1 See Page 16

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Tuesday, A ugust 20, 1968
Price
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e e t i n g
See Page 16
A m erica * $ L a r g e s t W e e k ly f o r P u b l ic E m p lo y eeB
V o l, X X I X , N o . > <
C $-?• i - j .
j u
T e n C e n ts
T h ru w a y R e n e g e s C S E A D e c r i e s T u r n d o w n
O n O w n P o litY r
O f A tte n d a n t S e r ie s A p p eal
L o th n e r C h a rg e s
A s ‘I n to le r a b le
( S p e c i a l to T h e L e a d e r )
A L B A N Y — T h e S t a t e T h n i w a y A u t h o r it y h a s r e n e g e d
o n lbs p r o m is e d p o lic y o f k e e p in g p a c e w i t h t h e S t a t e in
p r o v id in g b e n e f i t s t o i t s e m p lo y e e s , t h e C iv il S e r v ic e E m p io y e e s A ssn . h a s c h a r g e d .
T hruway officials, in rejecting
CSEA Executive Director Joseph
the CSEA request submitted along
D. Lochner cited the specific inwith 42 other grievances, said
gtanca where T hiuw ay officials
Im plementation o f differentials
refused to m ake available extra
“would en tail considerable e x ­
pay for employees who worked | pense to th e Authority.”
tnconvenient sh ifts or for those
“T his action is in direct conflict;
workers who are paid less than
with the Thruway’a thinking on
persons privately employed in the
other such matters," said Loch­
Bftine Jobs and working in the
ner, refexTlhg to the ten-percent,
•am e area of the State.
$6600-m lnlm um -pay raise, new
A lthough
these
differentials
pension plan and m ileage reim­
were signed into law last year for
bursem ent rate Increase, adopted
S tate employees, Lochner stated, for Thruway employees at the re­
the Thruway Authority has ar­ quest o f CSEA. All of these bene­
bitrarily decided “th at no basis fits, negotiated by CSEA for S tate
presently exists for recommend­ employees, required an additional
in g that these benefits, In whole outlay o f funds by the Authority.
in part, be Included in the
In h is letter to CSEA, Edward
A uthority’s employee benefit pro­
R.
Jones, director o f administra­
gram.”
tive services, who presided at the
grievance hearing, said, “I am
CSEA Favored
unable to sustain a finding that
these benefits are needed or that
the absence o f these benefits im ­
poses a hardship.”
Lindenhurst School
Aides Win Election;
Charge Unfair Acts
.
Ig n o ra n t’
( S p e c i a l to T h e L e a d e r )
A L B A N Y — T h e C iv il S e r v ic e E m p lo y e e s A s s n . h a s d e n o u n c e d t h e d e c i s io n o f J . E a i i
K e lly , d ir e c to r o f t h e S t a t e D iv is io n o f C la s s if lc a t io n
and
C o m p e n s a t io n , t h a t
d e n ie d
C S E A ’s r e q u e s t fo r a n u p g r a d in g o f a ll t i t l e s In t h e M e n t a l H y g ie n e a t t e n d a n t s ’ s e r ie s .
T h e d e c is io n , h a n d e d d o w n b y K e lly l a s t w e e k , w a s te r m e d a “s h a m ” b y D r. T h e o dore C. Wenzl, CSEA president.
lar Mr. Kelly and hi* Immediate M ental Hygiene Institutions. T h ey
“T h is travesty o f Justice has made superiors, made thU Intolerable showed a complete disregard n o l
a mockery o f the entire S tate re ­ move, they showed conclusively
allocation
and
reclassification th a t they are totally ignorant of
piocess,” Wenzl heatedly declaied. the deplorable condition* which
“W hen the State, and in particu­ exist today in all o f our State
a
u
b h
m
i
s
B
v
C ty . V itto r y
(F r o m L e a d e r C o r r e s p o n d e n t )
B U F F A L O — T h e C iv il S e r v ic e E m p lo y e e s A s s n . a c h ie v e d
a b ig u p s t a t e v ic t o r y la ^ t w e e k w h e n t h e E r ie C S E A c h a p t e r
w o n r e c o g n i t io n a s t h e T a y lo r L a w b a r g a in i n g a g e n t fo r
6,200 o f t h e 7,000 E rie C o u n t y w o r k e r s.
T h e remaining 800 employees,
County and Municipal Employees,
consisting o f sheriff’s personnel
and teachers, will be represented AFL-CIO.
T he AFL-CIO group plans to
by their own organizations. “I t ’s
a great day for our chapter,” said appeal the decision to the Erie
Neil B. Cummings, chapter presi­ County Public Employm ent R eladent. “W e’ve been waiting for this t l o n s ^ a r d .
R ath acted a f t o the CSEA
j recognition and now we can get
down to the business of negotiat­ scored a breakthrough when a n ­
other group, the E ile County
ing for the employees.”
Competitive Civil Service E m ­
Cum mings said he would go ployees Assn., agreed to let the
ahead to prepare for contract CSEA act for It in bargaining.
talks even though Rath's decision
Chapter officials are In the proh as been challenged by the
(Continned on Page If)
American Federation of S tate,
In reply to this, Lochner d e­
clared: “Since when does It cost
less for a Thruway worker to live
— to support hia family? The
Authority is chartered by and is
(From Leader Correspondent)
a subsidiary o f the State and It’s
S M IT H T O W N — I n
t h e only proper th at its employees
w a k e o f c h a r g e s o f s t a lli n g , receive the sam e wages and bene­
h a r a s s m e n t a n d c o e r c io n file d fits as S tate employees.”
b y t h e S u ffo lk c h a p t e r o f t h e
(Continued on Page 16)
Civil Service Employees Assn. on
behalf o f the Lindenhurst Schools
unit, th e employees face a rep­
V o w s
T o
C o n t i n u e
resentation election September 23. C S E A
The vote was scheduled by the
State Public Employm ent R ela­
T o
R e p r e s e n t
T r o o p e r s
tions Board after CSEA appealed
( S p e c i a l to T h e L e a d e r )
to the board from the school
A
L
B
A
N
Y
—
A
lt
h
o u g h n o o r g a n iz a t io n w o n a m a j o r it y o f
board's refusal to grant recogni­
tion. In addition, CSEA filed u n ­ t h e v o t e s in a c o n t e s t t o r e p r e s e n t m o s t m e m b e r s o f t h e
fair
labor
practices
charges S t a t e P o lic e la s t w e e k , t h e C iv il S e r v ic e E m p lo y e e s A s s n .
a sa ln st the board, because the m a d e i t a p p a r e n t t h a t i t w ill c o n t i n u e to p la y a s i g n i f i c a n t
board urged employees to Join an i role In representing and protectorganizaition w ithout afftiliation j ing its members In this division hearedly those members o f the
S tate Police who cast their votes
w ith other public employees.
In the year to come.
for CSEA.”
I n addition, CSEA field repre­
As a result o f the contest, th e
T he Taylor Law allows all pub­
sentative Edwin R. Cleary was
field h as been narrowed to two lic employees In New York S tate
iMtrred from a m eeting scheduled
organizations, the Police B enevo­ to belong to the organization or
with cafeteria employees during
theU* lunch hour. Cleary got his lent Association o f State police oganlzatlons of their choice. “Our
m essage to employees, and later and Council 60, APSCME. A run­ people can still retain their m em ­
filed charges of unfair labor prac- o ff vote to determine tlve e m ­ bership In CSEA and benefit from
ployee representatives will be co n ­ the services we provide, Including
ttee<s.
T h e district according to Cleary, ducted by the Publie Employees the processing of grievances and
legal representation in disclplinarjr
had stalled negotiations demanded Relations Board on August 30.
Dr. Theodore O. Wenal, OSBA proceedings,*’ W enzl said.
by unit president Charlea Boyer
“T h e fact remains th a t the w in ­
a n d h is officers although th e fis> president, aaid: “Our organization
Intends to represent it« members ner o f the r u n -o ff election will
oal year started July 1.
in th e S ta te Police to th e fullest be the official employee represen­
(A d » .)
C O M P U T I N O . y o u r retirem en t b enelitt? exten t possible under the pi'esent tative for only one year.” Wenzl
Th* M A U R IC K B L O N D A G E N C Y ,
I I W . 4 2 a d St.. N .Y .C . T«L 116-6664. •ituation. 1 w ish to thank w hole- oonoluded.
i L
&
only for the employees affected
but for the thousands o f patient*
who are not receiving the proper
care because o f a shortage of at­
tendants, who make up the ma^*
jorlty o f the M ental Hygiene em-^
pioyees.” h e said.
“CSEA, the recognized bargain*
Ing agent for m ost State worker*,
including those employees In the
Mental Hygiene institutions, la al­
ready In the process of appealing
this high-handed decision to the
S tate Civil Service Commission,
I which has th e authority to over­
rule K elly’s detei-mlnatlons,” Dr.
Wenzl said.
“Mr. Kelly has been quick to
point out in m any other similar
denials th a t because no recruit­
m ent or retention problem existed
for the positions nam ed in the re. quests for upgrading, he found no
basis for approving such requests.
“Yet here we have a situation
j ^ here Mental Hygiene in stltu tio n i
the State are operat­
ing at 70 to 80 percent of peak
strength simply because the S ta te
cannot fill th e thousands of vacancies In the attendant titles.**
(Continued on Page 16)
Agreement Reached
On Dutchess Pact
(From Leader Correspondent)
P O U G H K E E PSIE — D u t c h ­
e s s C o u n t y o ff ic ia ls a n d t h e
D u t c h e s s u n i t o f t h e C iv il
S e r v ic e E m p lo y e e s A ssn . h a v e
reached tentative agreem ent on a
tw o-year contract. County Execu­
tive David C. Shoentag h as re­
ported.
T he proposal was presented to
the u n it’s membership a t a m eet­
ing 8 p.m. F ilday, Aug. 16, In
D utchess Community College.
Schoentag aald term* o f the
agreem ent were disclosed to the
members a t the m eeting and the
details will be made publlo when
it is ratified.
The negotiation! opened In
June. Ellie Adams, president of
th e county unit, headed th e e m ­
ployee
bargaining
tea m
and
W oody Klose, m anagem ent a s ­
sistant to Sohoentag, led the
loounty officials.
Repeat This!
P a r t III —. C o n g r e s s
Civil Servants Can
Assist Candidates To
Formulate Platforms
^ T ^ H IS w e e k . T h e C iv il S e r v X
ic e L e a d e r c o m p l e t e s it s
li s t i n g o f c a n d ld a t'e s fo r p u b ­
lic o ffic e in N e w Y o r k S t a t e .
Three week* ago, we started b f
listing the various candidates for
Assembly and last week we pub­
lished the llefc o f S ta te S en at#
hopeful*. Thl* week, the list o |
Congressional candidates is prlhtii
ed.
R eaction from both oandidatM
(OontlnueA e a Page H
Viif• T wa
^CIVIL
8
ERTICK
CBXDEV
D O N 'T R E P E A T T H IS!
