capacities: account
clerk, alphabetic key punch op-
erator (IBM), assistant stock-
man, attendant, clerk, office ap-
pilance operator, photostat op-
erator, statistics clerk, stenog-
rapher, tabulating machine op-
erator, telephone operator, tran-
scribing typist, typist, mail and
supply clerk or key punch opera-
tor
For specific promotion untts,
see anouncement No. 55-257 for
senior etenographer and an-
nouncement No, 56-256 ¢or se-
nior clerk.
The written test for promotion
to senlor clerk will be held on
March 25, and will test candi-
dates’ skill in clerical aptitude,
English usage, arithmetic and
offic> practices. Minimum pass-
clerk, A performance test in
stenography will be held the
same day, consisting of dicta-
tion from a phonograph record
at a speed of 90 words per min-
ute, and a transcription test,
‘Typing speed of 40 words per
minute with acuracy ts also re-
quired, but the typing test may
be waived for candidates who
have already qualified on a typ-
ing test
For detatis on jéb duties, pro-
motional units, and application
forms, contact the Personnel Of-
ficer, Judicial Conference, Room
1212, 270 Broadway, New York,
N.Y. 10007. Write “promotional
applicstion” in the lower left-
hand corner of the envelope,
and include a stamped, self-ad-
dresed business-size envelope, Be
sure to specify job ttle and
number.
ZLOL “BL Aawnueg ‘depsony ‘YaCVAT AOLAUAS TAD
ing grade ts 70 percent.
Testing for senor stenogra- BuY
pher will also be held on March Us.
BONDS!
25, sie ar to that for senior
R.R. PORTER
$ 400
LEADER BOOK STORE
11 Warren Street
New York, N.Y. 10007
BE SURE TO INCLUDE 7% SALES TAX
The DELEHANTY INSTITUTE
58 years of education to more than a half million students
POLICE SERGEANT
Enroll now in promotion course featuring new
Cassette method of preparation,
Classes meet in Manhattan, Yonkers, Jamaica,
Melville & Staten Island
Administrative Associate
Examination to be held April 1972
CLASSES MEET MONDAY AT 6 P.M.
126 E, 13th Street, N.Y, N.Y.
SENIOR CLERK
Examination scheduled for June 1972
CLASSES STARTING NOW
126 East 13th Street, New York, N.Y.
91-24 - 168th Street, Jamaica
The DELEHANTY INSTITUTE
For information on all courses
CALL (212) GR 3-6900
Manhattan: 115 E, 15th Street
Jamaica: 89-25 Merrick Blvd.
Office Open Daily 9 A.M.-5 P.M.
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, January 18, 1972
America’s Largest Weekly tor Public Employees
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations
Published every Tuesday by
LEADER PUBLICATIONS, INC,
Publishing Office: 669 Atlantic Street, Stamford, Conn, 06902
Business & Editorial Office: 11 Warren Street, New York, N.Y, 10007
212-BEeckman 3-6010
Bronx Office: 406 149th Street, Bronx, N.Y, 10455
ery Finkelstein, Publisher
Pow! Kyer, Editor
Marvin Boxley, Executive Editor
Joe Deasy, Jr., City Editor Barry Lee Coyne, Assistent Editor
NH. Mi:
Ad
ALBANY — Joseph T, Bellow
KINGSTON, N.Y, — Charles Ani
1Se per Subscription
Service Employees As:
Poor Mouthing
HERE is no longer any doubt that the State ts going
to make the most out of its current budget crisis, by
putting pressure on the Civil Service Employees Assn., which
represents some 140,000 State workers, to back off from its
demands for a wage increase this year.
The crescendo of poor mouthing reached a climax last
week when negotiations between the Rockefeller Administra-
tion and the CSEA were called off by the Employees Asso-
ciation — after the State refused to make any offer what-
soever on a wage hike.
Justifiably, the CSEA has accused the State of acting
in bad faith and the whole Issue will now go to mediation,
There 1s no guarantee, however, that mediation will produce
any good faith action on the part of the State.
We find it extremely deplorable that the Rockefeller
Administration {s using the current fiscal situation as an
excuse not to bargain. Local governments with far less
sources of revenue at their command have recognized the
moral responsibilities of ralsing employees’ salaries. The
State owes the same attitude of responsibility toward its
employees. Workers, not budget makers, operate the vital
services the public demands and needs,
In essence, there ts no need for an impasse. History
shows that the State can always find money when Its had to
do so. And this is definitely one of those cases. The burden
of the budget cannot be laid on the backs of the 140,000 peo-
ple who do their job with unusual dedication,
We propose that the State Immediately drop this unfair,
brutal tactic and get back to the bargaining table with a
sensible offer.
An Unwarranted Attack
T A TIME when morale in the Police Department ts
at a low ebb, Police Commissioner Patrick V. Murphy
has issued an unwarranted attack on his officers and the
civil service merit system.
With nothing to document his charges, he told an
audience attending the promotion of 24 police lieutenants
that “the civil service promotion system keeps good men
from being elevated to higher ranks while promoting in-
competents.
His attack shows the apparent contempt in which he
holds the officers under his direction, It ts an attack, also,
on the memory of those dedicated patrolmen and officers
who have made the supreme sacrifice in service to the
people of the City of New York.
The Police Commissioner {s responsible for police morale
and his remarks only serves to prove that morale ts continu-
ing to fall at a rapid pace,
Murphy's unfair attack on his subordinates makes us
wonder:
Isn't it time that a new police commissioner be appoint-
ed, perhaps on merit rather than on politics?
Good Advice
HHOMAS Cuite, majority leader of the New York City
Council, has called upon the Police Commissioner and
the Department of Personnel to extend the current eligible
lists for patrolmen in order to retain some 6,700 eligibles
who have remained idle on the lists by the City’s Job
freeze.
These men, should they try to take new examinations,
could be too old to qualify for the position if this was
required,
Further, the cost to the taxpayers would be extravagant
since the City has already paid for the testing, investigation
and physical examinations of these men.
We commend City Counct! vice-chairman Thomas Cuite
on his stand and urge the Pollee Commissioner and the
Civil Service Commission to heed the advice he offers,
sion was unanimously reversed
by the Appellate Division, which
sent the case back for further
evidence as to the precise status
of the applicants,
What is involved technically
is Section 151 of the Election
Law, which provides that for the
purpose of voting no person shall
be deemed to have gained or lost
a residence by reason of atten-
dance at a college or university
away from home. The precise
issue Involved ls whether this
group of students can demon-
strate an intent on their part to
make the Town of Brookhaven
&@ permanent place of residence
apart from the residence of their
parents.
Significance Of Proceeding
In view of the significance of
this court proceeding in the
State election pleture, appeals
will no doubt be taken to the
Court of Appeals for a final rul-
ing. The significance arises from
two principal factors, One fs that
students will vote in considerably
greater numbers if they are per-
mitted to vote at the university
campus as against going home
to vote. The other ts that in
many college and university
towns, the student population is
substanlally greater than the
local population and consequent-
ly the student vote could have a
major Impact on loval elections,
including those for State Assem-
blymen.
None, of course, knows how
college students will vote. Not too
jong ago the war in Vietnam
and the draft were the subjects
of deepest concern on the cam-
pus, However, the massive with-
drawal of American troops from
Vietnam and sharp reductions In
draft quotas haye substantially
reduced ‘student interest in those
matters, What has moved to the
front burner of concern on the
campus fs the economic Issue be-
cause of the scarcity of jobs for
college graduates.
Job Situation
For example, college students
who aspire to enter the teaching
profession are confronted with «
hopeless task in seeking to land
their first Job, In New York City
alone, 5,000 teaching positions
were eliminated in the current
school budget. According to =
memorandum sent by Syracuse
University to its education ma-
Jors, these graduates are faced
by @ “teacher surplus of stagger-
ing proportions.” This memor-
andum warned that “No longer
can we guarantee you a job. In
fact we can't even guarantee
you any Job.”
Nor are difficulties in the Job
market limited only to teachers,
Cutbacks in various technologic-
a] industries and reduced Federal
support for research and devel-
opment, have substantially
closed the job market for
graduates in engineering, physics
and in other sclences, The en-
tire bleak picture 1s underscored
by a survey of approximately
1,000 major employers by the
College Placement Council, Ac-
cording to this survey, this
group of potential employers is
Planning 21 percent fewer cam~
pus visits for employee recrult-
Civil Service
Law & You
By RICHARD GABA
jn vtrctvavvavatoavenciraitotannanecneaeatectaaee
Mr. Gaba is a member of the New York State Bar and chair~
man of the Labor Law Committee of the Nassau County Bar Assn.
Reclassification And Dismissal
IN A RECENT decision from the Appellate Division,
Third Department, the Court reversed a decision of Special
Term in Kings County which directed that the employee, a
Court Clerk I, be reclassified to the title of Court Clerk III
retroactive to July 1, 1966. The Appellate Division set forth
certain principles and guidelines to be followed in this type
of case, First, the decision holds that the employee was
entitled to be reclassified upon the basis of the competitive
status he earned by examination and the duties he lawfully
performed in such status prior to reclassification. The test
relied upon by the Court is what the employee did within
the title of his former classification as compared with his
duties under the new classification. This must be examined
without regard to any duties performed out of title.
IN PREPARING his papers, the employee apparently
alleged that the duties he performed were exactly those
under the title specification of Court Clerk III. The Court
found, however, that a more accurate description of the
employee's duties was contained in a report completed by
him in 1963,
THE COURT stated, “The underlying test is whether the
duties performed by respondent prior to July 1, 1966, come
within the specification for Court Clerk II or Court Clerk
III.” In comparing the duties performed by the respon-
dent prior to the reclassification as he set forth in his
own report completed In 1963 with the duties set forth In
the specifications for Court Clerk II and Court Clerk III,
the Appellate Division concluded that the duties actually
performed by the respondent most properly fit into the
category of Court Clerk IT and that he was therefore prop-
erly classified as of July 1, 1966, as Court Clerk II. (Perlman
vy. McCoy, 326 N.Y. Sup. 2d 80.)
IN ANOTHER CASE from the Appellate Division, Third
Department, a probationary employee was found to have
been properly dismissed despite the fact that he did not
receive the required one week's prior notice as set forth
in the rules of the Civil Service Department. The employee's
case was dismissed in the lower court, and he took an appeal.
THE EMPLOYEE was appointed to a competitive title
in State service on Oct, 23, 1969, subject to a 26-week pro-
bationary period. On Dec. 9, 1969, he received a job perform-
ance rating which reported his work as being generally good
and recommending that his probationary period be con-
tinued. He received a second performance rating on April 10,
1970, which rated his performance as unsatisfactory and
recommended that he be dismissed at the end of the pro-
bationary period for the reason that he had not made the
necessary overall development adjustment that warranted
continuation of his employment. The employee actually saw
the second rating report,
ON APRIL 17, 1970, a few days before the end of his
26-week probationary period, the employee received a let-
ter dated April 16, advising him that his employment would
be terminated effective April 23, 1970.
THE EMPLOYEE argued that he did not receive the
one week's prior notice called for in the rules. However, the
Court stated that since the purpose of Civil Service Law and
Rules 1s to promote the good of the service and such purpose
will not be permitted to be frustrated by technical or narrow
constructions, the dismissal would stand. The Court pointed
out that the petitioner had previously been notified orally
and in writing of his unsatisfactory performance, and that
there was no showing of prejudice, The Court went on to
say, “Since the required notice ts notice of unsatisfactory
performance as opposed to notice of termination, as con-
tended by appellant, there has been substantial compliance
here and a lack of strict and technical compliance will not
create permanent tenure.” (Covelli vy, Luger, 326 N.Y. Sup.
2d 87.)
ment and is planning to employ
23 percent fewer graduates,
Whether the adverse Job mar-
ket will make Democratic or Re-
Publican voters on the campus
4a unknown, but typleally une re-
action would be unfavorable to
the Administration in power,
However, the extent to which
the college students will be per-
mitted to vole thelr views will
be determined by the courla,
Givil Service Principal Clerk, Steno
Exams Open In Suffolk
Suffolk County has announced a pair of promotional
examinations now open for filing prior to the Jan. 28 dead-
line: principal stenographer and princtpal clerk.
Television
Telsvision programs ef inter-
est to civil service employees are
broadcast datly over WNYO-TV,
Channel 31.
Tuesday, Jan. 18
12 noon— The Police Commis-
sioner. Report on ongoing
Police Dept. activities.
12:30 p.m.—Around the Clock—
“Traffic Safety.” Police Dept.
training series.
2:30 p.m.—Around the Clock—
“Penal Law Review — Rob-
bery.” PLD. training series.
7:30p.m — Around the Clock —
“Traffic Enforcement Review.”
Police Dept. training series.
1900 p.m.—The Police Commis-
stoner—Report to the public.
Wednesday, Jan, 19
12 noon—The Pollce Commis-
stoner. Report on ongoing
Police Dept. activities.
12:30 p.m.—Around the Clock—
“Traffic Safety.” Police Dept,
training series,
2:30 pm.—Around the Clock—
“Penal Law Review—Robbery.”
PD. training series.
6:30 pm.—Around the Clock—
“Traffic Enforcement Review.”
Police Dept. training sertes.
1:00 pm.—On the Job—Pire
Dept. training series,
Thursday, Jan. 20
12:00 noon — The Police Com-
missioner. Report on ongoing
Police Dept. activities.
12:30 p.m.—Around the Clock—
“Traffic Safety.” Polloe Dept,
training series.
2:30 pm.—Around the Clock—
“Penal Law Review—Robbery.”
PD. training series.
30 p.m—Return to Nursing—
“Intravenous Therapy.” Re-
fresaer course for nurses.
200 p.m.—Around the Clock—
“Traffic Enforcement Review
Police Dept. training series.
00 p.im.—The Police Commis-
stoner—A report on ongoing
Police Dept. activities,
Friday, Jan. 21
12:00 noon— The Police Com-
missioner. Report on ongoing
Police Dept. activities,
12:30 p.m.—-Around the Clock—
“Traffic Safety.” Police Dept.
training series.
2:30 p.m.—Around the Clock—
“Penal Law Review—Robbery.”
PD. training series.
6:30 p.m.—Around the Clock—
“Traffic Enforcement Review,”
Police Dept. training series.
7:00 pm—On the Job— “Con
Edison Distribution Facilities.”
Fire Dept. training series.
Saturday, Jan. 22
:00 p.m.—On the Job—"Opera-
tions Involving Radioactive
Materials.” Fire Dept. training
series
Monday, Jan, 22
12:00 noon—The Police Com-
missioner. Report on ongoing
Police Dept. activities
12:30 p.m.—Around the Clock—
“Traffic Safety.” Pollee Dept
training series
2:30 pm.—Around the Clock—
“Pena! Law Review—-Robbery.”
PD. training series.
4:00 p.m.— Advocates — “Should
Courts Be Able To Admit Evi-
dence Police Have Seized I.
7
a
Jemally?” Lawyers, judges and
policemen debate
6:30 pan.—Around the Clock—
“Penal Law Review — Rob-
bery.” Police Dept, training
series.
7:00 pan.—On the Job—'Opera-
tions Involving Radioactive
Materials.” Pire Dept. tralning
ing series,
The principal stenographer
performs the more difficult and
responsible clerical and steno-
graphic duties, in addition to
supervising others in this field.
Salary currently is about $281
bi-weekly, although this varies
by jurisdiction within the County.
A candidate for principal
stenographer must have been
employed for at least two years
prior to the exam date of Feb.
19 as a permanent sentor clerk,
senior clerk-typist or senior
stenographer in the jurisdiction
in which the promotion ts
sought; or a principal clerk in
the jurisdiction for at least six
months.
The written test on Feb, 19
will include basic reading and
English usage skills, public rela-
tions and administrative ques-
tions. A performance test, ad-
ministered at a separate time for
qualification only, calls for 40
words per minute typing speed
and 90 words per minute steno
speed. For more information, see
announcement of promotional
examination No, 12-144.
‘The principal clerk, with start-
ing salary of about $281, ls re-
sponsible for difficult clerical
functions and supervision of
other employees on specialized
clerical assigninents.
Candidates must have served
as sentor clerk, senior clerk-ty-
pist or senior stenographer tn
their jurisdiction for at least two
years, The written test on Feb.
19 will be similar to that for
principal stenographer (see
above), and there will be no
supplementary qualifying exam.
LEGAL NOTICE
8u PREM
or
BRONX
COURT OF THE STATE
YORK, COUNTY OF
SUMMONS. ~
LEMENT AL
if does bi in the County
joes business
of Brom
To the above named Defendants:
YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to
dhis action and
againat
for the colicl demanded
Daied, MARCH 2, 1971
GOLDWATER & FLYNN, fos
Atcoraey(s) tor Plaintift
Othice aod Pow Office Adsirom
60 Bast 42nd. Strece
«york t0017
10: ID PRO.
Pee OF THE Ste OF NEW. YORE
THE CITY (OF Siw YORK. GORki
and
Youn
aed ROBERT CHRISTIAN
ing summon is served upon
plication pursuant 10 an orde
Birdie Amsterdam a» Josh
Supreme Court of the Sate of
fed on December 10, 1971
bar defemdaars from
ity of re
eribned as
Su
od ia the propery
ING om ihe easterly side of
100,49 eet "wortherly
More information will be found
in announcement No. 12-142,
The only application form
necessary for these exams Is the
“application for promotional ex-
amination” card (blue), which
should be mailed or brought to
the Suffolk County Civil Service
Commission, County Center, Riv-
erhead, N.Y, 11901. Applications
and further Informations are
available in western Suffolk from
East Northport Testing and In-
formation Center, 295 Larkfleld
Rad., East Northport, N.Y, 11731
(tel: 261-2634); and in eastern
Suffolk from Suffolk County
Civil Service Dept., County Cen-
ter, Riverhead, N.Y. 11901 (tel:
727-4700, ext, 249)
The Must List
To trace your current certl-
fication status, follow The
Leader, Weekly listings appear
which Indicate test and list pro-
eress of successful candidates
seeking appointment by the Clty.