(Continued from Page 1)
«<nd readers was tremendous. Can^ a t e s have been calling and
TprltJng the editorial offices o f
1%)€ Leader urging continuance
o f the candidates’ list, noting that
lihey were hopeful o f a large reilponfe from the civil service
cw pe.
■While many of the candidates
•xe familiar with civil service and
tJie problems faced by the civil
•ervice employee, others are com ­
pletely in the dark as far as the
d v ll sei-vant’s role is concerned.
Candidates for the U.S. Cong iess from New York State are:
FIRST CONGRESSIONAL
DISTRICT
(Part of Suffolk)
Jam es M. Catterson, Jr. <R>,
D niid Hill Rd„ Belle Ten-e, N.Y.,
P.O. F o il Jefferson, New York.
O tis G.. Pike (D ), 132 Ostrander
Ave., Riverhead, N.Y.; Harold
Haax (C), 585 Tow'nlihe Rd..
Hauppauge, N.Y.; Albert Baron
(0L), IPS Southern Blvd., E. Patdiogue, N.Y.
BECOND CONGRESSIONAL
DISTRICT
(Tart of Nassau; Part of Suffolk)
Jam es R. Grover, Jr. (R -C ),
le e Wood.-i>me Road, Babylon.
New York; Charles A. Hee« (D ),
7 Mhxwell Court, Huntington,
New York; Emil Davidson (L),
1®3 Park Avenue, Deer Park, L.I.,
W.Y.
THIRD CONGRESSIONAL
DISTRICT
(Part of Nassau)
Abe Seldin (R ), 46 Ca«ide«
Kew Hyde Park, N.Y.; Lester L.
Wolff, D -L ), 6 North Drive, G fl^ t
Heck. N.Y.; D aniel L. Rk 5« (O),
460 Powells Lane, Westbuoy, N.Y.
FOURTM CONGRESSIONAL
DISTRICT
(Part of Nassau)
John W. Wydler (R -C ), 63 P irsl
m., Gaa den City, N.Y.; Michael J.
DclGniidice (D ), 606 Sand Hill
M . , Wantagh, N.Y.
FIFTH CONGRESSIONAL
DISTRICT
(Part of Nassau)
Mflson L. Hampston, Jr. (R-C>,
1th Maj-garet Blvd.. Merrick, N.Y.;
ALteJ-d K. Lowenstein (D ), 221
•W»M 82nd St., New York, N.Y.;
thanksgiving W en d
In London— Only $198
Members o f the Civil Service
Bmployees Assn. are offered a
Thanksgiving
trip to London
ivbich will leave New York on
Wednesday, Nov. 27 and retm n
en Sunday, Dec. 1.
This unusual package Includes
round trip Jet air fare, rooms at
ttie luxury class hotel Royal Lan«e.»^(er, and two sightseeing tours,
fknd other activities, all for only
Those w ishing to purchase
ilie air fare only m ay do so for
be made by writing to liv in g
|1 & 9 .
im m ediate application should
Jlflom enbaum ,
P.O.
Box
81,
Kempstead, N.Y.; telephone <616)
P I 2-7144.
MONROE
BUSINESS
INSTITUTE
• ACOEPrKD for CItII Berrlc#
• JOB
P R OM O TIO N
• BXCBI^LENT TBAOHXRS
• S H O R T C O C R S B — LOW
RATES
VKTKHAN T R A IM N Q
Kl I-S400
■.
Av. A
4MI(0 ('lioKtrr
HUIt )
M . , Ha.
H I 3 fttitIO
[Herbert CajT (L ), S2 No. Wood
Iia.ne, Woodmeiic, N.Y.
SIXTH CONGRESSIONAL
DISTRICT
(Part o f Queens)
SeymoujT HiaJpern (R -L ), 150
Greenway
Ternace,
Flashing,
N.Y.; Franklin Miller (D ), 60-03
j Hewlett Street, F lushing, N.Y.;
'Thom as J. Adams, Jr. (C ), 85-77
! 112th Street, Jamaica., N.Y.
SEVENTH CONGRESSIONAL
DISTRICT
(Part of Queens)
Louis R. M ercogliano (R -C ),
83-16 Smedley S tieet, Jam aica,
N.Y.; Jaseph P. Addabbo (D -L ),
13243 8 &th Sti>eet, Jam aica, N.Y.
EIGHTH CONGRESSIONAL
DISTRICT
(Part of Queens)
Jack M. W einstein (R ), 140-09
69th Road, Flushing, N.Y.; B en ­
jamin S, R osenthal (D -L ), 88-12
Elmhurst Avenue, Flushing, N.Y.;
Charles W ltteck, Jr. (C), 48-06
O'Conr.ell Court, Flushing, N.Y.
NINTH CONGRESSIONAL
DISTRICT
(Part of Queens)
John P. Haggerty <R-C), 48-43
64th Street. Fliishing, N.Y.; James
J. Delaney (D ), 45-14 31st Avenue,
Long Lsland City, N.Y.; R ose L.
Rubin ' D , 226-17 137tto Avenue,
Jamaica, N.Y.
TEN'PH CONGRESSIONAL
DISTRKH'
(Part of K incs & P art of Queens)
Frank L. M«a*t«JX) (R -C ), 2176
East 72nd Stjreet, Brooklyn, N.Y.;
Emanuel Celler (D -L ), 9 Pros­
pect Park W., Baxxdtlyn, N.Y.
ELEVENTH CX)NGilESSIOINAL
DISTRICT
(Fart of K l n n )
Robert J. Hlower (R ), 10(J Etna
Street, BixK>kJyn, N.Y.i Fxank J.
Biia^co (D ), 850 Autujnn Avenue,
Brooklyn, N.Y.; Ba^U E. Reynolds
(C), 436 Lincoln Avenue, B iook lyn, N.Y.; Edward L. Jcdineon (L),
485 Goeene Avenue, Brooklyn,
New York.
Tl^ELFTH CONGIIESSIONAL
D ISIV JC T
(Part o f K In ft)
Jame« FRomer (R -L ), 6C5 Park
Row. New York C « y , N.Y.; Shir­
ley Clhi.<hoJm (D ), 1165 Sterling
Place, Bix)ok]yn, N.Y.; R alph J.
Carrano (C), 431 Gaaham Avenue,
Brooklyn. N.Y.
THIRTEENTH CONGRESSIONAL
DISTRICT
(Part o f Kings)
Jack Steangasis (K ), 1015 Ea«t
24th Stj-eet, BixKikilyn, N.Y.; Bertiv m L. PodcU (D.) 153 Rugby
Road, Bi-ooWyn, N.Y.; Robeat C.
Laborde, Jr. (O), 601 East 19th
Sta-eet, Bi-ookiyn, N.Y.; Kenneth
Haber <L), 1347 East 17th Street,
Brooklyn, N.Y.
FOUREENTH CONGRESSIONAL
DISTRICT
(Part o f Kings)
Victor J. Tiratoasso (R ), 123
Criermont Avenue, Birooklyn, N.Y.;
John J. R ooney (D -L ), 217 OonEi’ess S k e e t, Bitx)k]yn, N.Y.; Alice
A. Ctepatosito (O), 804 Eckford
Street, BixMoklyn, N.Y,
FIFTEEJ^TH CONGRESSIONAL
DISTRICT
(Pari of K ings)
F iank O. Spinner (R ), 1067
84 th Stieet, B iw k ly n , N.Y.; H\jgh
L. Carey (D ), 61 Pix>epect Park,
W., B iw k ly n , N.Y.; Stephen P.
M«rlon (C ), S®6 S ixth Street,
Brooklyn, N Y.; V incent T. Miaee,
Jr. (L), 12S Greenwood Avenue,
Brooklyn, N Y.
S IX T E E N T H € X )N G itE S S 1 0 N A L
»18TnJ€T
tPart o f H te « t A Ri«hmAB4)
FaaJik J . £l«>iiduU^]o (A -C ),
Tue«^ay, Xnnni^t ?0 .
Y o u r
P
10^
u b l i c
W indy Hollow W ay, »ta.ten Is­
land, N.Y.; John M. Murphy (D ),
R e l a t i o n s
I Q
Eastern Loop Roaxl, S taten Is­
land, N.Y.I Joseph KottJeor (L),
SIO Beverly Road, Brooklyn, N.Y,
• y LEO J . M A R G O L IN
SEVENTEENTH
CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
(Part o f New York)
M r. M a r f o l l n i s P r o fe s s o r o f B u s in e s s A d m in i s t r a t io n a t
W hitney N. Seymour, Jr. (R ),
t h e B o r o u g h o f M a n h a t t a n C o m m u n it y Colles^e a n d A d j u n c t
290 W est Fourth Street, New York,
P r o fe s s o r o f P u b lic A d m in i s t r a t io n In N e w Y o rk U n iv e r s ity 's
N.Y.; Edward I. K och (D -L ), 14
W ashington Place, New York, G r a d u a t e S c h o o l o f P u b lic A d m in i s t r a t io n ,
N.Y.; Richard J. C allahan (C ),
250 W est 21st Street, New York,
N.Y.
EIGHTEENTH
FR O M T H E sta n d p o in t o f d a y -to -d a y o p e r a tio n s o f th e
CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
F e d e r a l g o v e r n m e n t , It r e a l ly w o n ’t m a k e m u c h d if f e r e n c e
(Part o f N ew York)
w h o a r e t h e p r e s i d e n t ia l c a n d id a t e s o f t h e m a j o r p a r t i e s
Henry L. H all (R ), 201 W est In N o v e m b e r .
138th S k ^ t , New York, R Y .;
CONTRARY TO w lm t you wUl
Adam C. Powell (D ), 120 W est hear from th e lips o f even the
138 St 4-eet, New York, N.Y.; Jo­ most exciting cam paign orators, ence governm ent policy, and they
seph M. McGuire (C ), 357 East the governm ent is being run— frequently do because they u su ­
ally know precisely w hat ia go­
57th Street, New York, N.Y.
and wUl continue to be run—by ing on.
NINETEENTH
2,740,000 Federal civil servants.
DURING
THE
forthcoming
CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
Including a n 8,000-nm n cadre of presidential cam paign much will
(Part of New York)
top echelon ca a w r professionals be heard about the adequacy oi
Donald E. W eeden (R ), 755 and administrators.
Inadequacy o f the arm y o f FW Park Avenue, New York, N.Y.; g y ^N D LARGE, the FedemI
Leonard Farbstein (D ), 500 A civil service has earned very good eral civil sei’vants. The fact is
Grand Street, N ew York, N.Y.; public relations, despite handicaps th at until now, the F edei^l cJvU
Bella VLsono Dodd (C ), 254 West which could have caused havoc, servan t h ad p eiform ed in an
outstanding m anner despite all
20th Street, N ew York. N.Y.;
except for the dedication and de­ the handicaps th a t successive
Ralph D e N at (L ), 430 East 20th
votion o f the rank a n d file.
Congresses have imposed.
Street, New York, N.Y.