By using this chart, you can
assess where you stand
Letters To
The Editor
Members’ Faith In
CSEA Is Rectified
Editor, The Leader:
T wish to publicly thank CSEA
for its continuous and successful
support of me in my grievance
against my immediate superior,
Until I entered the grievance, I
had at best a questionable faith
in the ability and strength of
the Association, but this has
been completely rectified.
I wish especially to thank
James Cooney, CSEA represen-
tative to the State Department
of Social Services, for his ex-
cellent counselling during the
period of the grievance.
Our chapter is deserving of
the highest praise its help, ite
time and most important Its
moral support during these three
very painful and difficult
months in grievance. In particu-
jar, Mrs, Alvina Thatcher, griev-
anoe chairman, merits kudos for
her perceptive criticism and deft
handling of both me and the
situation.
THOMAS W. FITZGERALD
SUPPORT THE ATTICA
FAMILY MEMORIAL FUND
ATTICA, N.Y. 14011
Audio-Visual Jobs
Audio-visual specialists are tn
demand in Suffolk, which has
established a Jan. 26 deadline
for the openings. The salary:
$10,000 annually.
Needed are a bachelor’s in
electronics or electrical engine-
ering plus four years of prac-
tleal experience — including op-
eration and repair of television
tape recorder equipment. More
Information on the background
sought appears in Bulletin No.
12-110.
To secure an application,
write: Suffolk County Civil Ser-
vice Dept., County Center, River-
head, LI, 11901. You may phone
(516) 727-4700.
__EIGAL NOVICE
to peo
Ossi a aoe mee id
CR — Index Number: 14555 /1971
beak GURSE, SDPRING:
TCE that 9 pes
lon hee boon prismmael ee" tis “Coesi
br roue husband, WILLIE siMpxins
Foe The diselurion of your marriage on
iad that you have abseated your
for five success re Last poe
ing knowe | 80 to be
the believes you to he
‘order
1972.
WILLIE
SIMPKINS
retiniomer
ALBERT & SILVER ESOS.
Acoracys for Petitioner
Office te PO. Add
Biss, Sa ing *
Bronx, 'N
Tol. 585-6600
OFFICIAL
DISCOUNT
Approved By Many Civil Service Organizations
NEW CARS — (iffic
CARPETING — Spec
Vea
purchase plan...
exactly $100 above dealers actual cost!
ly negotiated discount prices on almost all aational brands.
STEREO AND HI-FI — stereo consoles, stereo cabinets and stereo components includ
ing amplifiers, preamplifiers, tuners, turatables
tape recorders.
speakers and speaker systems and
DIAMONDS — Uncontested value at lowest possible price!
PIANOS -Direct factory arrangement for special discount prices. Factory showroom
located in New York.
CAMERAS AND PHOTOGRAPHIC EQUIPMENT — Cameras and accessories,
cameras, still and movie projectors, editing, copying and developing equipment, lenses
ADDITIONAL SERVICES
and film,
MAJOR APPLIANCES
washers, inn
FURNITUR’
Televisions, air-conditioners, refrigerators, freezers, dish-
chines, dryers, disposals, ranges, radios, humidi
era, tape recorders and vacuum cleaners
o, dehumadifi-
lable at slightly above wholesale,
— Complete lines of furniture as slightly above dealers actual cost.
CUSTOM DRAPERIES, UPHOLSTERY AND SLIP COVERS — Exc
ive service group
only through United Buying Service, 13 locations throughout the metropolitan area.
FURS —A prominent fur manufacturer
now contracted to offer th
available include Mink
products +t discounts exely
eaves
sian Lamb and a variety of Fun Furs.
LUGGAGE — Products of all loading manufacturers at special disco
United Buying Service Corporation
Buying
nd supplier to major department stores ia
ive to United Bu
Leopird, Muskrat, Broadtail, Alaskan Boa Per.
2 Ser
©
it prices,
1855 Broadway, New York, N.Y. 100023
New York: (212) LT 1.9494, PL 7.0007
Now Jersey: (201) 434-671
Long Island: (516) 488-3268
The Greatest Buying Power in Greater New York
ZL6L ‘8 éamamg ‘depweny ‘YqdVal FOIAUaS "AID
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, January 18, 1972
Bus Driver—Conductor Eligible list
(Cont, from Previous Editions)
3320 Gonzalo J Lerin, Ronald
Merritt, Willis I Jones, Robert T
Wheeler, Robert R Rini, James
E Fleschner Jr, John J Marsh Jr,
Jack A Lafaucl, Oscar C Win-
ston, Ronald J Kowalski, Edward
H Wilkins, James Harkins,
Charles A Castro, Norman D
Long, Kenneth C Wibley Jr,
Ronald Calzaretta, Robert J
Cappiello, Jose P Valle, Westley
Riley, George W Shell, George
L Albin, Edwin P Murray, Cecillo
Carrasquillo, Jeremiah Askew,
Harold W Smith.
3345 Theodore Andreala, Rich-
ard M Tefel, Robert J Bressler,
Bryan W Graves, Clayton L Had-
ley, Robert J Manzi, Joseph
Nasta, Tyrone C Sumpter, Victor
J Bruno, Charles J Testa, Jose
Puentes, Willlam G Unger, Rob-
ert Norcia, Frank J Esposito,
Warren L Amo, Thurman Baker,
John J Smith, Thomas Kalantzis,
Tsaac H Fillyan, Frank J Bracco,
L Mark Cantor, Frederick Hens-
ler, Matthew Woroniecki, Ronald
M Martino, Charles Laboard.
3370 Erald J Gilbert, Arthur
A Cuniglio, Anthony Scalercio,
Elilott L Douglas, Lionel B Mar-
tin, Vincent P Spadaro, Charles
D Ford, Peter N Deconzo, Alfred
J Wilson Jr, Daniel Randolph,
Robert E Quanne, William E
Martin, Ramon Flores, Michael
C Hughes, Herbert Renera, Hugh
A Herbin, Bartolo Vargas, Rich-
ard Eyans, Carlos M Molina, Mi-
chael L Kuryllo, Daniel Sirchia,
Lawrence S Sjursen, Willey B
Hawkins, Nicholas Faraci, Thom~
as A McGulre.
3395 Felton Thomas, Kenneth
M Field, Alfonso C Mariani,
Clarence L Haynes, Charles W
Yates, Michael W Sims, Jose A
Rodriguez, Coakley P Pender-
grass, Thomas M Jones, Pranklin
D Robson, Ben Neldle, Robert F
O'Keefe, Charles A Bervine, Leon
Nixon Jr, Levern Baker, John K
Hickman Jr, Sabbotte Botta,
Jullus Levenhar, Edward Gad-
eon, Frederick Willlams, William
V Kornish, Rufus A Moore, Ted
Hammer, Albert T Cheek, Ronald
F Hunter.
3420 Howard L Schmidt, Ber-
nard P McDermott, George E
Thomas, Dominick A Rutsi, Ben-
mie Bridges, Michael Laterza,
George R Wiseman, Dennis R
Passarett!, Martin M Schapira,
Steven L Collett!, Herbert A
Robertson, Walter J Rybarczyk,
Marion Adams, John H Bona-
part, Marvin B Edwards, Louis J
Quarto, John W Hysmith, John
J Wilson, Charles P Koenlg,
Daniel P Laterza, James F Me~-
Cauley, Jullus L Jefferson, Rich-
ard J Mullin, Vincent R Gerect-
tano, Robert C Mann.
3445 James W Katinas, An-
thony Daquino, Roberto Diaz,
Robert Fraument, Joseph V Con-
iglaro, Stanley E Alston, Willie
Hill Jr, Cherry V Cartier, An-
drew Valenti, Robert M Parker,
Walter Milton, Charles W Kap-
lan, Howard R Hite, Carlton
Jones, Pred Wright Jr, Robert
P Rappa, John Couret, Peter J
Sullivan, Wille Horne, Rudolph
A Bullock, Donald A Reel, Ar-
thur B Schneider, Arthur J Pat-
terson, Irving Brofsky, Jack
Ferri.
3470 Jesse J Hill, Emma A
Santo, Willlam L Lassen, Vincent
G Poster, Fred T Smith, Henry
Heyward , Norman C Damm,
Donald T Emerson, Reyes Men-
dez, Donel) Wilson Jr, Thomas
Parker, James A Whittick, Clyde
W Graves, Thomas J Hilliard,
Larry Jones, Larry H Cooke,
Leonard @ Stewart, Carle RB
Gomez, Rudolph W Forbes, Jo-
seph Nero, Patrick Mahony, Ir-
ving Sternberg, James A Rober-
son, Dario Quinones, Robert
Beauchamp Jr.
$495 John Sanchez, Karl J
Kammerer,
Velez, Rudy J Ubriaco, Alan J
Derosa, Nicholas W Moreback,
Louls Silver, Russell G Ball,
Cecilio Arroyo, Peter Rao, Law-
rence Schwager, Marlo O Rosado,
Prank V Russo, Frank J Droesch,
Herminio Cruz Jr, Joseph Man-
cello, Edward G Hernandez,
Charles M Dixon, David W
Brangman, Arthur L Armstrong,
Elliott K Brightman, Raymond
Encarnacion, Mario Valentine,
James O Clayton.
3520 Pervis R Belfield, Juan
A Espada, Ramon L Rosa, Hugh
G Kennedy, Nestor J Concep-
clon, Paul Delgado, George P
Spadaccini,, Vincent EB McDon-
nell, James Gethers, Randolph
E Allen, Robert L Bost, William
G Lawson, Milton Sills, Nicholas
Piccininn!, Amilear A Cardona,
Edward Grant, William I Ran-
dolph, Theodore Ronlashko,
Daniel F O'Connell, Alan T
Mangrum, James L Kelly, Sergio
S Torres, Harry Jenkins, John
P Ledwith, Cecil J MeMillon.
3545 Stanley Moore, Anthony
C Liguori, Leonard Romito, Mic-
hael Lodato, Harold Brunson, Al-
bert G White, James E Carter,
Arthur Reed, Abe Silverman,
Rudolph L Conguet, Domenick
J Parisi, Charles E Pritchard,
William Ff Allred, James R Gal-
lagher, Stephen A Zimmerman,
Ernest Heyward, Steven A Da-
mato, Benjamin Johnson Jr,
John R Fryer, Joseph J Gullo,
Edward A Prokopiak, William A
White, Haig Derdiarian, Carlos
I Negron, William Pollack.
38570 Robert J Sigmund, Wil-
tam Sclacca, Bobby G Cadogan.
Dandy Bush, Robert J Hamblin,
Thomas R Chapman, Juan Gon-
zalez, Harry Rabinowitz, Stanley
R Ford, Sumpter L Burton, Fred
B Williams, Harold Levine, John
C Maddaloni, Norris L Little,
Mickey Whitted, Jason D Led-
better, Angelo E Rapolla, Wilbert
Jones, John P Hornak, Sam
Dayis Jr, Joseph Fernandez, Joel
T Hughes, Peter Plescia, Melvin
= Bader, Eugene Dewaters.
3595 Peter H Etheridge, Mel-
vin © Fieramosca, Thomas F
Smith, Ronald J Gonzalez, How-
ard J Ford, Francis M O'Brien,
Alonzo V Pollard Jr, Albert P
Anastasio, Willlam L Quirk,
Charles T Parker, Herbert Moore,
Richard A Lelbold, Santo Orlan-
do, George J Androulakis, Theo-
dore Ramsey, Henry A Cook,
Herman A Norfleet, Vincent P
Harden Jr, Emanuel L Pece,
Frank Sabler, Milton Bass, Rob-
ert A Rubin, Edwin Roman, Nor-
wood E Whitaker, Albert Fisher,
9620 Joseph S Scott, Henry
Hayes, Salvatore Coticelll, Ru-
dolph Graham, Nathan Roberts,
Richard Oden, Leroy Henry,
Salvatore Costa, Leon D Clarke,
Lorenzo Perkins, James A Miller,
Robert M Castello, Conrad Mor-
gan, Marshall Stinchcomb Sr,
Louls J Yater, Eugene Dobarro
Jr, Elio Valdez, Glenn Milhouse
Jr, Joseph C Searano, Joseph
Salonia, Bernard Schoor, Frank
Ferrari, Harold L Bergman,
Peter Fayara, Willie I Benson.
$645 Ernest H Long, Felix
Ocasto, Robert J Poney, Joseph
€ Ricclo, Manuel Soler, Daniel
PF Koch, Kermit Carmichael,
Stanley J Gorlewski, Aubrey L
Gibbs, Edwin Peres, Peter G
Rice, Juan Botter Jr, Raymond
L Iglesias, Louls J Argenziano,
Henry R Gardner, Joseph A Ag-
ro, Clarence L Ivey, Robert 8
Horowitz, Leo Brown, Charles J
Earl Larry, Jaime
Robert J Bjorkman, Sam A Hen-
derson, Lenorria Goodlett, Emil
Tannace, Irving Robbins, Ray-
mond A McCormick, Willlam J
McCormick, Melvin M Rhodes,
Dennis J Alne, Israel B Smith.
3696 Steven Viener, Leroy Ful-
ler, Frank J Prument!, Timothy
M Pratt, Andrey Kushnir, John
A Guida, John F O'Brien, Alfred
A Baglioni, Douglas L Jones,
James D Collins, Edward J Jer-
rahian, Kevin P Blondel, Willis
Susson Jr, Ricky K Francis, John
Jackson, Leroy L Gilchrist, Olaf
C Bjorkman, Nelson Santos,
Clarence E Brown, Elwin T
Whitaker, Nathan Rosalfe, Mat-
thew Puryear, John M Carden,
Salvatore Isernio, Herbert L
Robinson Jr,
3720 Doyle Oglesby Jr, Robert
E Hallett, Joseph Mendez, Wil-
son Bradley Jr, Gerard C Cavic-
echio, Gerald E Waters, Mack
Walker, Ronald J Smith, Ercole
J Patalano, Robert S Pitzsim-
ons, Michael S Dellabella, Lewis
J Davis, Humilla Williams, Pred
Clement, Robert E Hirsch,
Randolph S McDaniel, Michael
Profsky, Michael J Hynes, Rob-
ert A Clark, Rafael Figueroa,
Paul J Sheptuck, James J Me-
Cormack, Owen P MoAnuff,
Donald M Johnson, Raymond F
Marrow.
3745 Joseph J Gallo, Burton
Horowitz, Anthony V Miglaccio,
Wilbert E Credle, Leonard P
Rice, Max Pasternack, Valentine
Delvalle, Leon Munitz, Martin
M Milgrom, Theodore A Delauro,
James R Quail, Amedeo R Stef-
anelll, Edward J Graham, An-
thony C Manelio, Louis Horowitz,
Julius Selinger, Alvin Moore,
James E Crumble, Philip J Leg-
gio, Donald R Messineo, Wil-
iiam A Montgomery, George Ro-
sen, Kevin T Murphy, Michael
8 Suzuki, Ellas M Karam.
3770 Sol Sadoff, Salvador Fi-
gueroa, Leroy Wright, Salvatore
Panno, Clifford M Woodford,
Donato Demonte, Lee A Nelson,
John J Nonnenmacher, Ronald
W Rizzuto, Charles G Keehner,
Calvin L George, Velmont Mil-
ler, Leroy Mathias, Anthony FP
Mannarino, Robert D Mason,
Jesus Nunez, David E Parker,
Edward J Mercado, Donald
Webster, Frank J Ceballo, Tom-
my Smith, Fred Covington Jr,
Orlando Parker, Andrew Mione,
Teddle Johnson.
3795 Anthony S Maggtore, Wil-
Mam J Cheltman, Michael J
Amarando, Raymond J Browne,
Jimmy L Jerldo, Abraham 5
Maynore, Harry W Gibson, Jesse
J Jenkins, John C Glacone, Jack
Meltzer, Isaac H Abady, Willie
L Daniels, John R Spruell, Bruce
Corbin, Steven Sodikoff, Marvin
Matthews, Phillp E Mason Jr,
Rober} M Cappiello, Joseph O
Montuoro, Eric G Steele, Steve
Cc Kemp, Sammy Smith, Laur-
ence M Kaye, Edwin S Trent Jr,
Gary A Graham,
3820 Wayne L Barker, David
Mathews, Vincent T Demarinis,
J McDonnell, Steve E Dellecaye,
Charles H Woodard, Mare A
Scott, Silverto Perrotta, Karo
Smith, Joseph Bacenet, Roy D
Gambrell, Homer Lee, Ramon
L Colon, Victor Rivera, Manuel
A Oroswo.
3840 Jack W Hamilton, Wil-
Germain, Leon Battles.
3880 Dennis T Rollins, Calvin
Wilson, John F Cawley, James
M Clicks, Sidney Rogofsky, Jacob
Johnson, Joseph Zimits, William
T Thompson, Arnold E Spence,
Marlo Gonzalez, Peter Faiella,
Ronald Williams, James Bren-
neisen, James A Lawson, Edward
Johnson, Robert J Digiannt,
Frederick Robinson, Aree A Ben-
yahudah, John M Lemon, Mic-
hael J Vignola.