UNTIL com paratively recently,
BUT THE BIG problem is yet
TW ENTIETH
Fedea-al civU servant* were work- to be faced by whoever Is the
CONGiRESSIONAL DISTRICT
in* for salaries w hich in p iivate next Pi-esldent of the United
(Part o f New York)
Industry would have been from States: how to keep in ta ct tih«
John O .Proudfit (R ), 215 West
20 to 160 pei-cent higher. The 8 .0 0 0 m iddle m anagers a n d re­
90th Sta-eet, New York, N.Y.; W il­
"•aJaJT dejn" broke on ly w hen cruit replacem ente for thoee whc
liam F. R yan (D -L ), 448 Riverside
meimibers of Oongreee fin ally raised retire or die,
D iive, New York, N.Y.; Ruben
their own pay to ^30,000.
JU ST ABOUT NOW, F t e d ^
Mlonter (C ), b12 A msterdam Ave­
T H IS PERMITTED dvU seavice careerists w ho cam e into govern*
nue, New York, N.Y.
oaa-eerifiita to m ove up th e salaiT m en t a t th e tim e o f th e New Deal
T W EN TY-FIR ST
ladder and com e cloeer to parity are ready for retirement.
CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
—n ot only w ith poivate Industry,
THE REALITY is that the nc^
(Part of Bronx)
but w ltb m a n y etatee -wlhloh had
full wi
Ctanley L. Shapiro (R ), 853 leaxned the baa'd wa.y th a t good President wUl find n
Sheridan Avenue. Bi-onx, N.Y.; civil service ta len t h a s to be prop­ problema, n ot the least o f wMcJ
is th at th e m iddle managera oi
Jannea H. Sch«,uer (D -L ), 1020 erly oofnpensated.
the Federal governm ent a re h
OQ'and Ooncoui'se, B io n x , N.Y.;
'PHE FEDERAL Oovernm ent’s
Maalo P ichler (C ), 410 E ast 141st 8 , 0 0 0 mana«er»-HniUldle m an age- danger o f bein« scattered to ttM
four wlnde by natural a*tritkm
Street, Bronx, N.Y.
tnent, aa they are called in private
FOR EXAMPLE, In th e rufwr
TWENTY-SECOND
Industry—really run th e country.
grade
pay classifications—<3e-l<
CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
By th a t w e m ean operationally. through 0 1 3 - 1 8 , w hich pay $ 2 a ,» S fi
(Part o f Bronx)
They do n o t necessarily m ake pol­
Janies N. H aniji (R ), 865 East icy^ but th ey ccartalnly ca n influ- to $ 2 8 , 0 0 0 — th e turnover ie nc\(
3 0 pei-oent a year.
167th Street, Bix)nx, N.Y.; Jacob
A RECENT Federal executive
H. Gilbert (D ), 1160 Evergreen
survey confirm ed th e im m inent
Avenue, Bi’onx, N.Y.; Juan J.
appa'oach o f a talen t fam ine. OI
Lugo (C), 915 K elly Street, Bronx,
2 2 .0 0 0 people a t or near Feder»;
N.Y.; Sergio S. P en * (L), 687
executive positions, one-third
Pttospect Avenue, Bronx, N Y.
over 55 and less than one-quajrtei
TW ENTY-THIRD
A
fiv e -d a y
tr ip
to
th e
wei-e under 45. Moro than one
CONGiRESSIONAL DISTRICT
G rand
B a h a m a s over
th e
tenth were eligible for retirement
(Part o f Bronx)
V e t e r a n s D a y h o li d a y Is n o w and o n e-th ird would be eJJ«i
Alexander Sack« (R -C ), 201
o p e n f o r b o o k in g s t o C iv il ble within five years.
East Mtosholu Park, N„ Bronx,
Service E m ployees Aasn. m em IT 18 IN T E R E S llN G to not*
N.Y.; Jonathan B. Bingham (D -L ),
bea's a n d their fainiliet for only th a t th e gi-eatest need for irtiinj
5000 Independence Avenue, Bronx, $149.50 com plete.
is in admlnlsti'ation, AdmdnistmN.Y.
The com plete tour price Includes tore comjMlse 2 0 percent of th i
TW ENTY-FOURTH
round-U ip je t tr*n«)ortatlon, d e­ total group. Engineers and doc­
CONGIIESSIONAL DISTRICT
luxe breakfast and dinner and tors each m ake up 16 percent cf
(Part of Bronx)
room a t the Sheraton-O ceanus th e top Federal managei-e. Phy*
Paul A. Fino, R -C ), 1601 MteU^o- hotel.
slcal scien tists totaled n in e per
po-litan Avenue, Bronx, N.Y.; M a­
T he fiv e-d a y and four-night
rio Biaggi (D ), 100 E ast Mo«holu trip depax'te Thursday, Nov. 7 and cent and lawyers five peioent.
THE N EX T PRESIDENT * a » a
Park S., Bronx, N.Y.; John P a ­
(Continued from Page 1)
double problem in runninc the
trick H agan (L ), 3800 Caapenter i-etuina 3V4onday, Nov. 11.
government. Fiast, he tnuet find
Avenue, Bi-onx, N.Y.
'n ie O ceanus Hiotel facilities in ­ replacem ents for middle inanace'^
TWEN'FY-FIFTH
clude f o l f course!, calling and m en t a n d second, he’d better find,
CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
deep sea fish in g tolpe, scuba div­ and attract good one* ao thml
(Putnam and P art of Weetchefiter) ing tiipe, ekeet and
shooting opeaational efficien cy wiU xvmaiA
Sam uel N akasian (R ), 22 Su n - and horseback riding.
high— and so w ill th e good pubhfl
n yb iae Place, Bdonxville, N.Y.:
Hor further ]nformatk)n and
Richard L. Ottingex (D -L ), 236 to m ake reservationa foar the trip i-elatione o f Federal civil serv ice
B eer Ridge Road, Pleasantville, contact S am E^nmoU a t 1060 East
C IV IL SB K V K B LEADBB
N.Y.; A nthony J. DeVito (C ), 2«th St., B iooklyn, N.Y. 11210 or
A m erica’* Leadiinr W e e k l/
fo r Public Kmployfca
Greenmeadow Road, PleasantvUle, telephone 253-4488 a lter S p.m.
•T Du«n« St., New Yoik. N. V. ]e0 « 7
N.Y.
Telephone: X l» IlKvknMB 8-eO ie
Fubliahed Ench TueiHlay
TW ENTY-SIXTH
a t S89 L afayette St..
R tferee Homed
t
Brldreport, Conn.
CONGRESSIONAL DISTRJCT
■h
k
Ih
m * and E«ll(«irlal OITIcct
(Park of W estchester)
I t ie ajppointaaent o f Joseph G.
• 7 D unn* St., Mew X o rk , N .Y . 1 9 9 9 7
0 « d e n R. Reid (R -L ), Ophir Mediels, Jr. « • a referee by the
Entered m aecond-clnr* m a tte r aud
ae«»nd-elaas p oetare (laid. ()<>teb«ir 8,
Ootte««, H airison , N.Y.
(P.O. WlorkjnenVi C^nnixnftation Board
l&ai> a t th a poet
at
Puchaae. N.% ); P aul Davldoff o f th e fitato e f Kew York, effecConn., under the Act o t M aieh 8. t m i .
M em bw » t A udit B ureau «f Clruula(D ), 18 Foi-est Park Ave., L a w h - 4 tv0 A u iiie l 18, Mm been a n ­
Uoni.
mo«t, N Y.
nounced by e.E . flenlov, WCOB
In b te rlp tlM i Frtce 9 U 9 9 T t *
la d fT lia a l C*plea, WS«
(Continued on Page
CtaaiMBQiaA.
Who Does The Work
Vets Day Bahamas
- $149.50
Tuesday, August 20, 1968
CIVIL
SERVICE
LEADER
Page ThnM
P o u g h k e e p s ie C SE A
W in s 1 2 P e t . i n c r e a s e
P O U G H K E E P S I E — ^The P o u g h k e e p s ie u n i t o f t h e C iv il
S e r v i c e E m p lo y e e s A s s n . s i g n e d a c o n t r a c t w i t h t h e C ity o f
P o u g h k e e p s ie fo r a 12 p e r c e n t p a y r a is e fo r c i t y e m p l o y e e s
o v e r t h e n e x t tw o y e a r s . T h e s i g n i n g to o k p la c e b e t w e e n
city officials and th e CSEA’s
m ediators last week a t P ough­ 400 city workers will be a f ­
fected. Policem en and firemen,
keepsie.
Aooording to Acting CMty M an- who have their ow n representa­
ftger W. Robert Richards about tion, are not affected.
The contract is the first of tlie
type for the city and Is an o u t­
growth of the S tate’s Taylor Law
which permits governm ent e m ­
ployees to organize for bargain­
ing purposes.
T he tw o-year contract pro­
vides, am ong other things, for a
six percent raise retroactive to
July
15 and another six percent
U T IC A — O n e id a
C ou n ty
e m p lo y e e s
o v e r w h e lm i n g ly in ciease effective th e first o f
next year. The pay increase will
c h o s e t h e C iv il S e r v ic e E m ­
add about $ 2 0 0 ,0 0 0 annually to
p lo y e e s A ssn . a s t h e i r b a r ­
the city ’s budget.
g ain in g representative in a recent
Another provision o f the c o n ­
designation election conducted by tract is a
vacation schedule
th e S ta te Public Employm ent R e ­ which will give employees two
lations Board.
weeks’ vacation during the first
R esults of tiie election were five years of seiTlce, three weeks
813 for CSEA and 33 for no rep- | thereafter to 15 years and four
resentation. Although 1,225 em - weeks after 15 years.
ployees were eligible to vote.
Other Itema in th e agreement
CSEA needed only a m ajority o f provide for longevity pay based
t h e votes cast. Roger F. Solim on- on total length o f service with
do, chapter president, was happy | the city rather th an in a specific
o v e the tunout, especially since job, and a liberal sick leave plan.
th e vote came duing vacation
Richards said, “ I think i t ’s a
fair contract for the city and
tim e.
Upon hearin gthe outcome, the for the eraployees. T h e nego­
County Board of Legislators ap- tiating comondtteea deserve a lot
px-oved a resolution setting up a of credit.”
Representing
th e
Comjnon
negotiating comm ittee. T hose apjw inted to speak for the county Council in th e negotiations were
were Theodore J. Robak, dii’ect>oi‘ Alderman F m n k G annon, Alder­
o f research; William J. Halpin, man ’Thomas Milano, Alderman
assista n t county - attorney, and Pasquale Letterll, Mayor Richard
R ussell W. Williams, chairm an of W. Mftchell and City F inance
th e Board of Legislators. W illiams Commissioner Aubrey Coons,
said the appointment would be | Representing OSE^A were Ned
for one year.
i Gusty, mediator, Jam es Gaaham,
CSEA chapter officials have field representative, John W. Colreadied a list of 18 benefits thac ■ bert, president of th e Poughw lll be sought at the bargaining , keepsie CSEA unit, a n d City
(Conthiued on Page 14)
ISealer John J. Pinello.
CSEA Swamps
Oneida Election
For Bargainer
M E N T A L H Y G IE N E M E E T IN G —
Ciivl Service Employees Assn. President Dr. Theo­
dore C. Wenzl pauses with members of the special
Mental Hpgiene ward service study committee
during a m eeting at the DeWitt Clinton Hotel in
Albany. A program of soliciting responses on the
problems of ward service workers evolved from
the discussions. Initial action was also taken on
setting up a career ladder that would allow a t­
tendants and nurses to upgrade them selves through
progressive on-the-job trabiing. Standing, from
left, are: Patrick Monachino, CSEA collective bar­
gaining specialist; Stewart Anderson, attendant at
Binghamton State Hospital; John Graveline, staff
attendant at St. Lawrence State Hospital; and
Richard Snyder, staff attendant at Wassaic State
School; seated, Mary Blair, CSE.\ program spe­
cialist; Barbara Burke, registered nurse at the
Rochester State Hospital; Dr. Wenzl, and Rose
Cilli, attendant at Pilgrim State Hospital.
One Bargaining Unit For Nassau
County im plofees Seen Probable
(F ro m
L e a d e r C o rre s p o n d e n t)
M IN E O L A — H e a r in g o ffic e r s h a v e r e c o m m e n d e d t h e r e j e c t io n o f a p p e a ls fo r s e p a r ­
a t e b a r g a in i n g u n i t s a m o n g N a s s a u C o u n t y e m p lo y e e s — w it h t h e e x c e p t i o n o f c o m m u n it y
c o lle g e p r o fe s s o r s — v ir t u a ll y a s s u r in g t h e c r e a t i o n o f a s i n g le ll.O O O -m em ^er b a r g a in in g
u n it a s s o u g h t b y t h e C iv il Sei*vice E m p lo y e e s A ssn .
In reports on the last two of
welfare departments.
single, overall unit of county e m ­
13 petitions, hearings exam iners
T he m ini-PERB is expected to ployees,” ruled exam iner Leonard
urged th e N assau County m in iCooper. He is a member of the
act in the next few days.
PER/B to reject separate bargain­
county m ini-PERB.
The
N
assau
chapter
of
the
Civil
ing units for the sh eriff’s and
In the W elfare D epartm ent rul­
Service Enxployees Assn., w hich
has been pressing for action so ing, Cooper said th a t the con ten ­
th at a formal recognition of tion of a group w liich wanted a
CSEA can be made, hailed the separate unit that a countywide
unit would be good for tlie em ­
progress.
The chapter submitted pledge ployer and bad for the employees
cards representing 50 percent of was false. “One need only review
the history of the trade union
the 1 1 ,0 0 0 county employees to the
movement
to find otherwise.”
m ini-P E R B earlier.
he ruled.
Ciiapter
President
Irving
Flaum enbaum noted tliat m em ­
bers who have not submitted C o lu m b u s D a y T r ip
pledge cards' siiould do so at
once. The law requires a show ­
T o P u e r to R ic o A n d
ing o f 55 percent in order to
permit the m ini-P E R B to grant
T lie V ir g in I s l a n d s
recognition without an election.
Creation o f a single countywide
bargaining
unitr—ithe
goal
of
CSEA’s 7,500 members In all de­
partm ents— waa foreshadowed by
language o f a hearing exam iner’s
report on tiie sh eriff’s depart­
ment.
“T h e joint responsibiiitlea of
th e county and the em ployees hei'e
involved would best ba accom ­
plished by the Inclusion of the
un it here contended for In any
W INNER
RaliA W. A gnes, president of
the Onondaga County Employees Association unit
• f Onondaga chapter of Civil Service Em ployees
Assn., presents the winners trophy to Mrs. Rich­
ard Stevens, owner of “ Grig No. 4” who won the
*‘Onondagaa County Employees Association Unit
Kaoe” a i Veravu D ow m recently. On# hundred
fifty m eniberi
th e chapter attended th e
race and a clubhouse buffet under the chairman­
ship of Mrs. Mildred Friew iocld, first vice-presi­
dent. L eft to right are Gene Pownall, driver; Mrs.
Steevnst Agne; B. Burdette Lee, first vice-presi­
dent, Skaneateles Bank; John Bachman, Onondaga
County comptroller, and Miss Leona Appel, past
president of the chapter.
and
A special six-day Columbus Day
iioliday trip to Puerto Rico and
St. T hom as In the Virgin Islands
is now available for Immediate
bookings to Civil Service Employ­
ees Assn. members and their im ­
mediate fam ilies. The tour will
leave New York on Oct. 8 and re­
turn there on Oct. 13.
The low price of $199 will -In­
clude round trip jet fares to both
Puerto Rico and the Virgin I s ­
lands, hotel rooiTus, all-day tour
to St. Tliom as and other features.
Space Is limited en d Immediate
application is advised. For reser­
vations write Deloras G. Fussell,
111 Winthi-op Ave., Albany, New
York. Telephone (518) 482-8597.
3 0 0 A t P ic n ia
BUFFALO- More than 300 per­
sons, Including m any chlldi'en, a t ­
tended th « annual picnic o f the
State University o f B u ffa lo ch a p ­
ter, Civil Sei*vic* Employees Assn.
at Oppenhelm Park, near Niagara
The cash value of Series B and
Palls. Edward Dudek is th e c lv a p - H U.S. Savings Bonds outstanding
tor cliairm aa.
In now more than |5 1 biUlM.
\
,
CIVIL
Pag» Font
Don't R epeat This!
(Continued from Page 2)
TWENTY-SEVENTH
CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
(Delaware, Orange, Rockland,
and Sullivan)
M«atln B. McKneally (R), 329
First Street, Newburgh, N.Y.;
John G. Dow, (D -C ), 195 River
Road, Ga-and View, N.Y.; Freder­
ick P. Roland (C), 19 Collyer
Ave., New Olty, N.Y.
TWENTY-EIGHTH
CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
(Columbia, Dutchess, Green,
Schoharie, Ulster)
Ham ilton Fish, Jr. (R ), Millbrook, New York; Josn S. Dyson
(D ), SpringhUl Farm, Millbrook,
N.Y.; G. Gordon Llddy
<C).
Pcughkeepsle, New York; Peter
Kian© D ufault (L), R.D. No. 1,
Hjllsdale, N.Y.
TWENTY-NINTH
CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
(Albany and Schnectady)
Daniel E. Button ( R) , 114 South
Pine Ave., Albany, N.Y.; Jacob H.
HerzoR (D -C ), 76 Vl^estern Ave.,
Albany, N.Y,; J. Lawrence Katz
(L), 838 Maxwell Drive, Schnectedy, N.Y.
B
“
THIRTIETH
CONGRESSIONAL DISTRJCT
(Esfiex, Fiilt«n, Hamilton,
Renwtelaer, Saratoga, Warren,
W ashington)
C a ik to n J. K ing (R -C ), 126
Nelson Avenue, Saratoga Springs,
N.Y ; Orlando B. Potter (D -L ),
B randielh. Long Lake, New York.
THIR TY-FIR ST
CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
Clinton, Franklin, Jefferson,
Lewis, Oswego, St. Lawrence)
Robert C. MlcEwen (R -C ), R.F.
D. No. 2, Otlgen.'burg, New York;
K. Daniel Haley (D ), Bucks Bridge
Road, Madrid, New York; William
P. Delaney (L), 21 Woodruff St.,
Saranac Lake. N.Y.
TIIJRTY-SECOND
CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
(Herkimer, Oneida and Madison)
Alexander Pirnle (R -L ), 12 S la y ­
ton bxif^h Lane,
New Hartford,
N.Y.; Anthony J. Montoya <D),
310 Ochab Da1v€, Boone, New
York; .Albert J. Bu&hong (C),
Golf Course Road, Rome, N.Y..
IIO R T Y -T IIIR D
CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
(Broome, Chemiuiig, Tioga, and
READERS OF THE CIVIL SERVICE LEADER P Q
Who N ever Finished
"
s c h o o l
AT HOM E IN SPARE TIME
Tompkins)
HowTard W. Robinson (R ), 833
Main Street, Owego, New York;
Benjam in Nichole
(D -L ),
109
U enroo St., Ithaca, N.Y.
T H IRTY-FO URTH
CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
(Onondaga)
David V. O ’Brien (R ), 409
SJott Avenue, Syracu.se, NjY.;
James M. Hanley (D), 316 Oolerrldge Ave., Syi-acuse, N.Y.; Pi*ancia H. Aspinwall (C ), 77 Onon­
daga St., Skaneateles, N.Y,; Au­
brey D. Tussing (L), 960 Lan­
caster Ave., Syracuse, N.Y.
THIRTY-FIFTH
CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
(Cayuga, Chenango, Cortland,
Ontario, Otsego, Montgomery,
Seneca, Yates)
George R. M etcalf (R ), R.D.
No. 2, Auburn, N.Y.; Sam uel S.
Stratton (D ), 244 Guy Park Ave­
nue, Amsterdam, N.Y.; W illiam L.
Griffen (L), Prebble, N.Y.
T H IR T Y -SIX T H
CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
(W ayne and Part of Monroe)
Frank J. Horton (R ), 212S E.
Avenue,
Brighton,
Rochester,
N.Y.; A ugustin J. Marvin (D ),
W ayneport Road, Macedon, N.Y.]
Leo J. Kessring (C ), 333 T hay­
er Road, Faii-port, N.Y.; Robert
L. Holmes (L.), 618 Hard Road
Webster, N.Y.
Tuetday, August
(D ), R D . No. 1, Cattarftugiw,
N.Y.i O ust E. Joihnson (O), 83
E. Vtrigtnift Blvd, Jamestown, N.Y.j
Charle# F. echw arta (L ), R.D.
No. 1, Alpine, N.Y.
THIRTY-NINTH
CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
(Part of Erie)
rxanled E. Weber (R ^ 65 U o y d
Dirlve, Oh€ektowa«a, \'^.Y.; R ich ­
ard D. McCarthy ( E) , 1 Beard
Ave., Buffalo, N.Y.; J>hn R. P il­
lion (O), 7651 Old
Shore
Rd., L aievlew , N.Y.
FORTIETH
CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
(Niagara and P a ri of Erie)
Henry P. Sm ith, 'OI (R -C ), 253
Chrlfitiana, Street, N. Tonawanda,
N.Y.; Eugene P. O ’Connor (D ),
6 8 Fairbanks Avenue, Towanda,
N.Y,; Jam es A. Peck (L ), 869 N ia­
gara Street, Buffalo, N.Y.
FO R TY -FIR ST
CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
(Fart of Erie)
Edward P. Mattar (R ), 1165
Delawaine Ave., B uffalo, N.Y.;
Thaddeus J. Dulskl, (D -L ), 60
Peaco Sti-eet, Buffalo, N.Y.
C iv il S e r v ic e
T e le v is io n
:
>
I
I
B
-
LEADER
THIRTY-SEVENTH
Tuesday, August 20
CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
p m .—A iound
th e
dock—
(Genesee, Livingston, Orleans,
New York Police Academy serWyoming, and Part of Monroe)
l e i for
jn-sea’vic« training:
Barber B. C?onable, Jr. (R ),
*‘Crime Bc-ene Ttictlcs.”
10532 Alexandeor Road, Alexander,
a re invited to write for FREE booklet. Tells how you can
W ednesday, August 21
N.Y.; R aym ond Stonier (D ), 41
earn a Diploma
p m . — Around the d o c k :
Webster Road, Spencerpoat, N.Y.;
'‘Crime Scene Tactics.”