3900 Craig L Wright, Arthur
V Brown, Roy T Reeves, James
R Snead, Gilberto Mieles, Harry
E Barney, Lawrence J Clinton,
Warren J Hoffmann, Raymond
Lopez, Henry Eckensburg, Anibal
Aracil, Arnold G Watson, Dom-
enick R Dinicola, George M Mar-
tin, George Little, Daniel R
Sheridan, Henry A Lohle, Peter
Steiner, Carl B Johnson, Richard
J Salas.
3920 Robert Chatterton, Don-
ald N Leverich, Simone M Mi-
lazzo, John Calamo, Harry Wil-
son, Robert L. Galvani, Louts P
Lombardi, Thomas PF Briza,
Kevin B Wilson, William L
Schmidt Jr, Francesco Greco,
Connie F Mass, Richard E Dia-
mond, Chester 5 Steiner, Eugene
O Lloyd, Frank Deangelis Jr,
Ronald V Campbell, Vittorlo Fio-
rejlini, Henry O Murphy, Roland
Lectora.
3940 Calver L, Johnson, Donald
FP Alston, Arnold Dailey, Sher-
man A Lewis, Henri Newsome,
Keith T Royster, Willlam J Yac-
kel, Richard J McCabe, Joseph
‘'T Glynn, Vito Fodera Jr, Pas-
quale J Doris, Carlos J Benitez,
Ralph Pabon, L D Stallings Jr,
Stephen I Eremo, Patrick Kil-
bride, Gilbert W Leake, Richard
J Della, Warren A Sacks.
3960 Jack G Bertorelli, Harold
A Bardong, Nemesio Morales,
William F McDougald, John P
Paolelia, Morris Salley, Henry L
McKoy, Willlam J Brandt, Jos-
eph F Doyle, Donald P Croke,
Goldia Freeman, Arthur F
Chambers Jr, Robert Morales,
Israel Rivera, Jamse J McKeon,
Albert D Howard, Joseph T Rel-
ter, Joseph Daquila, Michael
Tosue, Donald J Farley.
3980 Joseph Savino, Norberto
Molina, Arthur W Auer Jr, Peter
J McPolin, Daniel F Rubino,
Joseph C Cesares, Raymond G
Cleaton, Robert F Bennett,
Pranklin D Stout, Jerald C
Diggs, Joseph A Lucchini, Nic-
holas J Bruno, John J Cunning-
ham, Jacob I Pollack, William
L Chase, Edward P Ferrell, Theo-
dore L Pietz, Vincent J Criscillo,
Felix Lamarea, Clarence M In-
niss, Robert H Slenzak.
4001 George Jones, James J
Hiner, Dante A Letterese, Ted
© Filmon, John A Pluchino,
Lawrence D Lamazza, Linwood
F Moore Jr, Craig J Haggerty,
Harold C Gerstenlauer, Gus L
Hummings, John H Simmons,
Louls Reid, John P Dugan, Rich-
ard M Komst, Ricardo Martin,
Walter White, Patrick J Labettl,
Carmelo Dias, Charles F Bartelli,
John Rotunno, Brian Ahearn,
Joseph A Albino, Luis M Mendez,
Ronald Etheridge, Patrick A
Delprete.
4026 Rene C Jimenez, Rosario
A Ragonese, Jose lL Martell,
Willlam N Demakakos, Santos
Tosado Jr, Dominic A Lauro,
Irving Levine, Edward J Mallon,
Vincent A Tomasuolo, Emray
Bradley, Willis P Garcia, Mario
M Santos, Bobby R MoIntyre,
John E Monck, Joseph EB Giutive,
‘Jullus Kornberg, Seymour
man, Joseph Salmonese, Rudolf
Rankin, Lawrence E Buggie,
William E Kaufman, Philip @
Garrison, John R Pece, William
J Harris, James E Frederick
Barry S Tabachnick, Paul 8
Petraro, Leroy M Morgan Jr,
Harold Grill, Ralph J Lucarellt,
Raymond A Adams, Fred J Nel-
gon, Frank J Ancona, Jeremiah
Addison, Andrew A Migliore,
Robert S Patrizio, James Colella
Jr, David Cummings, Joseph
Tinsley, John W Parker, Wil-
Ham T Lambert Jr, Joseph Pit-
koff.
4101 Vincent C Zotts, Roy A
Jones, Vincent P Federici, Bruce
E Snyder, John A Zelinsk!, Jos-
eph Nenner, Needham L Ray,
Frank Addes, James J Ware, Al-
vin Thomas, Allen P Dawkins,
Emory Q Davis, Elliott Levis,
Calvin Falconer, James P Hop-
per, John W Jones, Clary Wilson
Jr, Dominick A Ruffino, Arthur
Miller, Clifford Moses, Wiliam
Carlsen, Leonard L Crenshaw,
Lionel Crawford, Cesar Melendez,
Melvin Pannell.
4126 Kenneth L Puscaldo, Al-
bert Angott!, John J Vigilante,
Lamar Lucas, Vincent Latino,
Paul R Blythe, Kenneth McCoy,
Gerald P McVey, Jose A Gon-
zalez, Ronald M Humber, Kenny
B Murphy, Israel Miranda,
Richard J Prendergast, Theodore
Erra, Robert A Mattry, Joseph
M Bravo, Earl L Page Jr, Robert
L Boyd, Lonnie Pegese, Gaetano
Glugno, Ruben Carrero, Oscar
Hail, John T Williams, James D
Lyons, Henry Riley Jr.
4151 John Sanchez, Richard
L Marshman, John Brunson Jr,
Alvin B Bayler, Luis A Crus,
Elliotte W Espinosa, Carlos L
Castro, Wenceslaus Hernandes,
Joseph P Orapello, Michael Ca-
vallo, Harry Schaeffer, Antonio
¥ Medina, Richard E Thornley,
Hyman Kessler, Kenneth Green,
Curtis Graham, Phil FP Polito,
Robert Gregg, Willie J Sidberry
Jr, James H Nelson Jr, John J
Dacunto, Thomas Wheeler, Cari
Gray, Willis Brown, Felix Dias
4176 George B Sawyer, Stanley
@ Hines, Milton P Shayowlts,
Andrew Sessa, Bernard B Grill,
Simon Berkowitz, James T
O'Connor, Edmund 'T McPhillips,
Max Scher, John R Munz, Roger
A Praser, Lawrence D Hinksaman,
David H Marsh, James J Fits-
patrick, Salvatore Valenza, Louls
Gerewitz, Vitoanton! Darmento,
Salvatore Gallo, Eldridge W
Levy Alex J Avitabile, Jorge B
Rodriguez, Martin J Hoffman,
Irving H Soloway, Carl C Piorlo,
Fray L Chevere.
4201 Gary T Halstead, James
Cook, Frank Dellaquila, Len-
field A Bartlett, George W Mo~
Bride, Ronnie Laffer, Joseph A
Terry, Theodore Galanakis,
James E Koch, Robert Torres,
Lawrence A Showell, Robert L
Trotman, WilMam W Cole, David
Pope, John P Larocea, Hector M
Rivera, Benjamin Crumbley,
Lloyd T Keyes Jr, James P
Heavey, John J Cipolla, Benito
Torres, John L Smith, Melvin
ce Willie Meadows, Robert J
4226 Kenson J Brown, Alex~
ander Ewers, Samuel M Jackson,
Raymond D McKimm, William A
O'Connor, George R Salerno,
John R O'Connor, James L Sear~
_Eligibles on Other City Examination Lists
1 Philip Lehrman, Robert J
Relily, Michael M Rudnick, Irv-
ing White, Benjamin J Reiter,
Morris Spiegel, Arthur J Rosen-
feld, John J Glynn, Mary E
Crespo, Murray Ginsberg, Bern-
ard C Brill, Robert H Gordon,
Ephraim Lakritz, Stephen Fein-
atein, Jacob C Friedman, Joseph
Goldenberg, John J Campobas-
so Jr, Carole S Ungar, Doris L
Penney, Ronald V_ Greene,
George M Miller, Saul D Vogel,
Laurence J Reilly, Hugh M Mon-
aghan Jr, William J Quinn.
26 Margaret H Connolly, Pa-
trick J ON’elll, Isidor Bernstein,
Howard G Shaw Jr, Armand
Gabriele, Alfred S Matthews Jr,
Harry J Satterwhite Jr, Robert
B Crabtree, Jean Epstein, Jo-
eephine Solsky, Shella Berman,
Jerome Brotman, Alma Lally,
Rose Babiis, Jessie N Barringer,
Bernard A Edelstein, Gloria R
Lewis, Carolyn P Mack, Jane C
Gaffney, Gary I Teitel, Mildred
M Brieger, Earl Dann, Edward
R Pinto, Elizabeth Lahm, Syd-
ney W Mandel,
51 Sheldon Kantrowitz, Sheryl
P Treshan, Rita B Jacoby, Ed-
8 Cohen, Deborah L Thomas,
Goldie Katchen, Frank J Nor-
ton Jr, Pearl S Katz, Diane L
Cathis, Helen B Deiner, Betty
Cohen, Susan A Bennett, Laura
Rosenberg, Shirley Siegel, Flor-
ence B Bores, Lillie M Davis,
Peggy Finson, William H Dwork-
in, Issac Feldman, Frances V
Matsoukas, Joseph Hilen, Jo-
seph F Farley, Thomas G Do-
herty, Saul Bernstein, Alfred J
Moody,
76 Sandra J Espresso, Fred
Landesman, Sara Goldschlag,
Annette Holtzer, Anne R Palan-
@ ky, Edward R Higgins, Lenard
id
A Krauss, Ruth A Weinberg,
Richard Mitak, Helen A Jes-
samy, Ethel G Hoffman, Alice
R Goode, Stephanie Spin, Mar-
fe G Gerlach, Anna V Gerlach,
Sophie Shapiro, Estelle Krau-
shar, Eleanor R Leon, Marion
M Bachler, Herbert L Duzant,
Stephanie Blaskovich, Seymour
J Kane, Margaret A Carpentier,
Frederick Meservey, Jerome I
Feldherr.
101 Shirley Meyers, Herbert
Kallmany Maurice L Kroll,
Charles J Finnegan, Kenneth
Campbell, Lawrence V Frommer,
Sidney Jacobs, Alex Tevlin,
Emanuel Krantz, Morris B Le-
vine, Anne G Shapiro, Rose P
Dolling, Linda 8 Rosenblum,
Vineeny M Vaccaro, Margaret
L Madigan, Philomena Matson,
Estelle S Rothman, Catherine
Zehner, Renee Citron, Harry C
Shnipper, Joel D Navy, Shirley
B Rayeneau, Juanita Greaves,
Linda M Hart, Helen Keane,
126 Erich Park, Louls M Gel-
bert, Sylvia Harris, Ruth F
Schneider, Octavia M Quash,
Geraldine O'Neill, Susan S Korg,
Ronnie B Pfeffer, Samuel Pried-
man, Joseph V Labate, Gerald S
McCormick, Burton J Brimberg,
Georgette Lewis, Richard B Kim-
mel, Robert W Kufert, Marous
D Tieman, Sol Davidson, Lila
Rosen, Mary B Kirby, Cecella H
Rolnick, Lawrence Kushner, Glo-
ria W Ferreras, Beverly Fried-
man, Vincent J Lonegran, Hy-
man Rapfogel.
161 Pearl Lewis, Lytle G
Chambers, Dorothy Marcus, Do-
rothy A Poe, Anthony A Euk,
Mildred P Posinoff, Linda A
Jenkins, Richard J Marin, Rose
Klein, Rae Vogel, Jay ¥ Kreis-
man, Marela FP Kaplan, H Gwen-
do Mualéord, Gertrude Edzant,
Jessica A Ortiz, Maxine P Shoop,
Kathleen M Leonard, Jay M
Cohen, Douglas R Porteus, Pran-
eine M Lischner, Helen L Jord-
an, Lucille Rovak, Merun J
Berger, Beatrlc Sacknoff, Val-
@io Orselll,
116 Edna W Walter, Helen 5
John J Dolan, Harold Goldstein,
Hardeman H Blount, Marian H
Savadge, Norbert A Home Jr,
Phyllis H Rubin, Dolores John-
son, Anne Krantz, Philip Kasp-
er, Mary C Gawelezyk, Gloria A
Gargano, Jean Wegweiser, Fred-
erick Grambs Jr, Edith Ravitch,
Joanna R Gould.
201 Rosalie J O'Hara, Ste-
phen M Ferrer, Stephen J Mo-
Grath, Barry A Rudniteky, Leon-
ard D Katz, Margo W Ware,
Pearl! Obut, Prances Nadler, Ann
Vaccaro, Joseph Lamattina, Oille
M Berry, Terence § Sholek, Ro-
salind R Socholitzky, Josephine
Seardaci, Molle Spirn, Anna P
Kachel, Gertrude Bloom, Sally
R Marra, James J Gleason, Otto
Smilowitz, Lynn C Faber, Ste-
wart M Weiner, Alan C Wald-
man, Doris J Winograd, Dorothy
A Adams,
226 Joan Edzant, Betty J
Lehrman, Aloe M Tighe, Ron-
ald B Tiekert, Gary J Kurzer,
Joseph Galletta, Fred Feldstein,
Susan L Bandini, Mabel L
Payne, Gary Andrews, Autumn
I Smith, Abraham Feder, Irene
Schnapp, Joseph Pendrock, Max
Klass, Marshall M Singer, Wil-
Mam Raksen, Peter O Vargas,
James J Tierney, Douglas B
Leavy, Morris Sidansky, Marie
Delalia, David M Baxter, Jultet
L Skelton, Henry Schwartz.
251 Lawrence D Singer, Besste
Fleishman, Kent Katz, Shirley M
Archer, Minnie Minter, Rebecca
Ehriich, Harry Schulhof,
lam Dagen, Gertrude E Le-
monier, Benett T Weiss, Berths
Stark, Malcolm I Shelsky, An-
thony L Kidney, Sylvia Woulff,
Miriam Schramm, William 8
Hicks Jr, Ann M Young, Irving
S Pink, Mary Kranls, Charlotte
Chalet, Ruth B Roth, Astrid
Martin, Eileen S Magnes, Louise
H Brewer, Trudie Kata,
276 Florence L Reynolds, Ger-
arldine Dixon, William Porter,
‘Theresa P Roche, Mary E Hart-
in, Laura M Dottin, Dolores M
Jones, Isaac Raskas, Mitchell
Schram, John H Meyer, L Mur-
Tay Ruggio, Milton Miller, An-
thony R Cirigiliano, Dora Chen-
enky, John § Annunziata, Helen
Dubin, Mary Garnes, Jacqueline
Salver, Sydna Berkowitz, Brenda
Edwards, Ethel B Minkin, Mar-
tin S Dubin, Buritta G Danglar,
Barbara E Townsend, Abraham
A Dick,
30L John J Maro, Allan H
Rose, Rose E Young, Betty
Davis, Jane Bongtorno, Steven
M Hyman, Robert F Belluscio,
Josephine Baker, Frances L Eb-
bets, Sylvia Vanlierop, Gwen-
dolyn Tunstall, Richard R Lucke,
Edith Smolen, Leonard Drap-
kin, Sophie Davidson, Beatrice
Garfunkel, Sheldon Papelow,
Helen L Orzechowsk!, Dorothy
R Evans, Patricla A Kscenaltls,
Jotta V Hamilton, Frederick Lo-
vero, Al Rosenblatt, Louise C
Oliva, Theodore G Boteseas,
326 Jacquelyn Watson, Simon
N Dodeles, Paul A Ferber, Bu-
genla Katz, Dennis T McCune,
Alice R Barry, Helen Katz, Mil-
dred A Willlams, Vincent A Con-
te, Sidney Atteslander, Blanche
Chernow, Becky W Klingenstein,
Irene Yeoman, Jay A Weiner,
Virginia A Haig, Poter M Joffe,
Marjorie Kaminash, Marie Sis~
ko, Israel Liss, Herman C
Schenkler, Gloria Simmons,
Mandel G Weinstock, Ruth
Hightower, Stephan J Goldstein,
Murtel E Garcia.
361
Gottileb,
Kathryn E Oliver, Evelyn Rein-
stein, Ameena R Zuhri, Harry
Belkin, Davida M Luttenberg,
Clarie M Rose, Marcia Caspe,
Theresa McKernan, Stewart A
Safran, John G Harris, John
Tarrago, Lorraine J Harris, Syl-
via H Nosatsky, Ada M Piltz,
Lillan Simon, Maxine G Cutro.
401 Walter J Goldberg, Sharyn
C Brown, Anne M Cowan, Abra-
ham Engelberg, Commie Lan-
dis Jr, Leona Washington, Mar-
tin S Marx, Paul B Morris, Jo-
seph Hochman, Catherine Rog-
ers, Jessie Levine, Stanley &
Bodzin, Geraline McCants,
Norma Turner, Barbara Baugh-
an, Carol L Lyttle, Bernard
Peltz, Eva Klein, Diane Z Lip-
sehits, Ida Thaler, Nora Solo-
mon Marcia A Rosebloom,
Hannah Elsenstork, Agnes M
Zwirz, Patricia A Tarelton.
426 Sara N Steinberg, Jacob
Schulhof, Dianne S Wiesenberg,
Ronald A Meekins, Rita Gar-
finkel, Lynn Neustadter, Gloria
J Hope, Anna P Delnegro, Leslie
J Upson, Lillian Krelker, Sylvia
R Kaplan, Michael L Davis,
Francine M Linton, Molly Koh-
ler, Lillian Dobkin, Beatrice Le-
vine, Frances V Jones, Arnold
Hurwitz, Cecil Frankel, Ruth
Berman, Carol B Owurowa, Flor-
ence Zubkin, Sarah V Mullooly,
Lee K Drapkin, Harold Pinkel-
stein.