Berta S. MacKenize (L), 241 But­
pin,.—Living for th e S ixties—
ler Drive, Pittsford, N.Y.
B etty P u m ess intex-vlewa MerTHIRTY-EIGHTH
AMERICAN SCHOOL. Dept. 9AP-90
lyn Pitele, executive director of
lao W. 4 ‘ind St., New Yuik, N.Y. 100»U. I'hone HK 0-2004, Day or Mght
CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT
R etirem ent Advisor®, Inc.
Send me your free 55-page High Bchool Booklet.
(Allegany, Cattaraugus, Chau­
Nam e
_______________________________________ Age_______
tauqua, Schuyler, and Steuben) 1:30 p jn .—O n th e Job—^New York
Otty Fire Depaa-tm«nt training
Chailes E. Goodell (R ), 504
Address
jv p t.
program: BuUdln* OonstrucCity -------------------------------'L.iiy
State
zap
^
zip
Fairm
ont Ave,, W.E., Jamee■ D i l l
OUR 71st YEAR i ■ ■ ■ b J low n, N.Y. I Wilbur W hite Jr., Idon, Old Law T enem ents.”
8 p.m.— Behind the Laws— ‘‘SiU’gat«’s Court Pix)cedure Act.”
lliuTsday, August 22
4 p.m. — Around th e Clock:
"Crlmie S cene Tactics.”
NOW Y O U C A N R EAD YOUR
7 pan,—li v in g for the Sixties—
WUJls
Atwell
discusses
the
N E W Y O R K D A IL Y C O L U M N
Amterlcan Af«ociatlon for R e­
E V E R Y DAY IN C L U D IN G S U N D A Y
tired Persons.
Friday, August 23
10 to 11 a m . —S ta ff M eeting of
N E W Y O R K D A IL Y
th e Air—O fficials o f New York
C ity’s D ep aitm en t. o f Social
Services ajifiwer phoned-in In^luliies from the offices In the
field. (U V E )
11 ft.m.—Humtan R ights F oiiim —
Dltacussion eeries on clvU rights
o f New Yorkers.
11:30—CommKunity
Action—The
Oomamunity Council o f Gaeater
New York exam ines the sei'vlces
in heaMJi and welfai-* th a t are
ttvaJlable to New Yorkers.
4 p.m. —.— Around the Clock:
IContinued on Page 13)
HIGH
I
SERVICE
COLUM N
1 0 0
of the N ations
Top
C
o l u m
n i s t s
IncMtnS
Jack OBi»*n
Walter WinchtU
Jimmy Cannon
Belly B ta ls
Ro«co* Diommond
Bcnnatl Carl
Barb*»
J o te p h Altop
H*ri> CoWan
Victor Rie»el
Marqui* Childt
Carl Bowan
Ann LandaL*
We understand.
AND SPECIAL FEATURES
_______
Slock ol the Day • TV Supplemenl • Book Digest • Crossword Pu^^le • Movio and T h e a te rl^ e v T ^
Be Sure to Buy Your Daily
CiiliH NOWon Your N e w ss ta n d Every Day
tImimSms
mrnlOj ! • «
Waller B. Cooke
FUNERAL§ FROM $250
Call 6 2 S 4 7 0 0
to re a c h e n y of c u r
10 neig hborhood c h ap e ls
In tfw Bronx, Brooklyn,
M*in^)attiin a n d O u M n t.
20,
1968
Where to Apply
For Public Jobs
T h e foUofVing directions teQ
where to a p p ly for publio io b i
w d how t e reach destinatlona I n
Nfw Tork City on the trAusIl
•ysteio.
CITY
NEW CORK CITY—The Appli­
cations Section o f the New York
City Departm ent of Personnel la
located a t 49 Thom as St.. New
York, N.Y. 10013. It is three
blocks north o f City Hall, on«
block west o f Broadway.
Applications: Filing Period —.
Applications Issued and received
Monday through Friday from t
a.m. to 5 p.m., except Thursday
/rom 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., and
S;>turday from 9 a.m. to 12 noon*
Application blanks are o b ta in able free either by the applicant
In person or by his representative
at the Application Section of th e
D epartm ent o f Personnel a t 49
Thom as Street, New York, N.Y.
10013. T elephone 566-8720.
Mailed reQuests for application
blanks m ust include a stamped,
self-addressed business-slze en velope and m ust be received by
the Personnel D epartm ent at least
five days before the closing data
tor the filing of applications.
Completed application form s
which are filed by mall must b«
sent to the Personnel D epartm ent
and m ust be postmarked no later
th an the la st day of filing or a t
stated otherwise in the exam ­
ination announcem ent
T lie Applications Section o l
the Personnel Department is near
the Chambers Street stop of tha
m ain subway lines th at go througb
the area. T hese are the IRT 7tli
Avenue Line and the IND 8 th
Avenue Line. T he IRT Lexlngtoa
Avenue Line stop to use is th e
Brooklyn Bridge stop and the BMT
QT and RR local’s stop is City HaJl
Both lines have exits to D u a n t
Street, a short walk from tdie Per­
sonnel Department.
STATE
STATE— Room 1 1 0 0 at 270
Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10007,
corner of Chambers St., telephone
488-6606;
Governor
Alfred
E. Smith State Office Bulldhig and
The S tate Campus, Albany: Suite
750, G enesee Building 1 West
Genesee St.; State Office Building,
Syracuse; and 500 Midtown Tower,
Rochester, (Wednesday only).
C andidates may obtain applica­
tions for S ta te Jobs from local
offices o f the New York S tate
Employment Service.
FEDERAL
FEDERAL — Second U.S. Civil
Service Region Office. News Build­
ing, 220 East 42nd Street (at 2nd
A v e.), New York. N.Y. 10017, Just
west of the United Nations build <
Ing. Take the IRT Lexington Ava
Line to Grand Central and walk
two blocks east, or take the sh u t­
tle from Tim es Square to Grand
Central or th e IRT Q u een s-H u sh ing train from any point on th«
line to the Grand Central ston.
Hours are 8:30 a.m . to 6 p.m.,
Monday through Friday. Also opeo
Saturdays 0 a.m. to 1 p m . T ele>hone 573-6101.
ApplicatTonv are also obtain­
able at m ain post office^ except
the New York, N.Y., Post Offico.
Boards o f examiners at the par*
ticular installations offering tha
tests also may be applied to for
further information and appllcfttion forms. No return envelopes
ara required with mailed reisuesta
for appUoation forma.
-
CIVIL
Tuesdaft Auguflt 20, 1968
B r o o m
e
P r a is e s
O n
M
C S E A
C o u n t y
in i-P E R B
C h a p t e r
O ff ic ia ls
S e le c t io n
B IN G H A M T O N — T h e B r o o m e C o u n t y c h a p t e r , C lvU S e r v ­
i c e E m p lo y e e s A s s n ., h a s p r a is e d c o u n t y o f f lc l a la f o r t h e i r
■ e l e c t i o n o f t h r e e m e n w h o w ill m a k e u p t h e c o u n t y ' s P u b lic
E m p lo y e e s R e l a t i o n s B o a r d .
B room e’s “m ini>PERB/' p a t­
terned after th e S tate board, will able step ” in recom m ending th e
con sist o f Carlton F. T hom pson, three m en for the board.
The supervisors approved th e
D onald M. F lanagan and John
appointm ents a t their June m eet­
R . Brunner.
I n a letter to the Board of ing after Herrick’s letter w as read.
Supervisors, John
E. Herrick,
Thompson and F lanagan are
president o f th e C?SEA chapter, lawyers. Brunner was m ayor of
said th e three m en were fair- E ndlcott im till h e decided tiot
m inded and together would be to seek re-election last year. He
representative
of
comm unity is an executive o f the Endlcott
thinking.
Lumber Ss B ox Oo.
**Commendable Step*'
Herrick
said
the
chapter’s
board o f director* h ad discussed
th e m atter and agreed that E d­
w in L. Ciawford, board chair­
m an, had taken a "com m end-
X
M en
'J f a y
S o u g h tA t V A
T h e V e t e r a n s A d m in i s t r a ­
t i o n H o s p it a l, B r o o k ly n , 11209,
h a s v a c a n c ie s fo r a n X -R a y
T e c h n ic ia n , th e r a p y , a n d a n
X -R a y T ech nician diagnosis.
T he X -R a y T echnician, therapy
position, G S-3, starting salary $5,732 per annum, requires a total of
three years’ experience w hich
m u st have included tw o years of
experience in operating, supervis­
in g the operation of, or in stru ct­
in g th e opei'atlon o f therapeutic
X-Rajr equipm ent in « m edical
capacity. The X -R a y Teclhnician,
diagnosis, position, O S - 6 , start­
in g salary $6,321 per annum , re­
quires * total o f four years e x ­
perience w hich m ust have includ­
ed three years of experience in
operating, supervising th e opera­
tion of, or instructing in th e op­
eration
of
diagnostic
X -R a y
equipm ent in a m edical capacity.
T he VA Hospital also has an
opening for a clerk-typlst, G S-4,
a t $3,143 per year to start. T he
Job Involves typing and c o st a c­
counting duties and th e applicant
m ust have a total o f tw o years’
experience.
For further Information, visit
or write th e Personnel O ffice at
th e hospital, telephone 836-6600,
exten sion 8B9.
B U Y
U . S.
B O N D S
•
•
•
—
A ll
The
m ent
M anpow er
T r a in in g
F am ous
has
a n n o u n c e d t h a t i t w ill a c c e p t
a p p li c a t i o n s c o n t i n u o u s l y
fo r
th e position o f m etal fabrication
instructor at $8.60 per hour.
A h igh school or equivalency
diploma and nine o r more years
of recent, full-tim e experience in
sh eet m etal work and power m a ­
ch in e operation are required. The
Jobs are for daytim e only.
A resume o f experience and
education should be sen t to Peter
P. Oulda, personnel supervisor.
M anpower r>evelopment Training
Program,
110 Livingston
St..
R oom 814, Brooklyn, N.Y. 11201.
LKOAL NOTICI
FOR NEXT EXAM
PATROLMAN
$ 1 9 1
B rand
N a m es
^ 1 ^
I
m S
U
i
■
■
fo r
F eb. 8,
1969
O u r c o u r s e In p r e p a r a t i o n f o r t h i s t e s t
w ill s t a r t o n M o n d a y , S e p t e m b e r 9, 1 9 6 9
o n d w ill m e e t o o e h w e e it a s f o l l o w s t
JAMAICA
(91-24 168 St); I^ O N D A Y S e t 6:30 P.M.
M A N H A T T A N (126 E. 13 St): WEDNESDAYS - 6 P.M.
TUITION:
$45. in 30 d a y s
-
$60. in installments
T he DELEHANTY INSTITUTE
115 East 15th S tre e t, N ew York. N.Y. 10003
G R 3*6900 For Inform ation
The DELEHANTY INSTITUTE
MANHATTAN: 111 CAST IB ST., N«ar 4 Ave. (All fabw aye)
JAMAICA: 8f-25 MERRICK ILVO., b«t. Jam aica & Hlllslda Avai.
O r n C E HOURS: MON. TO THURS. 9:.10 A.M. to 8 P.M.
FRIDAYS 9:30 to 8 P.M. (Closed Saturdays)
53 Years o f Experienca in Promoting thm
Education of Morm Than Half a Million Sludenig
a V I L S E R V IC E ~ T R A IN IN C ~
R egiiitration n o w o p e a i a clasaee fo r:
C A R PEN TE R
E x a m S c lie d u ie fo r Jan . 25, 1969
S a la ry : $ 1 0 ,587.50
Classeu w ill start in O ctol)er
P A T R O L M A N - N . Y .P .D .
E x a m e x p e c te d in F a ll 1968
Cias^eti ^tart A u g , 14tii
M e e t W E D S . 5 :3 0 o r 7 :3 0 P M
P .O . S U P E R V IS O R
E x a m sc h d u e d fo r S e p t. 2 8 lli
Classed m e e t M O N . & T H U R S . 10 A M or 6 P M
A D M IN IS T R A T IV E A SS O C IA T E
E x a m S c lie d u le d fo r D e c . 14th
ClaMe/i m e e t T U E S D A Y S 5 :1 5 P M
S E N IO R
C L E R K -S T E N O
E x a m S c h e d u le d fo r F eb , 8 , 1969
C lasses S tart S e p t. 9 th
M e e t M O N S , - Jamaica 6 :3 0 P M
and W EDS. - M anh. 6 PM
S T A T I O N A R Y E N G I N E E R S L IC E N S E
E x a m S c h e d u le d fo r M arch 8 , 1969
Claa 8 ca it a r t S en t. 9 th
M eet M O N D A Y S 7 PM
R E F R I G . M A C H IN E O P E R . L IC E N S E
E x a m S c lie d u le d A p r il 19, 1969
Clasoea S tart S ep t. 1 1 th
M e« t W E D N E S D A Y S 7 P M
M A S T E R E L E C T R IC IA N L IC E N S E
E x a m S c lie d u le d A p r il 19, 1969
ClaHHea start S e p t. 1 2 tli
M eet T H U R S D A Y S 7 PM
M ASTER PLU M BER S
L IC E N S E
E x a m S c h e d u le d J a n . 18, 1969
Claxses S tart S ep t. lO lh
M eet T U E S . & F R I . 7 P M
H IG H
SCH O O L
E Q U IV A L E N C Y
D IP L O M A
W EDNESDAYS
P R A C T IC A L V O C ^ n O N A L cT oU R SE S i
L ic e n se d b y S ta le o f N e w Y orii, A p p r o v e d fo r V eteran *
a t 5 :3 0 & 7 : 3 0 P .M .
P h o n e : G R 3 -6 9 0 0
our guest a t m class sessiea
Classes Meet
J u s t Fill in e n d Bring C o u p o n
C LASSES
I N S T IT D T B
Baat l a t h M., Manhattaui
•ddraas
• itr e lip
Admit rB U m to Oa« FatralinaB Claoa
M EET
• A U T O M E C H A N IC S
• D R A F T IN G
• R A D IO , T V & E I.E C T U O N IC S
D E L E H A N T Y H IG H S C H O O l
91-01 M errick B o u le v a r d , J a m a ica
* A
p r e p a r a t o r f co-flducatiniial, ic ailen tlo h ig h
• c h o o l accrMJitfid b f tli«
D B I.K H A X T T
J A M A I C A G A S & ELECTRIO
lOULIVARD
BAYSIOI. N. Y. IA
IA f.2 4 M
O N N I V I t TRL f PM
WiO a lA T n U « PM
S c h e d u le d
IN M A N H A T T A N a n d JA M A IC A
rh o M O rders— 10 AM.« PM— Cali With Mali* «ad Model N « « b « ri
■
E xam
p r e p a r in g
**New Y o rk 's F in e s t!"
C la s s M e e H
For c o m p le te inform ation
ilS
to
D e v e lo p ­
P rogram
Deieiianty Institute’s
• W A S H E R S • DRYERS • REFRIGERATORS • FREEZERS
• R A N G E S • D IS H W A S H E R S • T.V . • STEREO
• A IR C O N D IT IO N E R S
Pag* FItc
P r o m o tio n
8T7PRRMR COURT OF T H E
9T.\TR
OF NBW YORK, COUNTY OF NKW
YORK. YVONNB ZEKARI.<, Plaintiff,
a ra ln a t HKNRY K. ZRKARIA, Defftndant. Plaintiff deslfrnataa New Y ork Coun­
ty a» th s pl.isa of trial. The basis of
th a vw u ft li ReMdance of Pl.ilntlff.
$ 2 ,0 0 0 .
ACTrON FOR
ABSOI.UTH
DIVORCE.
oni. Plaintiff realdea a t 800 Cnntral
T h e services o f th e Broome Sunim
P a rk W w t. New York, Naw Y ork County
PER B in helping to settle im ­ of New York.
To th e ahovft named Defendant
passe issues will be mad« avail­
YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to
th e complaint In thia action and
able to any m unicipality or school anawer
to aervi* a (’o p y of your anawer, or. If
th
a
complaint
la n o t aerved w ith thia
district In th e county th a t chooses
aummona, to aeiTe a notice o f a p pea r­
to call on the new board, Craw­ ance. on the Plaintlff’a A tto rn e y (a ) wllliln
80 dayn a fte r tha aervlce of thia auinford h as said.
mona, eioliHlva of th e day of aervlce
T h e coun ty’s negotiating team (o r within SO daya a fte r th e aervli-e la
oompletrt If thla aummona la n o t peraonfor all employee m atters was de­ aJly delivered to you w ith in th e S ta ta
New Y o rk ); and In case of your
fined by th e supei-visors as the of
failure to appear o r anawer, Jndement
C ounty Board’s Employees C om ­ will be taken atralnet you by d efau lt for
the relief deni.Tnded In th a complaint.
m ittee, th e board chairm an and Dated. New Y o r k , N. Y.. J\ily 11, 1968.
SMALT., A ROCK
the chairm an o f the F inance C om ­
Atforney(a) fo r Plaintiff
Offie* and P o st Offlo* Addrea*
m ittee. Chairman o f the n egotiat­
201
Eaat 42nd Street,
ing com m ittee will be th e E m ­
New York, Naw Y ork lOOlT
MU 7-5358
ployees Committee chairm an, who N O r r r R — To h e n r y K. BEKARTA;
Tlie foreKolnsr aummona la aerved upon
this year is Earle D. Ridley. S ix th
you by publication p u rs u a n t to th e order
D istrict R epublican.
o f Hon. Irwin D. Davidson, a Juntlce of
th e Supreme Court, Stata o f New York,
dated Ju ly 19, 196S, and filed w ith the
LBGAI. NOTICB
oomplaint and other papera In tha office
S tIP R E M B OODRT OF THB 8TATB OF o f tha CJerk of th a County of New
NEW YORK, OOUNTT OfT NHTW TORK. York, 80 Centra St., New York. N.Y.
— R O SA U ND M. O'CONNOR, Flfclntia. TIta object of thla action la for a
U&tnat DANIEL. 3 . O’OONNOR,
!>•• divorce.
fe n d u it.— Ind«x No. 825O 3/108S.— Plk la- D atedt New York, J u ly ««, 1968.
SMAI.T. a ROCK
tlff dMlrn&tet New Y ork C o u n tr M (h*
A ttornera for PlalntllT
plao* of trfkl.— Til* ba*lt of tta* T«nu« k
P la ln tlft'i rHld«no«; New Y ork County
BUY U.S. SAVINGS BONDS
ACTION FOR ANNUI.MRNT OF MAItRTAOE.— SuinnioM .Plain tiff
raslda*
ft
221 W. s a n d St., N«w T o rk, H . T.,
E nroll N o w F o r
C o u n tr of N*w York.
To th a abov* aanind Defendant
You «r« b * re b r Sunimonod to ftnaw«r
th* eom p'aint la thi* action and to aanra
a oopr of y o u r aiiawsr. or, II tfaa aoraplaint la n o t a«rve.1 with thl«. aummona,
to aenra a notloa of appaaranoa. oo th a I n t e n s iv e P r e p a r a t o r y C o u r s e
P lalntlff’a A tto m « y i wlfhln 20 daya a fta r
tha aerrloa of ttalt aummona, axoIiialT*
tha day of anrviua (o r w ithin 80 daya
a fta r tha aarrtoa la eomplAta i t this auni*
mona ia n o t paraonally delUarod to you
w ithin th a S ta ta of Naw Y o r k ) : and In
oaaa o f y ou r failu ra to appear o r anawar,
JudKHinnt win ba taknn a c a ln it you by
d efau lt fo r th a raliaf daniandad In lha
complaint.
Datad. Kaw York, if T .. l u o a
,
196S.
LYNTOtr RT.FCrrf OPTOW A
A WEEK
S A sr^ w ,
Attom«^y* for Plaintiff.
AFTER 1 YEARS
Olllca and Poat Oflica AdJreaaaai 100 P ark
(Ineludai pay for
Avanue,
New York 100 IT. M. T .
(M u rra y Hill * 9 5 0 0 ).
HoUdayi and
To th a aboira named D efendant! Tha
Annual Uniform
foraerolnr aummona la aervad upon you
by publloaMon p u rs u a n t to an order datad
Allowanca)
Ju ly 1$, 196S of th e Hon. Irw in D. Darld<
aon, a' Ju itlo a of th e S uprem a C ourt ot
A
g
tii
20
thru 2 t
tha State of New York and filed a lo n t
Vffieni 2 0 /3 0
w ith th a aup p o rtlnr papera In the New
Y ork County Clark’a Ofriiia on Ju ly 18,
MiN. Hgt.t 8 7 "
19S8. Tlila la an action fo r tha annulm ent
o f niarrlara. Datwli J u ly #0, 1988. LyaD e le h o n t y h o t 5 0 y e a r s o f
tun Klein Optoa A SmIow, Attorneya fo r
Plalnllff.
s u c c e s s f u l e x p e r i e n c e In
O F F IC IA L
M A J O R A P P L IA IV C E
D IS C O U N T O U T L E T
F e a fu r in g
LEADER
Seek Instructor
For Metal Fab. S e n io r C l e r k - S t e n o
Flanagan, the lone D em ocrat
on th e three-m an PERB. is %
former City Judge In B ingham ton.
Thom pson is past president of
the Broome County Bar Assn.
E ach will receive a salary of
CIVIL S E R V IC I E M P LO Y E I PRICES Q U O T E D
A RB SLIG H TLY A BO V E W H O L ESA L E
•
SERTICE
B o a rd of R e g e n tt.
* Sflcretnrittl Trditilug availtibU for girli •• aa eleetiv«
•U|»loaiROt.
' * f a c i a l preparation ( ■ SciAitco and Matliaiuatica f o r
•todeata wlio wl«h to qualiff for Tevhaologloal taa
£ a |ia e 0 riag Collegaa.