451 Robert M Petrocelli, Barn-
estine Hastie, Dana D Mays,
Anna R oJhnston, Jack Pishler,
Charles P Podell, Frieda M Katz,
Biste J Richman, Pamela F
Mushinske, Bruce S Kershner,
Celeste M Carter, Mack A Col-
bert, Mollie G Innerfeld, Laraine
M Issac, Elaine Ratner, Joanna
Kendrick, Theda Calo, Laura A
Fleischer, Mary C Mulholland,
Lucille D Stanet, Carol A Miller,
Marcela L Roesch, Loreatha
Jones, Sharon L Reavis, Julius
Korn.
#76 Seymour S Gluckman, Ed-
ward A Schechtman, William
Wolfson, Carole A Byrd, Annie
L Vento, Maggie M Banks, Helen
Baumholtz, Sarah D Wright,
Florence C Engel, Laverne A
Rolle, Doris Lepitz, Julia 8S
Gajzler, Jean G Hoehing, Rosa-
Ma M Pulla, James L Walsh, Rita
L Terenzi, Wilhelmina Currie,
Stephen Kingston, Anita E Gel-
ler, Ida M Lynch, Michael E
Berman, Joyce J Jones, Ligue B
Inman, Darlene I Knight, Mi-
chelle A Lipschitz
COMPUTER PROGRAMMING
TRAINEE REVISED LIST
692 Eligible
1 Robert P Orne, FP Barry
Mulligan, Donald Elman, Rich-
ard D Dunn, Harold Horowitz,
Daniel T Knag, J Richard Clarke,
Allan M Gottdank, Samuel Nor-
ber, Chauncey H Chow Jr, Mar-
shall D Hannotte, Constance
Clark, Stephen FP Skolnick, Julius
J Sakowits, Vincent J Passtone,
Leonard 8 Spilka, David Kasa-
koff, James J Chadwick, David
R Patterson, Michael B Jordan,
Richard W Helfman, Gerald Ko-
nigstein, Kathryn F MeMillan,
Nicholas J Larocea, John A Lo-
kenberg.
26 Fred Snitver, Harold Haus,
William 8 Safchik, Tad H
Gwirtaman, Linda A Gravitz,
Donald T Bashline, Barry J
Polsky, Martin M Reinman,
Henry W Loeffel.
51 Edward J Federman, Clay-
ton B Thomas Jr, Paul V Klocek,
Howard B Pogelson, Robert D
Chernoff, Christine Foerth, Tene
P Winkler, Howard Marcus, Kir-
sten S Moy, James P Sanfilippo,
Calvin K Ofoakknoll, Rosalyn L
Tavel, Harry Gay, Leo Sauber-
man, Terrence T Myers, Harold
T Myers, Harold R Sonberg,
Malka 8 Furst, Kenneth 8 Wels-
man, Ellen M Bitkower, Frank
P Wetterau Jr, Alan S Friedman,
Mark P Eckstein, Murray M
Bernstein, Alex Silverman, John
J Crespo.
John O Wheeler Jr, Howard
Grahn, Jeffrey J Clark, Melvin
Peder, Louls Fefer, Ira D Pabst,
George T Sheluga, Gary I Wetn-
er, Leonard J Candela, Robert
Tishman, Joseph M Feldstein,
William R Sacco, Bennett Le-
vine, Frank J Dymnicki, Andrew
P Kochis, Dennis A Troin!, Eve
F Hochwald, Paul A Fine, Evelyn
B Goldstone, Harry B Pass, Er-
neat M Cortegiano, Gregory Sen-
yseyn, Robert 8 Schreiber, Ira
Sonin, Michael A Torrest.
101 Kenneth F Kessler, Paul
H Brownstein, Stuart A Frank,
Julie Namkin, Barbara L Kirsch-
ner, Alan L Rosen, Werner R
Gompertz, Mona Rudolph, Alan
M Antopol, Spencer B Hum-
phrey, Alfredo M Gruela, Geral-
dine Voelkel, Albert T Schmeder,
Jay B Bitkower, Franols T Brady,
Steven FP Lambert, Joseph As-
clutto Jr, Jerome Eiss, Fredric
L Goldstein, Caesar M Medina,
David M Schwartz, William F
Gordon, Clifford R Elton, Char-
les D Mooney, George K Rosen-
stock.
126 Barry N Pollack, Bruce W
Davey, Ross M Buchholz, Jef-
frey N Nichols, Carole G Slater,
Oritte Popack, Jehuda Ziegler,
Saul Estreicher, Arnold C Men-
delssohn, Martin Rosenman, Ar-
nold R Wertheimer, Simon Ma-
jor, Aron R Kurlekar, Mare
Mayer, Joel Turner, Simon J
Krontr, George Pospishil, Mic-
hael O Quinlan, Antonio P An-
nunaiata, Ronald G Colombo,
John C Santamaria, Robert D
Kleinman, Eileen B Deutsch,
Steven L Schiff, Jerald Abrams,
151 Helen H Tam, Ira L Shul-
man, Ellen Deltman, Michael E
Borowski, Frank S Millendorf,
Tra J Himmelstein, James T
Fitzwilliam, Haroutune Djamd~
Jian, Raymond B Miller, Adam
J Konecko, Kenneth L Brettseh-
nelder, Richard M Brown, Wil-
liam R Wasser, Lynn C Jaffe,
Raphael Kaminer, Ira Axelrod,
Bernard M Bellisky, Louls J
Guardino Jr, Michael Pistoia,
Bernard C Brill, John P Cairns,
Robert H Jacobs, Robert M
O'Donnell, Albert M Gunder-
sheimer, Dominick J Giambat-
Usta,
176 Leonard W Smit, Laura
Rosenberg, Henry Finkelstein,
John V MoConnell Jr, William
A Knobel, Laura Gonzalez, Jef-
frey 8 Binder, Dominic J Palum-
bo, Howard P Taubman, John
M Maroh, Barry G Fagen, Ste-
ven C Brauch, Salil K Kar, Ber-
nard Schuldiner, Patrick M Me-
Dermott, Daniel P McHugh, Ar-
lene M McCann, Warren J Sass,
Cecll Duran, Robert C Sattinger,
David FP Dimargo, Laurence Abi-
koff, Richard Simberg, Emanuel
P Frankel.
201 Anthony J Seubert, Rich-
ard J Demarco, William Montal-
James G Montesant,
Danute Radoman, Martin D
Werblow, Anne V Owens, Nor-
L Wong, Neil H Silverman, Sid-
ney H Meltzer, Norman R Gold-
i
226 Joseph W Iannello, Robert
M Keyserling, Bennett R Genzel,
Bruce 8 Lazerson, Thomas P
Zeyer, Brendan M Meade, Nor-
man Gampel, Daniel M Kanter,
Salvatore Amatuzzo, Neil Wein-
traub, Marcy C Sullivan, Vincent
G Foley Jr, Abraham Kraus, Ju-
dith B_ Liff, James Demetro,
Mark J Weyman, Daniel O'Brien,
Louls R Addeo, Naomi S Susnick,
Lawrence Blatt, Charles J Brady,
Linda M Howell, Walter Fischer,
Marian R Breitbart, David M
Leifer.
251 Gary Ellman, Norman H
Welssman, Shirley Yue, Steven
A Baranowiltz, Michael R Cohen,
Ruth M Goldstein, Benjamin
Rothman, Laurence J Reilly,
Morris Scheiner, Michael Vel-
lensky, Eva Fox, Benny Silber-
stein, Marion R Weinrub, Henry
Fryd, Mark T Simon, John P
Nettuno, Edith P Walker, Shlomo
Mandel, William Shapiro, Dor-
othy E Curren, Herman Lieber-
man, Paul A Witonsky, Anthony
N Romano, Edward J Moran,
Stephen A Cooper.
276 John L Moir, Albert Cazes,
Charles R Falchett!, Henry J
Hein, Jack Messing, Luis Olmo,
Joseph A Dimino, Graham M
Brownell, Arlene Jackson, W!l-
Mam S Hagel, Boanerges Her-
rera, Alfred L Block, Sherry L
Garber, Mark A Nordskog, Jacob
C Friedman, Leone D Farwell,
Kenneth L Mitchell, George D
Liebert, Ira Kahner, Mary A Co-
hen, Joseph Boim, Michael A
Cassera, Michael Labarbera,
Robert J Kellar, Steven W Eis-
enberg.
301 Ronald Welss, Phillip J
Deblasio, Stephen J McGrath,
Vincent Giaimo, Thomas M
Stanwood, Phyllis C Meyerson,
Barbara G Buffett, Eileen Berk-
owitz, Jack I Schillace, Jean Y
Resnikoff, Monte J Miller, Jan
R Hoefman, Harold Fishman,
Evelyn Puhrer, Bernard Tauber,
Herman M_ IUitzkowitz, Harold
Weiser, Sheldon L Rich, Peter
W Jonson, Armand V Prete, John
D Hoenig, Charles H Jones,
Jeanne S Hule, Richard P Shup-
per, Michael A Dellafera.
326 Joseph W_ Ferrandina,
Joan Cho, Richard M Scott, Carl
I Schwartz, Jeffrey W Klein,
Harvey S Jassen, Frederick
Griminger, Lee H Jung, Law-
rence W Shapiro, Martha L
Mackey, Robert H Alpert, Susan
E Hochberg, Myron 8 Kozak,
Stanley Lipper, Robert J Un-
tracht, Nelly B Berkowitz, Den-
nis R Sanford, Carol B Moss,
Erie M Morse, David Ng, Law-
rence D Ryan, Joel I Green-
stein, Hyman Drusin, Virginia
H Rango, Leslie G Glanz.
351 William P Seeve, Harriet
Sunshnie, Yitzchok R Goldson,
Elliot M Scharfman, Bugene
Caren, Gary 8 Milo, Edward O
Slsas, Veronica L Marchak, June
A Irwin, William M King, Nic-
holas Gallucclo, Murray Rosen-
thal, Robert Santos, Jerome D
Levin, Joel Schiller, Irene E
Stern, Amy Newman, Jonas F
Schiff, Patricia A Brown, Ursula
M Neutsch, Ronald E Simon,
Randy Horowitz, Mare R Linder,
Joseph R Filoceo, Jean D Kell-
bach.
376 Robert Hoekstra Jr, Ken~
neth Goodgold, Larry A Gold-
stein, John J Brown, John E
Holdorf, Vincent A Scovetta,
Abraham Sanabria, Edward R
Mozejko, John H Lucas, Elien
C Flynn, Lillian Polstein, Jimmy
Liao, Ena A Malone, Henry F
Salvione, David J Steinberg,
Bernard G Lamote, Eugene J
Kasper, Nathan N Schwarta
Sheila Glazel, Leonard Mosko-
wits, Harold D Forspan, Arthur
M Kataman, Emanue) Rimal,
Stanley Peyser, Anthony J Sa-
batino.
401 Anthony Giordano Jr,
Richard F Ropiak, Robert A
Gorbe, Laurence Janis, Robert F
Maginn, Randy A Nebelkopf,
Barbara A Mims, Harold M Ar
(Continued om Page 10)
ZLOL “SL Aaunuvf ‘Mepsony, “YAGVAT AOIAUAS AID
10
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, January 18, 1972
This Week's City Eligible Lists
Briston, Angelo M
Joel H Gedell, Mark E Hack-
shaw, David E Haverty, Mark G
Corry, Leo Deutsch.
426 Martin Feuerman, Bernard
Bell, Charlene K Goldstein, Ed-
ward T Giliilano, Carl R An-
erum, Dennis W Weiscopf, Mim!
W Mak, Ronald G Liebman,
Raymond Perrotta, Shut F Ma,
Haim Teltetbaum, Simma H
Blumberg, Menachem Lipszyc,
Jerome Pollack, David F Bern-
stein, Salvatore Bafuro Jr, Rob-
ert © Burns, John R Danziger,
Linda A Philipps, Barbara G
Heck, Alan J Reich, Seth S Rob-
bins) Thomas Chu, Marion L
Buckholte, John A Lock.
451 Barry Lederman, Steven
L Rosenberg, Gary Andrews,
Ricky H Oppenheim, John F
Ditirro, Deborah E Genge, Robin
D Sosis, Jeffrey P Schulof, Esther
M Globman, Albert K Dimeglio,
Susan L Grabel, Mark Hendler,
Robert A Locicero, Reynold M
Aufraser, Arlene P Closter,
Christina Wolotowska, Lawrence
Goldstein, Frank Phillips Jr,
Aaron Biggs, John J McGutre,
Linda L Faller, Ronnie G Spitka,
William §S Pashwa, Thomas
Bicasinger, Lester M Tannen-
baum,
476 Wolfgang Schubler, Walter
W Guddeck, Jane Menasha, Ar-
nold M Solomon, Dinah F Bazer,
Chihsiung Lo, Robert Weinstein,
Do You Need A
for civil service
for personal satisfaction
A Meeks Course Approved be
N.Y, State Education Dept,
Write or Phone for
Information
Easter School Al 4-5029
y, N¥ 3 (at 8 St)
me free about the
Wtgh icheel"Sqetvaloacy "Chase
Abraham Beer, Benjamin Volk,
David K Mok, Patrick J Cara-
vana, Joseph P Difrenza, Jay
M Pieisher, Philip M Roth, Ra-
mon Flores, Carlos M Clement,
Richard M Reilly, William J
Hennessy, David H Smith,
Claude P Koworiz, Bruce Kersh-
ner, James S Lockhart, Louis
T Tognan, Howard M Siegel,
Bruno L Schmidt.
501 Andrew H Karmin, Ra-
mesh K Kaira, Michael E Wil-
son, Irene R Waraksa, Steven L
Boyarsky, Norman H Green,
David C Nissen, Shella H Po-
merance, Rhea Abrams, Thomas
J Saporita, Morris L Hong,
Nancy E Feinberg, Robert E
Johnson, Christos Fillies, Mic-
bael E Hersos, Stephen W
Kraye, Casimir R Domurat, An-
thony A Rossi, Marguerite Be-
lanich, Atanasto Rodriguez, Ste-
phen J Pierce, Martin T Mar-
koe, Alan I Dell, Albert J Ko-
zacik. Solomon Kopolovics.
526 Jerome Jacobson, Helene
K Newton, Bluma Pretter, Leon-
ard A Steinmetz, Stanley G
Thaler, Henry C Forman, Rich-
ard M Detko, Richard ‘TI Weick,
Betsy L Rosenberg, James M
Burger, Charles J Collins, Ar-
nold Gottfried, Allen Singer,
Alan L Kramer, John M Brunda,
Tommy E Pedowitr, Henry J
Diroceo, Douglas E Fuschman,
Gary J Wiener, Gary J Kureer,
Leonard R Ogontz, Carmine J
Grigoll, Ira Kurtae, Edward 5
ENROLL WOW! Classes Mest
IN MANLATTAN,
Moa, & Wed, 5:50 oe 7:30 PM.
IN JAMAICA,
Tor & Thor S48 ae 7:45 PM,
SPECIAL SAT, MORNING
CLASSES NOW FORMING
Phone: GR 3-6900
DELEHANTY INSTITUTE
115 E. 15th St, Menhotten
91-01 Merrick Bivd., Jamaica
=
High School
I Equiv. Diploma 4
15 Week Gourse — ]
‘; $60. t
pise by HOME STUDY of in
ING CUASSES, tending 10" eate
sieved High School tauivateacy Dip
FREE WOOKLE i
300
“SCHOOL DIRECTORY
MONROE INSTITUTE — -1BM courses
SEG TRRPARATION FOR Cives SERVACE Tuts. dwcec hive,
ae Fan S eucuier, HS
TAST FOMDHAM ROAD, ‘aRONN
4 tor Vets and Forexgm Sinema. Ateved. N.Y
Ment
Competes “te
Repiwomch DBM S00
LAVALUNG Yep Tie Closet,
N RD BKONK Ki 25600
*3.0700
Mate Dept a) Education
PERSIAN * ITALIAN * AMERICAN
Sha ANE Bay
POR yREe
_TEMERAN
ttdks
DS GS NS ERAS RE
Seeley Jr, Patricia A Messner.
551 Melvin Tanditash, Felix
Abrams, Kathleen A Carone,
Mark D Weilsenberg, George Hoo,
Harriet D Krebs, Charles M
Eichler, George K Arbeitman,
William J Healey, Stanley J
Dorwitt, John T Martin, Reinal-
do Velez, Anthony L Rinaldi,
William R Stewart 2nd, Gary
Brick, Dafna Shmulevitz, Robert
Blum, Mses C Mandelbaum,
Charles I Korn, Maury I Hore-
wits, Richard W McCarthy, April
M Chau, Shirley M_ Vincent,
Diana B Soury, Louis Kaufman.
576 Susan L. Holod, Wayne V
Hammond, Johnny F Eng, Jeasa-
mine Lyles, Jay Koniak, Joseph
A Calise, Esther R Sauberman,
Robert D Patelsky, Frances R
Lake, Peter J Dooling, Richard
E Vanderbeek, Eve Fischel, Jos-
eph A Marino, Pat N Albergo,
Manuel Kasdan, John J Pits-
patrick, Jean F Lee, Philip
Greenblatt, Jonathan Kahn,
Joseph Colucciello, Alan Polin-
sky, Allen I Klass, Wyman A
Graves Jr, Joel D Navy, Carl J
Palla.