_
e DrUar Educatioa Coursaa.
f o r I n f o r m a t i u n o a a ll C o u r s e s P h o n e G R 8 ^ 9 0 0
A I.I. C L A S S R O O M S A IR -C O N D IT IO N E D
CIVIL
Page Six
—GwiS.
liE A P E B .
S E R V I C E L E A D G R
LETTERS
TO THE EDITOR
LcitiTS to the editor must b<
signed. Nam es will be withheld
from publication upon request.
A m e r i v t t ' H L a r f f t > t t l M e e l i l i f l o r P i i h i i e K n i i n . : y e e s They should be no longer than
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations
300 words and we reserve the right
t ’u h lis h e a every
Tuesday by
to edit published letters as seems
LEADER P U B L IC A T IO N S, IN C .
Appropriate. Address all letters to:
97 Diiane Street, New York, N.Y. 10007
2l2*BEeliman 3-6010 The Editor. Civil Service Leader,
Jerry !• inkciflfin, I ’u h li s li e r
Joe Drasy, Jr., C ity Editor P B A R e s p o n d s
Paul Kyer, Editor
Marilyn Jarkson, Assixlaiit t'dilor
Editor, T he Leader:
N. n. MiiRtr. Business Manager
It was was indeed a pleasure to
A d v e r tis in f e R e p r e s e n t a t i v e s :
read your recent editorial entitled
ALBANY — Joseph T. H.ll.w — 303 So. Mar.ning Blvd., IV 2.5474
"Responsibility”.
KIN(;S'ro>’. N.Y. — Cliarlfs Amlreus — 239 Wali Street, FEdrral 8-83!)0
We at the New York City T ia n s10c per copy. Subscription Price $3.00 to m em beis of the Civil
it Police, Patrolm en’s Benevolent
Service Employees Association. $5.00 to non-members.
Association feel strongly about
contacting
responsible leaders in
r iiK S D A Y , AU(;UST~^ 20 ~ ] % »
every comm unity to establish a
“grass roots” program of support
for the civil servant.
Prejudice is unknown in our op­
eration—there is only one color
NCE a g a in , t h e d e d ic a t io n o f lo y a l c iv il s e r v ic e e m p lo y e e s
w ithin the New York City Transit
is b e in g r e lie d u p o n b y t h e S t a t e A d m in i s t r a t io n to Police— and th a t color is blue!
f o r e s t a ll s a la r y r e a llo c a t io n s .
To use your closing words, “our
P e r h a p s t h e h a r d e s t w o r k in g , y e t m o s t \m d e r p a id , e m ­ m en and women live, work, and
p lo y e e s o f t h e S t a t e s e r v e in t h e I n s t it u t io n s o f t h e D e ­ yes, even die together. T hey are
p a r t m e n t o f M e n t a l H y g ie n e in t i t l e s w it h i n t h e a t t e n d a n t responsible for the com m unity’s
safety. T h e com m unity is i-es e r ie s .
T h e s e tr a in e d e m p lo y e e s r e p la c e t h e a lm o s t im p o s s ib le - sponsible for theirs.”
Let us reason together and e s ­
to -fin d n u r s e s w h i c h th e d e p a r t m e n t c a n n o t r e c r u it b e c a u s e
tablish
rapport on all levels in
o f lo w p a y s c a le s . E v e n a t t e n d a n t s a r e h a r d t o fin d .
every comanunity so that every
J. E a r l K e lly , d ir e c to r o f c l a s s if ic a t io n a n d c o m p e n s a ­
branch of civil service can do a
tio n fo r t h e S t a t e C iv il S e r v ic D e p a r t m e n t , In r e j e c t in g
better job.
t h e a p p e a l o f t h e C iv il S e r v ic e E m p lo y e e s A ssn . in b e h a l f o f
RONALD E. BROWN
t h e s e e m p lo y e e s , o b v io u s ly f a ile d t o c o n s id e r t h a t t h e S t a t e ’s
Executive Secretar.v,
m e n t a l h o s p i t a ls a r e o p e r a t i n g a t le s s t h a n f u l l e ff ic ie n c y
T ransit Patrolm en’s
b e c a u s e o f la c k o f s t a f f .
B enevolent Ascrn.
T h e C iv il Sei-Vice E m p lo y e e s A ssn ., p l a n s t o a p p e a l
•
•
*
K e lly ’s d e c is io n to t h e C iv il S e r v ic e C o m m is s io n . W e h o p e
t h a t t h e c o m m is s io n t a k e s a ll fa c t o r s In to c o n s id e r a t io n O p i n i o n s W a n t e d
a n d c o m e s u p w it h t h e o b v io u s a n s w e r — E m p lo y e e s in t h e Editor, T he Leader:
I read w ith great interest and
a t t e n d a n t s e r ie s d e s e r v e a r e a llo c a t io n .
approval your recent colum n in
the August 6 , 1968 issue asking
th at civil service employees assist
candidates in foim ulating their
platforms.
As Republican candidate for the
63rd Assembly DistrLst, I ask that
all interested groups and Individsals furni.sh me with their opin­
A L B A N Y — O n e h u n d r e d f i f t y - s e v e n c o n t r a c t d is p u te s ions and advice. I can assure you
in v o lv in g p u b lic e m p lo y e e s h a v e b e e n s e t t l e d s i n c e t h e S t a t e th at they will be given the utmost
P u b lic E m p lo y m e n t R e la t i o n s B o a r d ’s I n c e p t io n l a s t S e p ­ consideration.
In truth, it is only when com ­
te m b e r .
He added: “Our experience to
plete information is received that
Dr. Robert D. Helsby, chairman
date clearly demonstrates th at
a candidate for public office can
of PEHB, the State agency crethe Impasse procedures represent
act with assurance and knowledge
nt«d to administer the Taylor
solid foundations on w hich to
when planning his legislative pro­
Law, said la.st week that the
continue to build niore perfect
gram.
ma.ior portion of disputes in the \
techniques for resolving disputes
first nine m onths under tlie new !
LEONARD N. LIPKA
in the public sector.
law have Involved school boards
New York, N.Y.
“We recognize th at the im ­
and teaclier organizations.
•
•
•
Under the Taylor Law, public passe machinery has not worked
employees for the first time, have
moreover we are U F O A I s G r a t e f u l
the right to organize and to be
th at procedures alone are Editor, The Leader:
represented by organizations of not the a n s w e r , 1^,, coming to
W e wish to. thank cur friends
thiTir own choosing in collective grips with th e complex issues that in the news m edia for their help
negotiations with their public arise in collective,.,.negotiations. in supporting our action to ade­
The attitudes o f th«-.parties, and
employers.
quately protect th e lives en d prop­
In the period between Septem ­ their gradual achievem ent of ex­ erty o f this great City,
ber 1, 1967, the effective date of i perience and expertise in collec­
T h e U nions in the New York
th e law, and June 15, 1968, the tive negotiations, will be import­ City
Pire
D epartm ent
have
Stpte B oards Office of Concilia­ ant Ingredients In the process," achieved initial m ovem ent in ob­
tion recorded 284 contract dis­ he said.
taining th e necessary manpower
“After all,” he^ added, ‘the par­ to adequately protect the lives and
putes in New York State; 229 of
these involved school boards and ties to negotiations are Involved property of the people of New
in a new experiei?cf In labor re­ York City.
teacher organizations.
Of the total number of disputes lations, and only tifli? and ex ­
This m ovem ent ha« not oome
recorded, 157 have been resolved, perience will demonstrate the u l­ easily nor speedily. T he officials
«nd the remainder, 127, are In tim ate workability o f the law!s of this City state th at they now
various stages of mediation and im passe m achinery.”
recognize th e problem. They have
Long Island, according to Dr. agreed th a t the manpower which
fact finding, the two basic steps
o f the law’s dispute-settling m a ­ Helsby, represents t h e area of can be afforded now Is m inim al
single greatest concentration of and is n ot intended by tJiem nor
chinery.
"We are pleased that the Im­ PERB activity. O f approximately construed to be, enough to pixjppasse machinery of the Taylor 133 school districts in Nassau and erly protect the lives and property
Law is working well In the vast Suffolk Counties, t h e S tate Board of the people.
m ajority of Instances where it assigned mediators and fact find­
We tried to bring th is problem
has been applied," Dr. Helsby ers to 82 disputes and settled 62 to th e attention of the elected of-
An O bvious E rror
O
i PERB Reports S uccess
: in 157 Contract D isp u te s,
‘^ a id .
(C o n d n u e d o n F a c e 1 5 )
(Coniinued o n P a g t 1 ft)
Tue«<Tay, August
C
L
i v i l
a w
20,
1968'
S e r v i c e
&
Y o u
B y W ILLIAM G O FFE N
(Mr. GoffeB, » member of the New York Bar. teaches law at the
College of the City of New York, Is ttie author of many books and
articles and co-authored "New York Crlmioal Law.” )
Constitutional Guarantees
T H E R E C AN b e n o d o u b t t h a t a c iv il s e r v ic e e m p l o y e e
m a y b e d is c ip l in e d fo r r e f u s in g t o a n s w e r q u e s t i o n s s p e c i ­
[ f i c a ll y a n d n a r r o w ly p e r t i n e n t t o t h e p e r f o r m a n c e o f h ia
I o ff ic ia l d u t ie s . S u c h q u e s t i o n in g , h o w e v e r , m u s t n o t r e q u ir e
| t h e e m p l o y e e t o w a iv e h is c o n s t i t u t i o n a l r i g h t a g a i n s t s e l f ­
'
i n c r im i n a t io n . T h e s e p r in c ip le s w e r e e n u n c i a t e d in U n i ­
|
f o r m e d S a n i t a t i o n M e n ’s A s s o c ia t io n I n c . v. C o m m is s io n e r o f
j
S a n i t a t i o n o f t h e C ity o f N e w Y o r k (N e w Y o r k L a w J o u r n a l,
J u ly 18, 1968, p. 1 ).
T H E A C T IO N w a s b r o u g h t b y 15 e m p l o y e e s o f t h e D e ­
p a r t m e n t o f S a n i t a t i o n o f t h e C ity o f N e w Y o r k fo r d e c l a r a ­
to r y a n d I n j u n c t iv e r e l ie f a g a i n s t d is m is s a l. T h e U n i t e d
S ta te s D is tr ic t C ourt a n d th e U n ite d S ta te s C ourt o f A p ­
p e a ls b o t h d e n ie d a n y r e lie f . H o w e v e r , t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s
S u p r e m e C o u r t h e ld t h a t t h e d is c h a r g e o f t h e e m p l o y e e s
fo r r e f u s a l t o s i g n w a iv e r s o f i m m u n i t y b e fo r e t h e G r a n d
J u r y o r f o r i n v o k i n g t h e i r c o n s t i t u t i o n a l p r iv ile g e a g a i n s t
s e lf-in /> r im in a t io n v i o l a t e d t h e p e t i t i o n e r s ' c o n s t i t u t i o n a l
r ig h t s .