601 Frances K Abramo, Wii-
liam H Garren, Vijay K Gupta,
Martin Z Smtih, Rebert C Year-
wood, Robert A Gordon, Harvey
J Friedman, Lawrence M Tulli-
pano, Christine Morrissey, Shel-
don Bruh, Michael J Tendort,
Diane M Villani, Alan Edelstein,
Howard H Noble, Thomas Wald-
man, Samuel D Bresier, Jay J
Gelbein, Jacob Pupko, Benzlon
B Blum, Melvyn J Provda, Ger-
shon D Bernstein, Elaine 3 Kirs-
chenblatt, Celia Wu, Jacqueline
Montag, Jan M Gorsky
626 Jeffrey M Seligman, Luts
A Sanpascual, Susan Drutman,
Raymond Kosinski, Eugene R
Orlando, Jay S Schoenberg, Vin-
cent G Varisano, Ira Menacker,
John R Addeo, Jack Bobker,
Valentino Difava, William F
Sandrowsky, Richard Nicolots,
Thomas D Downes, Mitchell D
Schneidirant, Donna Roman,
Ted E Wachtel, John D O'Rell-
ly, David A Robinson, Janet M
Torre, Christine Marino, Jacob
Rosenbauch, Charles E Schwartz,
Teaac L Kupferman, Abraham
Schwartz.
651 Sayed H Ismail, Eric O
Deser Jr, Janis B Bowman,
Cylich, David S Alinkofsky,
Wendy L Loveless, Susan L
Gufert, Kenenth A Campbell,
Ira M Gross, Larry { Friedman,
Burton D Savits, Lillian M Pan-
dolfo, Carol S Beck, Ruth M
Maag, Dennis J Conroy, Linda
P Silverman, Raymond PF Chan-
oler Jr, Benedict T Catalano,
Mark I Grinberg, Joan 8 Fred-
ericks, Ruth M Gitomer Prank
NEW CAR BUYER....
DO NOT PURCHASE
THE FOLLOWING ITEMS
FROM YOUR DEALER.
WE'LL SAVE YOU
ua. THE PRICE...
Check AAA on our integrity
Offer Valid veith Adv.
bundercaating.
iad
ds, Barbara L Andrews, Am-
paro M I
Schorr, Mervyn Frankel,
1 Margaret T. Grosal.
ASSISTANT CHEMIST—
TOXICOLOGY — 17 Eligible
1 Carmen E Bardi, Shivnaraya
Verma, Philip P Sapienza, Vito
Angiull, Rocoo A Lamattina Jr,
Shalini N Valanju,
Deutsch, Adly G Baseluos, Mar-
git Iklody, Peter A Bernstein,
Piyush K Partkh, Amelia S Raf-
fo, Vidyhdhar Bhide, Virgil C
Mihadash, Vincent D Daly.
SENIOR STOREKEEPER
PROM 690
Board of Education
1 Clarence A Mitchell, Joseph
Rubin, Peter A Pappas, David
Podolsky, Ruthard C Murphy,
Thomas J Colangelo, William
Lobell, Walter A Czajkowski,
Charles E Callaway.
TBTA
1 McKinley D Hightower, Pal-
mine J Papa
DEPT OF SOCIAL SERVICES
1 Leo Feldman.
ADDICTION SERVICES
AGENCY
1 Robert G Berry.
BLUEPRINTER 1160
7 Eligibles
1 Carmelo Ferro, Oscar Yan-
ofsky, Albert F Peppe, John
Carter, Peter Mastrota, Kiritku-
mar Patel, Ralph Aguayo Jr.
GENERAL SUPERINTENDENT
OF CONSTRUCTION
44 Bligibles
1 Thomas J McCafferty, An-
drew A Bellina, Joseph A Vente,
Robert J Blum, Harry Cokeley
Jr, Thomas G Arnot, Maxwell S
Wiederman, David Chin, Joseph
Santow, Francis R Pasqualino,
Louls Mollot, Ralph Piccirillo,
icholas Scinicariello, Eugene T
O'Connor, Murray Tive, Michae)
J Petrella, Frank J Mallia, Frank
C Levoct, Manuel Lopez, Char-
ies T McCaffery, Donald 8 Pit-
telli, Denis W Hickey.
26 S Francis Solleppi, Philip
Trigoboff, Jerry Galtuccl, Louls
Alleva, Frank L Johnson, Paul
J Deluccio, Marvin J Kennedy,
Edward A Bova, Laqueth Plem-
ing, Maurice B Green, Murray
L Coaden, Lars A Jacobsen, An-
drew Winter, Robert F Demeo,
James Andros, Charles J Silva.
Raymond N Palmer, Gilbert W
Tatshoff, Ignazio Rizo.
SENIOR BUYER 225
60 Eligibies
1 Mortimer Winter, Edward R
“ Herleth Jr, Jack Charnet, John
Freiman, Austin L Parm~, =e
er, Samuel Jaffe, Willlam J Seu-'
fert, David C Stone, William A
Raucher, William Burkhoff, Paul
Irving I White, Edward Turner,
Philip Friedman, Max Wilken-
feld, Marion S Krauthamer,
Phyllis M Bond, Evelyn Vanden-
heuvel, James V Lailsi, Isabel C.
Barko, Margaret M McKeon,
Prank B Corey, Irwin Bisom,
Dick Danieilo, Herman Samnick,
Thady P Mills, Ben Goodman.
51 Evelyn E Cartwright, Jesse
L Reese, William I Heller, Gilbert
Kaminsky, Anthony J
Edwin Welssman, Julius Hersh-
man, Lillian Schoenfeld, Joseph
Silberman, Michael J McPher-
son,
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR —
WELFARE 7669
37 Eligibles
1 Martin T Burdick, Carl P
Yanez, Prank Wexler, Vincent F
Norman, Gene Klein, Sam Bo-
garsky, Ann W Rosenhaft, Ray-
mond Schulman, Eric Reiner,
Doris O Highsmith, Betty WO
Bank, William S Tambeau, Ida B
Cohen, Richard T Downes, Na-
than Handlin, Sandy Y Lewts,
Leon Janchill, Rudolph S Fer-
rara, George W Moore, Julius G
Lavender, Ora M Kirkland,
Eleanor U Manning, James J {
McKeon, Torquato J Rango,
Anita Bloom.
26 Alfred Ocken, John P Mul~
hern, Ines C Monteverde, Helen
M Cascy, Thomas B Churgin,
Hyman Bogen, Martha Rosten,
Alice L Riddick, Catherine Hi@
fery, Pearl Rowe, Jack Ziporkis,
Jeanne H Flateau. 4q
AUDITOR OF ACCOUNTS
COMPTROLLER 1564 Prom ‘
4h
1 Abraham Preiss, Michael A
Lupe, Isidore Zayas, Harold
Senack
PERSONNEL EXAMINER
Dept, of Personnel
. T Ehlers, Linda
McDermott, Willa C Jurow, Joan
Moschides, Stephen Rosenberg.
Board of Education ....
1 Margaret V Johnson.
PROM 7590
SR. PERSONNEL EXAMINER
1 Lawrence Pishbein, Betty J
Pishau Bernice Symel, Nan-
netie C Lenkowitz, Richard
Gitlin, Frank J Amantia. Bri
A Jager, Carol R Wachter, John
H Becker, Mare H Sawyer, Cath-
erine Reilly, John R Hannigan,
Norma Aitchison, Gwendolyn
Lewis, Esther J Koenig, Lorianne
N Holden, Elaine J Siiodor, Al-
(Continued on Page 13)
CHAYKIN'S REVIEW, Inc.
1585 Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10036
Offers Coach Courses For The
N.Y.C. ACCOUNTANT EXAM
Each Wednesday Beginning Feb. 2, 1972,
6:30 P.M. to 9 P.M. and
N.Y.C. SENIOR ACCOUNTANT EXAM
Each Wednesday Beginning Feb. 9, 1972,
6:30 P.M, to 9
For further information call 581-4206 -7
A 25 pear Sucomstul Record of Training for Now York Cicy esame
$
N.Y.C. List Progress
SEPA oS at
department.
TITLE AND AGENCY
Sets SM-Special Mill P.Geneeal
following 10 the sppelaing nae -
LAST NO. REACHED
Aguila Aide (47-300) 190
Admin Asse ($8,800) 9559
exam 9559 (6-18-71) :
Admin Ase ($8,800) — HRA
de, ($8,800) — PRCA, 1 cacnacy — 8 cern Jem 6 prom
dmin Ast ($8,800) — TAD, 3 vacuncia —
a awe ie F"acancies” "14" ert, Fa
PL, WD, MSA. BE, DE
PL, WD, MSA, BIE, DE
‘WB, PL, WD, MSA, BHE, DE
OC es
suet “Architect 812,100), Grp. 6
cer, Jon $;, OC exam 1110 (12-23-70)
Am Chemise ($10,800) — ACA, DE, MSA, 1 vacancy — 15 cert, Jan
: "PRCA — "9 cere jae 5; OC
Blec Engr ($12,160), Grp 3 = jam
(122391) Ny i pes banc 15 cert, Ji 5 OC exam
Geologie ($12,100) — RWS, 2”y, = a
0239 G77) Beni et cic thd
Am Plan Bi 1 cert, Jan 10; OC cam
10; OC exam
10; OC exam
EDA," BiH, PL, HDA, ENF
Wuuannd oe Sou
cb dche
cert, den 6. OC
5 2 a
Cae Worker 188,300). Gap 5 BRR HBA BE HDA 36i" acancies” 7
Jan 6; SM exam 8025 (8-668) 110
Care Swoiee ($8,300) < DSS, HSA, DC, HDA, 261 vacancies —"T cere, Jan 6;
0099 455
Case Worker (300) — Dis a6i vacancies — 300 cert, jan 6; OC! exam
300
Gauthier, Housing Teller ($6,000) — TLE, 5 cies — a ena
Barge dl ) sal vacancies — 46 cert, Jan 6, am
yest ater "i cert, “Jan 6; OC “exam 0219
fs 32.7
ia 10; OC exam $105 (11-20-70) 180
Depa yaar (99.499) — C8 2 tcaactes Th Sern Jan 5; OC raid 7106
ma 104
“s 0) Grp TEAL vacancy Teer, Jan 6; prom’ exam
1
Br (814,00), Gep 2 — TA, -- i as
ESE Bano), Gap 1 "vacancy — 2 cert, jun 6; ‘prom exam
General Entrance 900) — MBA, "5 vacancies — 38 Cert, Jan J: OC
176
5 Secies "(95.900)" —" BiIE, “i vacancy — "20 cen,
OC exam 0001 (4-16-71) |. E Bustond es
General Entrance Stores Series ($5,800 HA — 31 cert, Jam 7; OC ean Nt
ey 170
($10,360), Grp" Pe a “out, Jam ly
OC eam
“Thy "OC tem
1 EAS PRCA, 1 vacuac
Jai ‘OC exam 9013 (4-27:
te Accountent co Ghee 512,000)" FAY
B631 (6-15-70)...
o
! $9,400, TA, 1
5-69)
p]
0083 (2-26-71)
@ Toit Coticce (Maries) ”($7/300) BDA T vacancy” 1 cere, jan 4;
a
7563 (7-30-71)
) iw HA, PL, CO, DK — 1
HA, PL, CO, DK — I
176" HAL PL, Co, DK 7
p iss Pi, 60, DK —T
199" "HA, PL, CO, DK —"2 cert,
(85,600). Gee Gi” "HHA PL GO, DK —"e
am ios? ae
Gp 2 ~ HA, PI, CO,
a Tost Vioné71)
er ($5,600), Grp 7 — HA PL, CO, DK "1 cert, jaw 7; OC
, DK ST
cert,
BET cere
(10-27-71)
ome Beis “Grp 9 HAL PL, cert, jan 7; OC
¢ :
5.600), Gep 13 — HA, PL, CO DK —Z cer, jan 7) OC
Yo) 01)
Seenographer ($5,600), Grp 17 — HA, Pi, CO, DK —
CULT-TL),
rapher (65,600), Gep 33H) Bi GO, BK" Y "cere, Yan
—)
ay iA, PL, Go DK
24 — HA, PLY, CO, DK — 3 cert, J
PE CO, DK 9 cere, Jaw
Y cert, Ja
"i057 Tugeot)
w (43,600). Grp 25 — HA.
COT cert, Jan 6 prom
RE Radiction Services. Ay
Gh teucatton; BP, ie
a ‘Gerk, Connell 6,
cs, Cy CUNY,
heaton’ “9h Commer
Bw
‘Compirolier;
Chay
Affairs;
eit, Jan 7;
cert, ‘Jan 7s
13” cert, Jan Fi
aH
36
1125
22
1
prom
arte c
id 8
exam
2
om
enogtapher ($5,600), Grp 18 — HA PL, CO, DK — 7 cert, Jam 7; OC
1037 (11-18-71) “Sinbiy 1
9 — HA, PL, GO, DK —"4 cert, Jan 7; OC exam
Sesogrepher (65) Grp 20 HA, PL, CO) DK — "1 cer, Jan 7; OC
exam 1057 titi as 1
er, Grp 21 HA, PLCO, DK — 5 cert, Jan 7; OC exam
10s? (1-2 i a 3
eobee, (95,600). Gep 21 — HA PE," 0O,"DK "3 "cere, Jan 7; OC exam
it
DK, District ‘Auorney,
jens Resiremend
School Custodian, Too
Nassau Office Jobs
Placed Open- Cont.
Only three titles have been
assigned to the continuous
filing class, a Nassau County
Civil Service Commission
spokesman recently informed
The Leader. Filing ts limited to
Nassau residents.
Stenographers being at $5,754
and clerk typists at $5,460, The
third title, school custodian, var-
fes in pay by school districts,
which are budgeted differently.
Persons wishing to take such
exams are advised to obtain
announcements and applications
at the Civil Service Commission,
140 Old Country Road, Mineola,
11501, or by forwarding #
stamped self-addressed legal size
envelope,
Requests for additional exam-
ination information may be
made by calling (516) 535-2511
Resid Needed
Nassau Beckons
Clerk-Typists
Clerically skilled personnel
are the object of a County-
wide hunt by the Nassau
Civil Service Commission,
Residence is required for both
openings, Clerk I and clerk-
typist,
Graduation from high school
or business school will suffice,
‘but a satisfactory equivalent of
schooling and experience will
also be fine. Pay scales show
candidates getting $5,453 to
start, and rising incrementally
to the $6,867 level after six years.
Written tests are conducted
periodically and cover questions
on verbal abilities, numerical
abilities and clerical skills. A
later performance test screens
applicants for the ability to
type at 35 wpm. For each part
of the exam, 75 percent is needed.
Prospective candidates can get
Exam Notice No. CR-4371 di-
rectly from the Commission at
140 Old Country Rd. Mineola,
LI, 11501 In writing, be sure to
enclose a stamped, self-addressed
large envelope for reply.
This Week’s
Key Answers
PROM. TO SK. BUYER, 695
Test Held June 12, 1971
‘The following final key ans-
wers, as adopted by the City
Civil Service Commission, These
appear in bold face.
1, Dj 2, ND; 3, C3 4, C; 5, D;
6, A; 7, B and/or 8, delete;
9, C; 10, D; 11, C; 1%, delete;
13, A; 14, B and/or C; 15, C;
16, D; 17, A and/or ©; 18, D;
19, B; 20, A; 21, C; 22, A; 23, A;
24, D; 25, delete,
26, C; 27, 28, A; 28, C;
30, B; 31, B; 32, C and/er D;
33, B; C; 35, D; 36, B; 37, C;
38, A; 10, D; 41, C; 42, B;
43, C; 5 A; 46, B; 47, C;
48, C;
60, C; 61,
65, C; 66, D; 07, delete; 68, de-
lete; 69, D; 70, B; 71 B; 72, A;
18, B; 74, D; 16, C.
76, B; 77, B; 78, B; 79, A;
; 84,
; 88,
90, B; 91, C 92, C; 93, B; 94. ©;
95, D; 96, B; 97, D; 98, B;
100, A.
TO HELP YOU PASS
GET THE ARCO STUDY BOOK
Accountant Auditor
Administrative Assistant Officer
Assessor Appreiser (Real Estote)
Attendant
Attorney
Auto Machinist
Auto Mechanic
Beginning Office Worker —
Beverage Contre! Invest.
Bookkeeper Account C!
ie & Yount: Officer —
jointainer — G:
Bus 0;
Complete Guide te C.5. Jobs
Computer Prog)
Const, Supy. & I
Correction Officer
General Entrance Series
General Test Pract. for 92 U.S. Jobs
H.S, Diploma Tests
e
Homestudy Course for C5.
How to get a lob Oversees
Meintainer Helper Growp B
Maintainer Helper G: D
Management & Administretion Qwizxer
Mechanical asin
Motor Vehicte
Motor Vehicle Operator
Notary Publi
Nurse (Pract
Ent
1 & Public Health)
ment Agent
Parole Officer
Personnel Assistant
Pharmacists License T:
ind Director — Recreation Leader
‘ost Office Clerk Carrier —_ ot
st Office Motor Vehicle Operotor 4.07
Preliminary Practice for the H.S. Equivolency Diploma Test 4.00
Principal Clerk-Steno 5.99
Wrehetien & Peres Offer
Professional Career Tests N.Y.S. ae
Professional Traince Admin, Aide —
fee ts iene or
Railroad Clerk 4.00
Real Estate Manoger —
Staff Attendont
Stationary Eng. & euones EE AEDES, *
Storel Stockm 4.00
Supervision ‘Game 5.00
Transit Patrolman 4.00
Contains Previous Questions and Answers and
Other Suitable Study Material for Coming Exams
ORDER DIRECT — MAIL COUPON
0c for 24 hewrs special delivery
LEADER BOOK STORE
11 Warren St., New York, N.Y, 10007
Please send me———coples ef books checked above,
Lenciose check or m
y order for $_____,
Name; siseccvsercseccerccccnvsesccssecnsvecencececes?
Address . on
City scccscesncrecsrecsenrereces SOM seeccceceecese
Be sure to include 7% Seles Tox
SOLANGS TAD
“‘“ugdval
Aepean yp,
ZLOL ‘BI Aanuel
, January 18, 1972
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, T:
February City Exam Filing
Administrative Associate —
Exam No. 0706, to be given April
8; 1,500 candidates expected;
Promotional.
Administrative Claim Examin-
er—Exam No. 1645, to be given
April 18; 20 candidates expected;
Promotional,
Administrative Manager —
Exam No, 1656, to be given April
8; 150 candidates expected; pro-
motional.
Assistant Administrator of
Youth Services—Exam No. 1604,
to be given March 7; 28 candi-
dates expected; promotional.
Assistant Supervisor, Stores,
Materials, Supplies—Exam No.
1532, to be given April 7; 8 can-
didates expected; promotional.
Bus Maintainer, Group B—
Exam No, 1535, to be given April
15; 150 candidates expected;
promotional.
Clock Repairer — Exam No.
1146, to be given March 14; 50
candidates expected; open com-
petitive.
Electronic Equipment Ma{n-
talner—Exam No. 1684, to be
given April 19; 20 candidates ex-
pected; promotional.
Marble Setter — Exam No.
1149, to be given March 20; 50
candidates expected; open com-
petitive.
Principal Chief Dieticlan —
Exam No, 1663, to be given
March 4; 2 candidates expected;
Promotional.
Principal Engineering Techni-
clan—Exam No. 1587, to be given
March 25; 70 candidates expect-
ed; promotional.
Principal Purchase Inspector—
Exam No. 7615, to be given
March 21; 25 candidates expect-
ed; promotional.
Principal Storekeeper — Exam
No. 0694, to be given April 12; 15
candidates expected; promotion-
al.
Senior Attorney — Exam No.
1611, to be given May 13; 100
candidates expected; promotion-
al.
Senior Chemist, Toxicology —
Exam No, 1033, to be given
March 23; 40 candidates expect-
ed; open competitive.
Senior Consultant, Early
Childhood Educatton—Exam No.
0688, to be given April 25; 25
candidates expected; promotion-
al.
Senlor Consumer Affairs In-
spector—Exam No. 7610, to be
given June 10; 150 candidates
expected; promotional.
Senior Engineering Technician
—Exam No. 1590, to be given
March 25; 50 candidates expect-
ed; promotional
Senlor Investigator—Exam No.
Toe tLe arta blames aca ca can -
THE NEWS THAT’S HAPPENING TO YOU =
® MONEY SAVING IDEAS
* HEALTH HINTS
* NEW PRODUCTS
* HOUSEHOLD HINTS
* BACKGROUND NEWS
° T.V. CALENDAR
Plus
20 PAGES OF COLOR COMICS
ON YOUR NEWSSTAND
NEW YORK
COLUMN
E.ca0 eom a uANG UAH MORHHNUCHNMORUNHNNNANANENMANRNN
i
1681, to be given April 28; 50
candidates expected; promotion-
al
Senior Psychologist — Exam
No. 1670, to be given March 24;
7 candidates expected; promo-
tional,
Senior Purchase Inspector —
Exam No. 7613, to be given May
6; 150 candidates expected;
promotional,
Senior Statisticlan—Exam No.
1601, to be given April 11; 30
candidates expected; promotion-
al,
Senior Telephone Operator —
Exam No. 1571, to be given April
1; 250 candidates expected; pro-
motional.
Senior Water Use Inspector—
Exam No. 1619, to be given
March 25; 100 candidates ex-
pected; promotional.
Supervising Claim Examiner—
Exam No. 1682, to be given April
19; 20 candidates expected; pro-
motional.
Structure Maintainer, Group
B—Exam No. 1544, to be given
April 10; 250 candidates expect-
ed; promotional
Supervising Ferry Agent —
Exam No. 1602, to be given April
11; 40 candidates expected; pro-
motional,
Supervising Housing Consul-
tant—Exam No. 1100, to be given
April 4; 12 candidates expected;
open competitive.
Supervising Institutional In-
spector—Exam No. 1672, to be
given March 21; 5 candidates ex-
pected; promotional.
Supervisor of Bullding Custo-
dians — Exam No. 1618, to be
given March 25; 20 candidates
expected; promotional.
Supervisor, Structures — Exam
No. 1555, to be given April 12;
10 candidates expected; promo-
tional.
Supervisor, Track—Exam No.
1654, to be given April 12; 21
candidates expected; promotion-
al.
‘Trackman—Exam No. 1561, to
be given April 8; 2,000 candi-
dates expected; promotional,
In the January 11th issue of THE NEWS the entire double
truck or center fold was given over to the rescue of a cat.
Now that may strike some people funny but actually it wae
beautiful. Crowds as far as the eye could see .
winged, drowned by hose lines
and wobbly with smoke polson-
ing, teetering on a third floor
ledge, suddenly the mob ts heard
to cry for the animal's rescue.
Ladder 4 wastes no time kicking
off their aerial and Lt, Caesar
Sanservero scurries up and gets
the cat... the crowd roars It's
approval and all's well that ends
well except the cat now has
elght lives instead of nine. . .
and the look on the face of the
cat's owner tells a terrific story
all by itself.
The photos were taken by
Keith Torrie whose father was
& great Dally News photograph-
er himself and also a very good
(rlend to the firefighter. George
Torrie was also one of the finest,
kindest and most considerate
men I have ever known. I wasn't
the only one around the city
room at the News who had red
eyes the day George Torrie died.
Nice work and good luck Kelth
Torrie, You are filling a great
pair of shoes very well indeed!
Of late I have been having
an awful lot of trouble with re-
ception on my Regency Monitor
Scanner. In fact the other day
I was on my way out to see the
guy who sold it to me with the
intention of putting a Halligan
Tool through his thick skull
when I heard the Bronx tell a
Truck company that transmis-
sions in the Bronx were all
broken up and very poor because
of tremendous Interference.
I should imagine that those
communications people who at
the top today dind it pretty dif-
ficult to plan for the needs of
the system 20 years hence, The
people of yesteryear cannot be
blamed for thelr obvious inabil-
ity to foresee the tremendous de-
mands which future would hold
and which are a great source of
Areport of limitations on natural gas supply.
To avoid what could become a
serious gas supply problem, the
New York State Public Service
Commission has ordered all g)
ulllities in the State to put some
limits on the sale of gas. Gas for one
, .
restricted, but for many other uses
Itle.
Con Edison's existing contracts for
natural gas and our provision for
future supplementary gas supplies
were sufficient to meet customer
needs Including normal load growth,
Unfortunately three of four suppliers
presently are unable to fulfill existing
contracts in their entirety. Our
principal supplier has curtailed
deliveries by an average 10 per cent,
a. condition that will last through 1972
and possibly longer.
However, we expect tobe
continue to serve our customers.
There is some seasonal flexibility to
the curtailment on gas from our
suppliers. We will work closely with
them utmost use of
available storage capacity.
The main points of the PSC Order as
they affect our gas customers:
these:
1. New and existing one and
two-family homes may continue to
use gas as required for any purpose.
2. Existing apartment buildings may
use gas as required for cooking and
water ting. Such buildings now
using gas for other purposes may
continue to do 80.
3. New apartment bulidings may use
gas as required for cooking and
water heating. However, gas for
other uses such as space heating Is
restricted except where bulldings
have 100 per cent standby facilities
capable of using an alternative tuel
or are individually metered and the
gas is utilized in a furnace supplying
no more than two residential units,
4. New restaurants may use gas for
the preparation of food.
5. Existing commercial customers
using less than 12,000,000 cubic feet
of gas a year are limited to 120
per cent of thelr highest gas use
In any of the past three years, or
12,000,000 cubic feet, whichever le
less.
6. All customers may continue to
for any purpose
100 per cent
facilities to burn an
There are certain other restrictions
on the use of gas. Before you spend
9
make sure your
Intended use of gas is allowable
under the PSC Order. Owners of one
and two-family residences, of eae!
need not check—the:
limitations on their use of td
These restrictions are to remain In
effect for one year, or until further
notice from the Commission.
Con Edison and Its suppliers are
committed to expanding the gas
supply as quickly as possible,
Meantime, we ask you to use gas
wisely and not wastefully—even
when gas Is In abundant supply,
It’s wise to conserve all energy.
. . Suddenly the cat,
difficulty today. However, know- @
ihe now that such difficulties
exist, and falling to find funds
to correct the inequities is in-
excusable.
‘The strain and tension under
which the dispatchers work are
bad enough without subjecting
them to ¢urther frustration due
in large part to the unwilling-
ness of Father Knickerbocker te
view the matter objectively,
If the City Fathers insist upon
trumpeting this disgusting bit @
about increased productivity, I
think this should be s two-
edged sword which ought to ap-
ply to them as well, especially
when, after having been weighed
in the balance, they have been
found so woefully wanting.
I’m sure that the Fire De-
Partment people have sought the
needed funds. Certainly the Com~
misioner and his communications
people know of the need and, if
the funds were available, they
would be put to work properly. e
The blame for the situation to-
day therefore must be placed at
the door of Insensitive individ-
uals who fancy themselves ae
keepers of the purse strings and
who, with every tug at such
strings invite disaster through
ignorance,
eee
The other day in Staten Is-
land, a 20 year old “yoot" set
a bed on fire and then pulling
a pistol, threatened to shoot hie @
mother who called the cops.
Spotting the smoke, the cops
called the Fire Department. Be-
fore long, the rigs had been
placed at each end of the block
ready to move !n, Battalion Chief
Moretta of the 22nd, Licutenans
Beyhl of Engine 156 and Fire-
man Kohn of 86 Truck were
fitted with flack vests and, even
as the “yoot" was seen at an
attic window with the gun, they
moved in with an inch and a @
quarter line and went to the
second floor and hit the fire.
They accepted the danger as
“part of the job" as all self
respecting firefighters do day
after day. Later, when the “yoot"
was subdued, his gun proved to
be a toy. The beads of sweat
and the skipped heart beats of
the three mentioned here were
however quite genuine and un-
derstandably so. Good show, gen-
tlemen . . . congratulations!
SRORC
FIREFIGHTERS FIGHT FIRES
«+. NOT PEOPLE
Civil Engineering
Exams Postponed
Hopefuls for three State poal~
dons In transportation and civil
engineering will have another
few weeks to file, I was an-
nounced by the New York State e
Dept. of Civil Service, Candi-
dates for principal olvil engineer
(34-679), transportation pro-
gram administrator, New York
1972, file applications.
The Job Market
By BARRY LEE COYNE
A LISTING OF NON-CIVIL SERVICE JOBS AVAILABLE
THROUGH THE NEW YORK STATE EMPLOYMENT SERVICE
In Queens an experienced
Planer is wanted. Must be able
‘0 set up and operate planers,
and read blueprints, The pay is
@ #3. an hour . . . Fully experi~
enced Roofers fre also wanted
at $3.75 to $5.00 an hour, de-
pending on experience . . . The
demand for Taxi Drivers con-
tinues at $140 a week, Must
have a chauffeur’s Moense and
one year of driving experience
.,. Also wanted fs a Foreman
to supervise woodworking op-
erators. Must have heavy ex-
perience in woodworking and
mupervising ability. The pay is
Osis a week... There is an-
other interesting job for Maln-
tenance Mechanic, Must be ex-
perlenced and know how to do
mechanical and electrical re-
pairs, and read schematics and
blueprints. The pay 1s $2.75 to
%4.50 an hour, depending on ex-
perience . . . Apply at the
Queens Industrial Office, 42-15
Crescent St., Long Island City.
There are openings in the
@Apparel Industries Office in
Manhattan. Sewing Machine Op-
erators to work on single or
leather goods or shoes accept-
able. The pay range ds from $70
to $150 & week. Piece work and
are Sample Stitchers to work
with designers or patternmakers
in the production of the original
. Merrow Machine
Operators with factory experi-
@ence on power machines used in
making polo shirts or sweaters
and other knitted garments can
fill jobs paying from $80 to $95
® week... Apply at the Man-
hattan Apparel Industries Of-
flee, 238 West 35th St. Man-
battan.
Im the Professional field M-
eensed Medical Lab Technicians
ami Technologists with a New
York City Locense are wanted.
range ts from $130 to $200 a
who have graduated from an sc-
ceptable school and have a New
York State Moense can fill posi-
téons paying from $9,000 to
$15,000 . . . There are numerous
attractive openings for Social
Case Workers with # Master's
Degree in social work plus one
@7esr of experience. The begin-
ning salary Js $10,000 a year, and
higher salaries are offered for
additional experience... X-Ray
Technicians with a New York
Biate lcense are wanted for Jobs
paying $150 to $220 plus a week
.»» Apply at the Professtonal
Placement Center, 444 Madison
Ave., Manhattan.
‘There are job openings tn the
commercial field, for example,
Accounting Clerks with a knowl-
edge of typing. Some college ac-
counting credits are preferred
for these jobs paying from $115
te $150 & week... There are
openings for Clerk Typists
able to type 35 to 40 words per
minute accurately, These jobs
are in many fields and locations
and pay $100 to $125 a week...
Law firms are looking for Legal
Stenographers and Secretaries
with skills of 100 words per
minute and 50 words in typing
on an electric typewriter. These
jobs call for heavy stenography
from one or more lawyers and
can be filled by those with or
without legal experience. The pay
range is $135 to $185 a week
depending on ability . Biller
‘Typists who are good at figures
and can type 36 words per min-
ute with accuracy are needed in
all industries and locations, The
pay range is from $100 to $126 a
week .. . Pull Charge Bookkeep-
ers with thorough experience in
all phases through general lede~
er and trial balance are wanted
for jobs paying $150 to $200 a
week, Some openings without
general ledger at the lower sal-
aries ., . Apply at the Office
Personnel Placement Center, 575
Lexington Ave, Manhattan.
‘There are openings with New
York State Government for
Hearing Reporters able to take
dictation at 175 words per min-
ute, type 40 words per minute
and must have own stenotype
machine. These are Civil Service
positions with generous fringe
benefits. The annual salary is
$9,901 a year. Applicanta should
apply to the Sth floor of the
Office Personnel Placement, New
York City,
MAMA To Hear
Will Host
Pension Speaker
‘The Municipal Assn. for Man-
agement and Administration will
hold its next meeting on Tues-
day, Jan. 25 at 6 p.m. in room
401 of 220 Church St., Manhat-
tan.
‘The speaker will be Arthur C.
Van Houten, secretary of the
Retirement System in the Bur-
eau of Retirement and Pensions,
who will discuss “Pensions from
® Management viewpoint.”
All City employees are invited
to attend.
LEGAL NOTICE
COURT OF THE STATE
bf
£8 fe
af
other
fl
*
558
ites
2
vs
treat j
again by
mig ho "York 10036,
dene,
Deceaber, ‘sa dasett
This Week’s City Eligible List
(Continued from Page 10)
fred R Abbatiello, Barry E Smil-
ey, Carol A Gawlowtez.
ADMIN PERSONNEL EXAM
0623 PROM
Dept. of Personnel
16 Eligibles
1 Philip G Segal, Jeffrey S
Kahn, Daniel B Lebow, Phyllis
Cohen, Herbert L White, Mor-
ris B Shiechel, Morris I Naham,
Richard T Walsh, Leonard Y¥
Rosenberg, Sigmund Hoffman,
Edward Scheinkman, Robert H
Brophy Jr, Barbara A Romann,
Sol Buchman, Margaret R Jor-
dan, Helene R Willingham
SR PERSONNEL EXAMINER
9 Eligibles
1 Morris I Naham, Max Fiks,
Bernard J Phillips, Ethel T Mos-
koviz, Judith A Yoepp, Lynne D
Resnick, Catherine Reilly, Frank
J Amantia, Alice R Levy.
PERSONNEL EXAMINER 1011
1 Ira 8 Greinsky, Albert M
Gundersheimer, Winifred L
Brown, Joan Moschioes, Michael
G Davies, Joan O’Oheny, Martin
A Cohen, Linda M McDermott,
Carl F Sasiow, Morris I Nanam,
Eli Gottlieb,
ASSISTANT PERSONNEL
EXAMINER
Personnel Dept.
32 Eligibles
1 Richard L Chazen, Albert
M Gundershelmer, Charles J
Herzberg, Michael G Davies,
Fred M Benson, Cass 8 Weil,
John Angrilli, Denham T Ehlers,
Carl F Saslow, Rona H Wilson,
Charles S Wachter, Hugh G
Peach, Brenda E Spiegel, Linda
L Beach, Howard Pikoff, Allan
P Altman, Elizabeth Kearney,
Robert A Marvin, George E
Spontak, Victor 8 Vitale, Pat-
rica M Gaj, Richard Cooper,
Naomi C Wurzburger, Goodman
L Klang, Richard A Meyer, Deb-
orah A Doherty, Alan J Hiss,
David A Levitsky, Jeffrey Doug-
las, Rosemarie Bello, Alice H
Oriikoff, Pearl Mintzer.
‘TA General Admin
1 Mark B Levy.
Model Cities Comm
1 Joan Klonsky.
Board of Education
2 Eligibles
1 Charlotte Holt,
Decanio.
Board of Education
1 Jules S Feldman, Burton N
Scholl.
Dept of Social Services
1 Ralph Lichtenstein.
Collective Bargaining
1 David M Tuckerman.
H ited M.
& Live
OVERSEAS
HIGH PAY, BONUSES, NO TAXES
For More Information
Marie L
CALL (212) 683-5907
wo YU ei ERE AS NDSa
"LOSE WITH LINDSAY"
bumper
stickers
2 for $2.00 or $1.00 ea,
A&B Products - Lt
P.O, Box 34049
Bethesda, Md. 20034
nity
SMALL Heese + part or full
time, You own your owe Lays
lice from retirees welcome,
information call (212) Feats,
5:30 t@ 6:30 & 10 w 11:}0
Furniture For Rent
RENT FURNITURE
HOME OR APARTMENT
Comping Lisiew $500
eBiiese
sont’ TERMS AVAILABLE
ALBANY-SHERMAN
FURNITURE RENTAL
Re 9% Latham, N.Y, 518-784-5050
Transportation
1 Robert P Jenn.
'TA General Admin
1 Paul Helter.
Collective Bargaining
1 Eligible
1 Marolyn 8 Davenport.
REAL ESTATE VALUES
ee eT TIT MLLLERLILIG LULL LAUT M TL T
CAMBRIA HTS VIC
$25,900
7-ROOM HOUSE
Exceptions! home oa, a beausiful
quiet street.
shopping center, Howes
wi 1 block
subyay Hear living | room, fait
"i ining room, kitchen plu
shed OR ches ping
payment terms can be arranged,
‘Ask for Mr. Rogers.
ST. ALBANS
$29,990
EXCEPTIONAL VALUE
This Colonial
house has every:
i
ZLOL “BL ArenUEs *<epsony “YaGVAT AOIANAS TIAD
LAURELTON Fy
$34,990 E
ENGLISH TUDOR BRICK =
Yacooe = move right i si 2
: E
E
QUEENS VILLAGE
$30,990
ALL BRICK
This beautiful 9%yeurold house i
thing! Ic is completely decoraced | really exquisite, Cin be used as
rooms, $ lurge bedrooms, | Mother/Daughter. It has 2 kitchens
imodern streamfined new kitchen, | 4 bed Besse living room, full-
SZ ser Hollywood color, tile beh, sized dining room, 2 auto
exceptional basement. 20. ft tv macic mis Heat and loads of extras
Z room, full-sized dieing room, included. House is vacant
& xcaped crounds. Gl '$1.500' down | can move right in!’ Take over oe
needed. “Ask for Mr, Fredericks. | eximing morugnge. Ask for Mr. Soto,
E BUTTERLY & GREEN
=
5 168-25 Hillside Avenue JA 6-6300
Sntonuynmsvrvvncactngneect neste eA
183 ST, EAST OF CONCOURSE
TIEBOUT TOWERS
2332 Tiebout Ave. New Bidg
244 roams, $195
3% mms, $235, 4/2 rms, $275
Renting offc apt 38 or 2A;
584-9754
BRONX SPECIAL
NYU VICINITY
Detached 2 fam (6 & 4 rms). 50x10
lot; overlooking the water. Veverans
$2000 dow: ‘No Closing Fea
FULL POSSESSION AT CLOSING
FIRST-MET REALTY
4375 WHITE PLAINS ROAD
324-7200
Homes For Sale - Queen
BIMSTON REALTY
FREE
MAILING LIST
Call right now and we will place
your same on our free mailing list
Of best buyt, plus other belpful
information, We have more than 50
Ucemsed real estate taleimen te serve
Bimston Realty
170-24 Hillside Ave., Jamaica
523-4594
FLORIDA
MOVING TO
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COMPARE OUR COST
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WRITE—
Southern Transfer
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St. Petersburg,
FLORIDA 33733
Phone 862-8249
CAMBRIA HEIGHTS
Price reduced for
All brick 615 em 3 becom \olatial
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tied bedemn 23° livees, “banquet
diorm —ulera eat-in Kitch,
2,008 , col tla bath, sumptuous
Bement, overs gatone, beanti-
ful garden plot oa quict residential
All maloe. appliances ‘Tncladed.
Low dowa A
morgane’ arranged. 01 OF PHA
LONG ISLAND HOMES
168-12 Hillside Ave. Jam. RE 9-7500
et enaaiceicieeccmnaeetiadaie
CAMBRIA HTS $29,990
BRICK MOTHR-DAUGHR
6 tm duplex, 3 bedrms plus fnish'd
basme apt, Garage. Modern, Many
extens,
QUEENS VILLG — $38,500 |
5 BEDRM CUSTOM HOUSE |
Det bek on oversiaed lor, 5 bedems|
2 baths, fim beme, gar. Reduced for
quick sale,
LAURELTON $38,500
LEGAL 2-FAM COLNL
Det Span Stucco 5 rm & bad
bamt for owner, PLUS 3-rm income
ape Gar. Lge landscp toe
CALL ANYTIME POR APPT.
170-13 Hillside Ave, Jamaica
OL 8-7510
House For Sale - Long Island
LEVITTOWN VIC. = 3 bedrm
0. — $9,790 taki
‘OC
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NEW FALL Cotalog, aod Hundreds
ot Real Busines Bar
‘AMT “oy E prices Dahl Keaty.
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Bulk Acreage — Retirement Homes
Business im the TriState Ares
GOLDMAN AGENCY BRALTORS
#0 Fike Port Jervis, NE (814) S50-0888
FLORIDA
JOBS
FLORIDA JOBS? Federal,
County, City. Floride Civ
Bulletin, Subscription $3 year - 8
faves,
P.O. Box 046 L,
N, Miami, Fla, 23/61,
“u
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, January 18, 1972
covenenyy
In Valley Stream Schools
Custodial Employees Will
Vote For Representation
(Special To The Leader)
VALLEY STREAM — The Civil Service Employees Assn.,
representing the majority of custodial employees in the
Valley Stream (L.I) school system, will defend its status
as official representative in an election there next week.
‘The election, which will be
held on Jan. 24 and 25, pits CSEA
against Local 100, SEIU.
Custodians and head custo-
dians of District No. 1 may vote
Monday, Jan. 24, from 3 to 4:30
pm. at the Memorial High
School Cafeteria,
District No, 24 custodians may
vote Tuesday, Jan. 25, from 3
Gancel Four Titles
Formerly Announced
Four State Job titles formerly
open for continuous recruitment
have been cancelled, according
to the New York State Depart-
ment of Civil Service.
‘The cancelled titles are senlor
computer programmer (30-234),
Institution teacher (20-335), nar-
cotic correction officer, femaic
(20-125) and narcotic correction
officer, male (20-126)
to 4 pm, at the Willlam Buck
School,
Dr. Theodore C. Wenzl, state-
wide president of CSEA, sald he
felt “very confident that we
will win in the Valley Stream
school districts. CSEA has done
an outstanding job for our peo-
ple there, and they know that
“Local 100 Is using very dis-
ruptive tactics in thelr attempt
to unseat us,” Wenzl continued.
“They know they can’t beat us
on the basis of our record. Split-
ting the custodians and head
custodians in District No. 1 into
two units, for example, was
really an attempt to divide the
‘anks. The employees have al-
ways been served very well as
one unit, and everybody, includ-
ing Local 100, knows that. They
Just hope that by splitting up the
unit, they will sap some of
CSEA's strength. It’s not going
to work."
To Add Funds For Mental Hygiene
(Continued from Page 1)
Southern Conference area held
& press conference in Newburgh
on hospital conditions.
The pressure on the State gov-
ernment to alleviate the night-
mare aspects of patient care
came to a head last week, and
one offictal conceded privately
that the increased intensity of
criticism im recent weeks
brought the issue to a head
produced the increased allotment
of funds for the Department.
A tour of Willowbrook State
Hospital conducted by Assembly-
man Andrew Stein (D.-Manhat-
tan) was covered by ABC tele-
vision in New York City last
week, and the sight of patients
who were unable to take care
of themselves, lying in corridors
and on stairways because of an
insufficient work force, caused
a furor in the news media, Other
aspects of the Mental Hygiene
problem were also aired on addl-
tonal telecasts,
Governor's Word Given
Another angle to the Gover-
nor’s announcement of a semt-
thaw in the departmental freeze
fs that %& keeps Rockefeller's
word to Assembly Minority Lead-
er Stanley Stelngut that he
would do something about Men-
tal Hygiene or, at a minimum,
mot cut any funds from the de-
partmental budget. The Gover.
nor made the pledge in return
for Democratic support for his
fiseal program.
Assemblyman Martin Ginsberg
(D.-Long Island), GOP chairman
of the Assembly Health Commit-
tee, has already indicated he was
more than willing to go along
with the budget proposals. How-
ever, the reaction of the full Aa-
sembly and Senate to the Gov-
ernor’s fiscal plan will not be
kcown until later in the session.
Insured On Injuries
Nearly 2,7 million workers and
thelr families collect monthly
aoclal security disability benefits
folaling $3 billion « year,
Dr. Theodore C, Wenzl, presi-
dent of the Civil Service Employ-
ees Assn, only two weeks ago
had called upon the Governor to
‘ablish humane priorities” in
lotting hudget funds, and
greeted the news of the flexibil-
ity tn solving some of the urgent
problems in Mental Hygiene with
considerable enthusiasm.
“I am delighted to see our
long battle result in recognition
of our position concerning the
of this State's most un-
ate citizens and the dedi-
fortun
cated people who take care of
them," he declared,
Wenzl withheld judgement,
however, on whether or not the
mies would be sufficient to
do the job. “We will just have
t walt and see how the money
ls spent, and trust that it will
be spent wisely,” he sald.
He also noted that “despite
the fact that a positive move-
ment has t sen made, at last, In
this area, {t must still be viewed
in the overall picture of State
working conditions. The solution
of a major problem in one area
cannot be used for avoiding ac-
tion in other areas where the
pressures of State workers, al-
though different, are equally
strong."
Ryan Reappointed
‘The Governor has reappoint-
ed William E. Ryan, of Rockville
Center, to the unsalaried post
as member and chairman of the
Counc! of the State Maritime
College at Fort Schuyler, His
term runs to July 1, 1960.
Impasse In
Members of the joint legislative-political action committee of the Civ
Employees Assn. were told by chairman Thomas McDonough that
mediate problem tonight is to set up a responsible network of people through-
out the State.” Among those attending the meeting were, from left, George
Butler, Boris Kramarchyk, Vincent Rubano, Delbert Langstaff, John Mrocz-
kowsli and Albert D'Antoni.
vem ere &
> -
Also participating in the Jan. 12 meeting at the Hyatt House Motel in Albany
were, Rite left, Vito tieriace Andrew Placito, Olive Allen, Donald Blake,
Associate counsel Jack Rice, left, brings the committee up to aate on progress
regarding voting records of legislators.Listening to his report are counsel sec-
retary Linda Rosa, Harry Ginsberg, Stephen Stouter, John Clark and CSEA
public relations director Joseph Roulier.
Service
“The im-
Mobile Unit Visits
Binghamton Chaplers
(Continued from Page 3)
quently signs up new members
during its two-week conference
tours throughout the State,
“The unit's presence serves to
let the employee know that help
is always available,” Hannan
said, He added that the consen-
sus around headquarters is that
the unlt, In terms of services
performed in behalf of CSEA
members everywhere, has more
than justified the organization's
investment in its creation.
Binghamton State Hospital
CSEA chapter president Leo
Welngartner, who has just re-
turned to Binghamton from con-
tract negotiations in Albany,
said chapter first vice-president
Andrew Lebwohl and state field
representative Modrzcjewski re-
ported a very favorable turnout
during the unit's visit to the
hospital grounds last week,
‘The unit ls scheduled to move
Into the Southern Conference
area at the end of ita swing
through the Central Conference
zone.
Bargaining
(Continued from Page 1)
men and santtationmen in New York,
CSEA and the State will attempt to select a mediator
acceptable to both sides,
Wenzl said his union also will file an Improper practice
charge with the State Public Employment Relations Board,
“because the State is refusing to negotiate, and Is acting
im bad faith.”
State And County Eligibles
SR CLERK TYPIST
Bannan E Cheektowaga...
Beanett Y Kenmore i
Lestieri M Cheektowaga.
Purtill M West Senoce .
ii
&
x
9
4
3
z
Plesur C 3
10 Schulz M Wes Seneca
Li Williams M Buffalo
12 Malek M Buen .......
13 Fridmana M West Seneca
14 Cummins $ West Seneca .
13 Fleming L West Sencca
Damico L West Seneca
Gor
Mugle J. Hamburg 3
25 Trewer B Wee Sencca iT 2
ASST DIR OF Diy OF TREASU
1 Bouchard R_ Watervliet 9.9
2 Noleux J Albany Wn)
3 O'Donnell J Latham 75.0
SUPVG CONSTR SAFETY INSPC
L Hanover P Tonawanda concn ITA
2 Swamoa R Seauen be
3 Eckhart N Congers
4 Bonfiglio J Bkiya ....
4 Butler G Eadicote
Ci sy eg
7 Mactla
8 Barooe
9 Askerman KR Baldwinevil
ASSOC CONSTR SAPETY
1 Sullivan A Margaretvil
Aubure
INSPC
D_ Niverville
wan W 5 Tonawanda ...
er W Middletown
is § Cortland
19 Murphy J ‘Troy
25 Terwilliger H FE soni
26 Badger L Utica
7 McCarthy JV:
Andenien K Honeoye
Kipp D Niverville
Race J Nurrowsburg
Hawal Wo Medina .
Mootaia PF Woodwock
6 Witney J Middlecown
Wood W Syracuse.
Cugno KR Statea Is
Rhoads $ Cortland
Ryan J Lyon Mc ......
Brennan J NY
Badger L Utica
G Brentwood
V Jamescown
L Lyons...
16 Meyee E Dresden
17 Hutchens H Livngsca Mar
18 Terwilliger H Middiecowa
19 Moato G Newark ......
20 Barber J Albany
21 Coon R Batavia...
22 Ablers H Orangeburg
23 Lanes R Wantagh
26 Taxes PF Buifalo
27 Doo J Delmar
28 Murphy J Troy”...
29 ee J Valatle
it tackere We ‘Tonawanda ...
32 Dorney W Wellsville
33 Faillace T Mamaroneck
34 Corb B Bklya
tend
Hartford
38 Kelder B Olive Beidye
39 Wad
40 Richenla
He Syracuse
ODUCTION MICE SUPYR
1 Chemaa $ Derby. ....
TRAPFIC AND PARK CAPTAIN
1 Jaeger os
Is Your Name Here?
*Unclaimed Checks Waiting
For Many City Employees
Several dozen present and former City employees have
already claimed the money owed them for checks they ne-
glected to pick up, through following the weekly listing of
names in The Leader. If you find your name below, the City
owes you at least $75 in back
pay, vacation pay, uniform al-
lowances, etc.
This is The Leader's tenth
such listing, covering the period
of deposit of unclaimed checks
with the Pinance Administra-
tion's Division of Refunds from
Sept. 8, 1970 through Sept. 1
1970. Because of the bookkeeping
system of the Division of Re-
funds, it ts necessary to report
this information when filing for
an unclaimed check.
@ Claimants must go their em-
ploying agency, the abbreviation
of which is listed after each
name, The process of auditing
and drawing the check then
takes about four weeks, after
which the check is mailed to the
claimant.
Some of the employees lasted
may be deceased, in which case
their beneficiaries may make
claim by presenting a Surrogate'’s
Court order or a paid-in-full fu-
@rerat bin.
JB Adlersberg, HD; J Ahrens,
HD; B Alcantara, HD; R B Al-
len, HD; C ¥ Allick, HD; E F
Alston, HD; C A Ambrose, HD;
R Anderson, PD; A Andrews,
PD; T M Angelucel, HD; J E
Banta, FD; E M Baynes, HD;
J J Brosnan, PD; E Brown, HD;
G Brown, HD; H W Brown,
EPA; ML Buncamper, HD; R J
Burgess, PD; R V Burke, MA;
WL C Burrascano, PD.
C Bynoe, HD; K Byrd, HD; C
Caban, HD; R Caesar, HD; M
Campbell, HD; A C Capece, HD;
W R Capers, PD; P J Casey,
SC; H P Cavanaugh, EPA; L V
Cervinl, HD; H C Chambers
HD; J Shinea, HD; M Clark,
HD; J M Conner, HD; J Coper-
sito, PD; B Craig, HD; E E Crus,
PW; V M Cruz, HD; K M Cupl-
dore, HD; W D Daly, PD.
@ ©™M Daniels, PD; J Darlington,
EPA; L R Daugherty, HD; D
Deglarde, HD; E J Dellibovi, PD;
N 8 Destmone, EPA; J M Distef-
ano, PD; H G Downes, HD; J A
Durante, HD; C L Davis, HD;
E Edelman, PD; B Edwards, HD.
8 Esposito, FD; M E Fanning,
HD; N Farino, EPA; Q Feder-
man, BD; E T Pitzgerald, HD;
BJ Flanagan, EPA; E M Plem-
ing, HD; J R Folino, PD.
D Praser, HC; M P Fratangelo,
; AP Freeman, PD; J Pried-
der, HD; N M Puentes, HD;
J Gallo, EPA; V Garcia, HD; R
Garson, HD; M Gerber, PD; A
Gittens, HD; J H Glatwer, PD;
D Glavin, HD; T Gonzales, HD;
H Graham, HD; D Green, HD;
D V Hardison, HD; J J Harlow,
‘uusviopuiienianisnniaeiectaeeanennae appa
Dept. Codes
lic Adminincravor, N.Y. Cow
D, Board of
of ‘Transportation;
OC, Ciey College; CO, Comperelier, CM,
Gor Magistrace’s Court; DE, Department
of Education; DP, Depariment of Parks;
BDA, Economic Development Adminiatra-
thom, EPA, Enviroamencal Protection As
ministration; FD, Vice Deparcmeng, MC,
Munier € HD, Health Deparrmens;
HDA, Housing and Development Admin
imsation: Kl, Kingrborough Community
College; KN, County Clerk, N.Y. County;
LD, Law Dept; MA Maroraling; MC,
Municipal Courts,
ramet Authoring, TH.
Arm sod Sciences, WE, Boord of Waser
Supply
MMMM did 4A AON
PD; A Harris, D; H Hart; W
Herbert, HD.
E Higgins, HC; D W Hilton
(deceased), HD; A Hines, HD;
R Gipplewitz, HD; G Howard,
HD; J Holland, HD; FP Ingrassia,
EPA; J A Jackson, HD; J C
Jasinski, PD; L Jennings, HC;
L P Johnson, HD; 8 Johnson,
PD; AC Jones, HD; B R Jones,
HD; C L Jones, FD; G Jones,
HD; G R Jones, EPA; W V
Jey, EPA; B C Kaufman, HD;
8 A Kearney, HD.
T E Kelly, PD; M Kenny, HD;
8 K Einoy, HC; T B Kitchen,
HD; G M Koota, PD; T M Lacey,
EPA; R Laloma, HD; P M San-
german, PD; B J League, HC;
C Lennon, HD; L D Lesser, HDA;
K R Leuthner, PD; D Levine,
HD; B Levis, HD; L Lipscombe,
HD; E Marshiack, HC; C A Matt-
son, PW; H J McCabe, EPA;
P C McCormick, HD; S L Me-
Cray, HD.
H J McIntyne, EPA; N Moctke,
HC; J M Moffatt, PD; I Moreau,
HD; C L Morris, HD; S Moses
HD; G R Mercado, HD; A Mul-
downey, EPA; W Mulhersen, RE,
J A Murphy, HD; L G Newell,
HD; D O'Conner, Jr. PD; C
Olmeda, HD; B Ortiz, HD; MC
Oyarzabal, HD; F Paterno, EPA;
JT Perillo, EPA; M Perkal, HC;
L A Peterson, HC; W P Pizzi, PD.
G L Platt, HD; E W Pore, Jr.,
PD; 5 R Prunty, HD; M Reid,
HD; J F Reldy, EPA; M Ricardo,
HD; J M Rice, HD; R Richards.
HD; R W Rizzuto, EPA; R Rod-
riguez, HD; W E Rodriguez,
EPA; M Ronda, HD; M A Rus-
RC; R V Sabatini, 8C; W
. EPA; W Sanchez, Jr.,
M P Scott, HD; D Skop.
L P Smiles, HD; F Smith
P Smith, HD; M Soleansky
EPA; D E Stewart, HD; J K
Sugarman, PD; T Sullivan, EPA
N Syniowaska, HC; M 5S Saitar,
HD; J Tarias, EPA; 8 J Taritag-
lia, EPA; J Taylor, HD; J J Tay-
lor, MA: G B Tinsley, HD; O
Torres, HDA; P A Tucker, HD;
W Tyler, EPA; M Valle, HD; E
Vega, HD; R M Vettel, EPA; T
Vincent, HD; V G Volpe, PD.
R E Walcott, HC; R G Wal-
lace, PD; T J Walsh, HD; B
Warren, EPA; R Wehland, EPA;
T White, PD; 8 Whyte, Pw;
L Wiggins, EPA; H Williams,
EPA; M E Williams, HD; L Wil-
ls, HD; C L Wingate, PD; B A
Wint, HD; E Wojewodski, EPA;
W W Wun, HC; T Yap, HD.
Festive Meeting Set
By Gity Engineers
The Municipal Engineers of
the City of New York will high-
Ught their annual meeting on
Jan, 26 with dinner and dancing
at the Terrace On The Park res-
taurant in Queens.
Located tn Flushing Meadow
Park at 111th St, and Sand Ave.
the Terrace On The Park will
host the affair beginning at
7:90 p.m, Reservations are $15
per person, and can be made
through Paul P Galiard!, G.P.O.
1, Box 772, Brooklyn, N.Y. 1120)
(tel; UL 2-5000 Ext. 4103)
Firefighters Fight Fires
+++ Not People!
AWARD WINNERS — prank A. Bois, 3r., lett, president
of the 10,000-member Grand Council ef Steuben Assns,, presents
that group’s annual award for outstanding law enforcement to
N.Y. State Atterney General Lou's Lefkowitz,
center, and Nassau
County Police Commissioner Louis J. Frank. The organization,
composed ef New York State civil servants of German extraction,
annually cites law enforcement excellence on the State, local and
National levels, The latter award this year was given to FBI
Director, J. Edgar Hoover.
Public Health Newcomers
Dr. W. Kenneth Riland, of
New York City, and Dr. John F.
Roach, of Loundonville, have re-
ceived recess reappointments to
the State Public Health Coun-
ol! for terms ending Jan. 1, 1978
Members receive $1,881 annually
How Unclaimed
Checks Can Be
Checked Out
Unclaimed fall within
the jurisdiction of the City Fi-
nance Dept., Paymaster Division
They qui din the Mu-
nietpal Build
The names of the employees
and former employees
money ts ded by date of
deposit In City Treasury
Names are not listed alphabeti-
cally under the depos
by agency, using
department code.
The ledger ts divided into 10
columns, with these headings:
line number; date of deposit; de-
partment code/payroll number,
date of payroll; name of em-
ployee; tickler number; check
number; remarks; amount of
check; total, The tickler number
refers to the paymaster's file,
established once the employee's
agency has submitted a check
as “unclaimed,”
The Division of Refunds does
the bookkeeping on these un-
claimed funds but does not re-
Jease the money directly to the
claimant, This must be done
through the paymaster, and
each check must be warranted
before M can be released,
Because of the volume of
claims at a given time, there is
umally close te a month in
waiting time for processing to be
completed.
checke
owed
the
tt date but
the paymaster’s
23. aN RNA
FOR SALE
Mode! 300
1971 SKI DOO
OLYMPIC
with
SEALION TRAILER
Used Less Than 10 Hours
TU Oe
pore
Schedule Thurs.
Applications For
Asst. Architects
Assistant architect jobs exist
for applicants with the City
Health & Hospitals Corp. as well
as other agencies. Pay starts at
$12,100.
Candidates will be required to
have a bachelor’s plus two years
of full-time experience In archi-
tecture. However, State registra-
tlon will also prove sutisfactory
Filing {s conducted ‘Thursday
morn is in oom M-9. Rall
Worth Manhattan
Exam Notice N 1120 Indi-
cates the duties is no
written test but training and ex-
perience will welgh 100 in the
rating.
Promotion Prospects
The City announced that 24
candidates en test
recently for promotion to super-
vising, attorney 220
Chureh St
took the wrt
given at
Manhattan.
GOVERNORS
MOTOR INN
STATE AND GOVERNMENT
EMPLOYEE RATES
RESTAURANT . COCKTAIL
LOUNGE OPEN DAILY FOR
LUNCHEON AND DINNER.
LARGE BANQUET HALL
SEATS UP TO 175 DINNERS
AND BUFFETS SERVED.
FINEST FOOD ALWAYS.
por saSEAvATIONS
CALL 438-6686
4 Milos Wert ot ALBANY Bt. 20
Write Te:
C. S. Leader,
Box S.L. 100,
11 Warren St.,
New York 10007
Specialist Competitors
‘Two candidates recently vied
on an oral for human resources
specialist, conducted at 56
Thomas St., Manhattan.
(Ae ana
NEED A GOOD |
SECOND CAR? |
nly,
yeur identification and get
discount, Call 914—252-8219 — est
for Chariio Smyth.
‘'wv¥vvVvVVvVTrSe
20% OFF TO STATE WORKEXS
ON ALL MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
HILTON MUSIC CENTER |
346 CENTRAL AVE. Opp. Sere Bank
ALBANY HO 2.0945
SPECIAL RATES
for Civil Service Employees
otter
HOTEL
Wellington
ORIVE-IN GARAGE
invanience, teed
Family rater, Cocktall lounge.
1236 STATE STREET
GPPORTE STATE CAPITOL
fee pour Iclendly travel agent
SPECIAL WEEKLY RATES
FOR EXTENDED STAYS
ALBANY
BRANCH OFFICE
(OR INFORMATION tegarding advection
ment Please write of call:
JOSKPH 1. BELLEW
202 50. MANNING BLVD,
ALBANY. MLR Proms Iv 2-5474
ARCO
CIVIL SERVICE BOOKS
Mail & Phone Orders Filled
MAYFLOWER - ROYAL COU
APARTMENTS—Furuished, Uv.
furnished, and Reems, Phone HE
4-1994. (Albany).
Sei ae
When You're New York City
Bound...
“THE GORHAM IS A
ONE-OF-A-KIND
HOTEL”...
So says New York Magazine... and so
will you! HN. writes — “We love The
Gorham! At last...2 decently priced,
clean and friendly place te stay! Al)
Rooms have campletely
equipped Ki eLuse
Bath, DirectDial Phone Service — and
rates start at $18 Daily, Single and
$22 Double. Fine Restaurant and Gav.
Special rates at
adjoining garage One
block from N.Y. Hilton, Information: Write
for colorful brochure. Reservations: Call
ws collect (212) Ch 5-1800,
“Your Personal Hotel
THE GORHAM
Wn The Heart ef Radio City”
136 West 55th St, New York, NY. 10008
61 ‘RT Aaenues hepsony ACV IOIANAS TAI
ZL
18
CIVIL SERVICE LEADER, Tuesday, January 18, 1972
CSEA Fights Termination
Of MH Meat Cutters As
Violation Of Agreement
(Special To The Leader)
ALBANY At Leader presstime, a third-stage grievance,
filed by the Civil Service Employees Assn. was on its way
to Mental Hygiene Commissioner Alan D. Miller protesting
the proposed termination of cutters in all State Mental
Hygiene faciltiies as a viol
of existing CSE, dation of all meat cutting enter-
agreement covering Ir nal prises at the Mental Hygtene
Unit employees. supply facility in Amsterdam,
‘ompted the CSEA protest.
he union maintains that the
fs a violation of Article
utional Services
a egotiated by
CSEA and the State.
The article states: “There shall
no loss of present jobs by
A letter sent to all tnstitu
y Jack J, Bellick, direct
ne Mental Hygiene Bureau
it nal Services, callin
ing off of meat
of Feb. 9, 1972, and
3 Albany DOT Heads
permane! loyees as ar
* a ne exercise of ‘ts
Retire In December wien to contract out tor goods
and services
According to CSEA pres!
Theodore C. Wenal, a meeting
has been set up for Jan , be-
top CSEA officials and
in Albany, to discuss the
meal cutter grievance.
One
car
hundred twent
r service conc!
month with the retire
tt top staffers of
partment of Transportats
Albany.
Conrad H. Lang, assistant
commissioner for operatic
ired Dee. 31 after 45 y
service, Frank J
Fuller, director of DOT's Alba:
district, closed shop the
completing more
rs of service. Russel! E.
ctor of DOT's
tton Financial Revlew
sald good-bye Dec
years.
aid that the move to
e Meat cutters “may
sound familiar to many State em-
3 ‘This act by the De-
day
44
to a previous attempt to
Mental Hy-
off bakers at
oll
recently protested this
move through the grievance pro-
cedure and the Department
agreed to offer other jobs in the
Department to all bakers that
were fired, if we withdrew ow
arievance.”*
SUPPORT THE ATTICA
FAMILY MEMORIAL FUND
Anton Oechsner, second from right, receives a seroll and
handshake from Stony Brook University, Civil Service Em-
ployees Assn. chapter president Albert Varacchi at recent
retirement party. Plant supervisor Richard Emmi, right,
holds another seroll as Clifford Decker, director of phy
sical plant, left, looks on, Medallion around Oechsner's neck
was one of gifts from about 80 fellow employees.
University Retiree Cited
STONY BROOK—About 80 fellow members of the Stony
Brook University chapter of the Civil Service Employees
Assn, saluted Anton Oechsner on his recent retirement.
Oechsner recelved a scroll signed by statewide CSEA
president Dr, Theodore Wenzl, another from the chapter
presented by chapter president Albert Varacchi and gifts,
including a medallion, from fellow employees, Oechsner re-
tired after 10 years at Stony Brook University, mostly as a
maintenance man in the carpenter shop.
Among those attending were Varacch!; Clifford Decker,
director of the physical plant, and Richard Emmi, plant sup-
ervisor.
POLITICAL ACTION — statewide first ee-brillaii Thomas TRIE right, dona
another of his Civil Service Employees Assn. hats as he briefs some members of the joint legislative -
political action committee before their mecting on Jan. 12, McDonough, who recently accepted the
chairmanship of the committee, ls shown with, from left, Donald Blake, George Clark, statewide
third vice-president Richard Tarmey and Ruth Braverman, The committee decided on Jan. 25 for
a meeting of representatives from all chapters to outline plans for political action, (Additional pie-
tures appear inside The Leader on page 14.)
Niagara Driver
Rescues Man
Near Falls
NIAGARA FALLS An
act of bravery, above and be-
yond the call of duty, by an
employee of the Niagara
Frontier State Park Commission
“should help to show the kind
of concern and dedication that
public employees in New York
State have for thelr fellow man,”
according to Theodore C. Wenzl,
president of the Civil Service
Emplo
Battachio, a
iver for
a man,
1¢ Niag
Rapids
detivery
ne Commission
rald Schoures
near the
Bridge about
a qua’ -mile from the Falls.
Upon 5
water, Ba’ who was driv-
ing on the Robert Moses Park-
called
the police on his
radio and then
scaled a fence to reach the man
in the water.
Wenzl learned of the State
employee's deed from Anthony
Serianni, pi of the Niag-
ara Frontier chapter of CSEA.
Battachio ls also an officer in
the CSEA chapter.
“It shouldn't really require an
act of heroism to bring to the
publi attention the high call-
ber of men and women who are
serving the people of New York
State as public employees,”
Wenal sald, “since this type of
dedication 1s evident in the day
to day work performed by the
majority of our State employees.
“But If people begin to take
for granted the consistently high
quality performance of these
public servants, extraordinary
feats, like that by Mr. Battachio,
will continue to point out the
altruistic spirit of the State em-
ployee, devoted to helping their
fellow citizens.”
Monin Named
Lawrenge O. Monin, who for
the past three years has served
& an assistant counsel Ww the
Governor, has been named De-
puty Superintendent of the State
Insurance Department. Salary
Was not dluclosed. -
Reach Accord In Nassay
On One-Year Contract
(Continued from Page 1)
sideration in promotions and
transfers to grievance
procedure.
uarantee of County bene-
fits for Judicial Conference area.
© Bereavement leave of three
subject
forms.
leave an
up year's leave of ab-
sence for pregnancy
Most other units boosted
standby and overtime provisions,
es, pay for jury
n rights
Flaumenbaum Participation
Cc y Executive Ralph G.
Caso sald “this ts the best bar-
gain we could make.” He stated
that he would have preferred a
long-range contract, but conced-
ed t th the uncertainties
of the economic climate that it
was not realistic to attempt to
project employees’ needs two or
three years hence.
Flaumenbaum, who personally
entered the talks three weeks
ago after a rocky course since
last July, sald that the national
economic climate and the State
and County fisoal situation con-
tributed to the length of the
talks, He expressed satisfaction
that the gains exceeded what
could be expected from most
te thts year,
rs of the negotiating
team in all major departments
and divisions are avallable to
explain provisions to members.
Members of the team are: Hay-
ward Quann, Social Services:
Cletus Doollttle, Probation;
James Ellenwood, sewer main-
tenance; John Stone, County
Court; Sidney Greenfeder, Health
Department; Rita Wallace, R.N.,
Patterson Home; James Callan,
Nassau County Medical Center;
Prank Russell, Supreme Court;
John Keating, Community Col-
lege; Blanche Reuthe, Medical
Examiner; Anthony Greoo, Dis-
trict Court; Angelo Palange,
Recreation and Parks; Dudley
Kinsley, General Services Ad-
ministration; Carmine Santoli,
highway maintenance, and Ed-
ward Logan, » Public Works em-
ployee on duly as excculive aide
in the CSEA office, who acted as
chairman.
The committee was advised by
CSEA attorneys Willlam D.
Friedman and Richard C. Gaba.
DOT Region 10
Organizes For™
Political Action
BABYLON
The Region
10, Department of Trans-
portation chapter of the
Civil Service Employees
Assn. has embarked on the ¢or-
mation of a political action com-
mittee and advised leglslator
that “we want good representa!
tion.”
Chapter president Joseph
Gambino said the chapter had
resolved that “if the legislators
can give themselves a ralse, they
can give us one, too.” He added,
“We want good representation.”
The chapter would screen leg-
islators throughout the metro-
Politan area encompassed by the
region, extending from Montauk
Point to Mount Vernon, — )
bly Speaker Perry Duryea an
many of the most Influential
legislators represemt paris of
Region 10
The chapter had never before
feu the urgency of having a
political action committee.
University Appointees
Three Albany area men have
been named to the Council of
the State University at Alban®
They are C. Theodore Caron,
of Delmar; Victor K. Looper,
Jr, of Albany, and Wayne B
Wagner, of Scotia. There 4 no
salary,
Crime Board Appointee
Harris B. Dates, of Ludiow-
ville, has been appointed to the
State Crime Control Planning
Board. The Board reviews soot
cations for project funding
the Stafe Streela Acts, Members
serve without salary and at the
pleasure of te Governor,