T H E C O M M IS S IO N S R o f I n v e s t i g a t i o n o f N e w Y o r k
C ity i n v e s t i g a t e d c h a r g e s t h a t e m p l o y e e s o f t h e D e p a r t m e n t
o f S a n i t a t i o n w e r e n o t c h a r g i n g p r iv a t e c a r t m e n p r o p e r
f e e s f o r u s e o f C ity f a c i l i t i e s a n d w e r e p o c k e t i n g f e e s t h e y
d id c h a r g e . A s p a r t o f h i s in v e s t i g a t i o n , t h e C o m m i s s i o n e r
o b t a i n e d a S u p r e m e C o u r t o r d e r authorizing^ w ir e t a p p i n g a t
t h e C ity f a c i l i t i e s in q u e s t io n .
E A C H O F T H E p e t i t i o n e r s w a s s u m m o n e d b e fo r e t h e
C o m m is s io n e r o f I n v e s t i g a t i o n a n d ad v i.sed t h a t r e f u s a l t o
t e s t i f y w i t h r e s p e c t to h is o ff ic ia l c o n d u c t o n t h e g r o u n d s
o f s e l f - i n c r i m i n a t i o n w o u ld r e s u l t i n t e r m i n a t i o n o f h i s
e m p l o y m e n t . T h e t e r m i n a t i o n o f p u b lic e m p l o y m e n t i n t h i s t
m a n n e r Is a p p a r e n t l y a u t h o r i z e d b y t h e N e w Y o r k C it y C h a r te r , S e c t i o n 1123. A s s e r t i n g t h e c o n s t i t u t i o n a l p r iv ile g e
a g a in s t s e lf-in c r im in a tio n , 12 o f th e p e titio n e r s r e fu s in g
to t e s t i f y w e r e d is m is s e d ,
I T I S C L E A R t h a t t h e p e t i t i o n e r s w e r e n o t d is c h a r g e d
s i m p ly f o r r e f u s a l t o a n s w e r q u e s t i o n s r e l a t i n g to t h e i r
c o n d u c t a s C it y e m p lo y e e s . T h e y w e r e d is m is s e d fo r in v o k ­
in g t h e c o n s t i t u t i o n a l p r iv ile g e a g a i n s t s e l f - i n c r i m i n a t i o n .
I n d e e d , t h e C o m m is s io n e r o f I n v e s t i g a t i o n to ld t h e m t h a t
t h e i r a n s w e r s t o h is q u e s t i o n s c o u ld b e u s e d a g a i n s t t h e m
i n s u b s e q u e n t p r o c e e d i n g s a s fo llo w s :
I w is h f u r t h e r t o a d v is e y o u t h a t a n y t h i n g y o u s a y
c a n b e u s e d a g a i n s t y o u in a c o u r t o f la w .
T h u s , t h e p e t i t i o n e r s f a c e d t h e c h o ic e o f c e r t a i n d is m is s a l
fo r r e f u s a l t o t e s t i f y o r o f g iv i n g t e s t i m o n y w h i c h c o u ld
b e u s e d a g a i n s t t h e m in a s u b s e q u e n t c r i m in a l p r o s e c u ­
tio n ,
T H R EE O F T H E p e titio n e r s w h o a n sw ered th e q u e stio n s
p u t t o t h e m b y t h e C o m m is s io n e r w e r e s u b s e q u e n t ly d i s m i s e d fo r r e f u s a l to w a iv e im m u n i t y w h e n s u m m o n e d b e ­
fo r e a G r a n d J u r y . L ik e t h e i r 12 c o - p e t i t i o n e r s , t h e y w e r e
d is m is s e d o n t h e g r o u n d t h e y h a d v i o l a t e d S e c t i o n 1123 o f "
t h e C ity C h a r t e r .. . . .
IN S U C H c ir c u m s t a n c e s , M r. J u s t i c e A b e F o r t a s , w r it i n g
f o r t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s S u p r e m e C o u r t, h e l d t h a t t h e r e l i e f "
s o u g h t b y t h e p e titio n e r s m u s t b e g ra n ted .
J tr S T IC E l*]ORTAS m a d e v e r y p l a i n t h a t i f t h e p e t i ­
t i o n e r s h a d r e f u i ^ d t o “ a n s w e r q u e s t i o n s s p e c i f i c a ll y , d ir e c t ly ,
a n d n a r r o w ly , r e l a t i n g t o t h e p e r f o r m a n c e o f t h e i r o f f ic ia l
d u t i e s o n p a i n o f d is m is s a l fr o m p u b lic e m p l o y m e n t w i t h ­
o u t r e q u ir in g r e l in q ii is h m e n t o f t h e 'b e n e f it s o f t h e c o n s t i t u t i o h a l p r iv ile g e ,^ t h e y w o u ld h a v e b e e n s u b j e c t t o p u n ­
i s h m e n t . H o w e v e r ; ' 't h e c a s e p r e s e n t e d w a s o n e in w h i c h
t h e p e t i t i o n e r s h a d , j ^ e n r e q u ir e d t o c h o o s e b e t w e e n s u r ­
r e n d e r i n g t h e i r c o n s t i t u t i o n a l r i g h t s o r t h e i r jo b s. L ik e e l l
p e o p le , p u b l i c e m p lo y e e s a r e e n t i t l e d t o p r o t e c t io n o f t h e '
.
C o n s t it u t io n .
T H E C O U R T d id n o t f in d It n e c e s s a r y t o c o n s i d e r Is-*'
s u e s r a i s e d w i t h r e s e c t t o t h e w ir e t a p p i n g . A lso , i t w a s un-i'^'
n e c e s s a r y f o r t h e C o u r t t o d e c id e w h e t h e r i t w a s a t a l l p o s ­
s ib le f o r t h e p e t i t i o n e r s t o h a v e w a iv e d s u c c e s s f u l l y t h «
p r iv i le g e a g a i n s t s e l f - i n c r i m i n a t i o n . I t s e e m s n o t , b e c a u s e
a« d e c id e d b y t h e S u p r e m e C o u r t In t h e c a s e o f G a r r i t j v.
(Contlnved e a P « f« I t )
m
fi/0 H^t-Augutt
20,
G I T I C B I I Y I C I
1968
LEADIR
P a l* S e w e
Q ^ A
QUESTIONS & ANSWERS
•bout
HEALTH
IN S U R A N C E
WILLIAM T. PARRY
Covernment Relations Manager
BLUE CROSS - BLU^ SHIELD
Albany, New York
Tbla Column will appear periodoAliy. A s a public service, Mr.
Htiry will answer questions relstlv8 to tli« Statew ide Plan. P lease
iibmtt your questions to Mr.
?arry. Blue Cross Blue Shield
^tanager, Tlie Statewide Plan,
215 Western Avenue, Albany,
M.Y. 12203. Please do not submit
luestions pertaining to specific
clitlais. Only questions o f general
itereat can be answered here.
I a m a su b s titu te te a c h e r
working^ in t h r e e s c h o o l
d is tr ic ts a n d a m em b er o f
N .Y .S .T .A . I n o w h a v e B lu e
C ro ss a n d B lu e S h ie ld o n
a a in d iv id u a l f a m il y b a s is
a n d I w o u ld lilce t o j o i n a
g r o u p p la n . C o u ld I b e ­
com e a m em ber o f th e
S ta te w id e P la n a n d p ay
t h e a n n u a l p r e m iu m to
y o u In a lu m p s u m ?
I t Ls I m p o s s ib le t o p a r t i ­
c i p a t e In t h a S t a t e w i d e
*lan a s a d ir e c t p a y m e n t s u b c rtb er b ille d a n n u a ll y . Y o u
lu^t j o i n t h r o u g h a n e x i s t i n g
r o u p a s a n a c t i v e e m p lo y e e
f t h a t group. Y our le tte r
m e to b e lie v e t h a t y o u
o u ld o n l y b e c la s s if ie d a s
m porary.
W e h a v e l o s t o u r w a lle t
s i« e id e n t iA c a t i o n c a r d s fo r
b o t h t h e B lu e C ro ss a n d
B lu e S h ie ld P la n o f t h e
S t a t e o f N e w Y o r k H e a lt h
I n s u r a n c e a n d a r e w r it i n g
fo r r e p la c e m e n ts.
A. I f a f o r t u n a t e l y , t h e S t a t e ­
w id e
P la n
C o o r d in a t in g
DSacd Is n o t a u t h o r iz e d to r e ­
place I d e n t i f i c a t i o n c a r d s fo r
J b a tew id e P la n
su b s c r ib e r s .
P a r tic ip a tin g a g e n c y e m p l o y ­
ee* go- to t h e i r o w n a g e n c y
‘o r r e p l a c e m e n t s . S t a t e e m )lo y e e s c o n t a c t t h e H e a lt h
a^ a ra n ce S e c tio n , N ew Y ork
S ta te O lv ll S ervi'ce D e p a r t irient, A lb a n y .
E n c lo s e d is m y p r e s c r ip ­
t i o n r e c e i p t f o r t e n d o lla r s
($ 1 0 .0 0 ) fo r w h i c h I b e lie v e
I s h o u l d b e r e im b u r s e d
u n d e r t h e M a jo r M e d ic a l
p o r t i o n o f t h e S t a t e w id e
P la n .
I. P r e s c r ib e d d r u g s a r e c o v ­
e r e d I t e m s u n d e r s t h e M aJM e d lc a l p o r tio n o f t h e
Jtafcewlde P la n . H o w e v e r , to
n ltla b e a c l a im , y o u m u s t
Uist s a t i s f y t h e $50 d e d u c tib le ,
tien M a jo r M e d ic a l w ill p a y
Q% o f t h e b a la n c e . I a m r e u r n ln g y o u r p r e s c r ip tio n r e e lp t s i n c e t h e S t a t e w i d e P la n
^ r d ln a tin g
O ffic e c a n n o t
•focess M a jo r M e d ic a l c la im s .
•— _____________________________
E v e r y m
a n
These are ours;
And you don’t have to figure out how much the
extras will add to the price of the Volkswagen yoUj
buy. W e already figured them in.;
By building them in.
Jhings like heater/defrosters, windshield wash­
ers and adjustable bucket seats are part of the car.
You can’t own a VW without owning them, too.
(Things like whitewalls are extra, ds you might
•xpect. But we tell you that in the *.)
A Volkswagen won't only cost you less to drive
out In. It'll cost you less to drive around in.
VW sedans leven the65hp Fastbackand Square-*
AmityviHs
MowTofMolOrt, Ud.
Auburn MoHiWfl B«rfy, kw.
la t a v i a Bob Howkot, Inc.
Boy Shora Trcuts-t^and Aufomobllos Corp.
BaytM*
VoHcswaa«n Corp. >
Blnghomfon Rog»r Krasgs, Ino.
Iro n x Avoxa Cof|*ofaHoii
Bronit Balk-Defrin M ofo rC o rp.
Brooklyn Aldan Volkswagen, Inc.
Brooklyn Econotny Votktwagan, Inc.
Brooktyn Kiiigsboro Motors Corp.
BufFak> Jtm KoHy’s, Inc.
Buffalo Butlar Voikswagen, Ino.
Elmtford Howard Holmai, Inc.
IHilton lakeland Votkswogan, Inc.
G anova Dochak M oton, Inc.
G iant Foil* Bro ml ay Impo rti, Inc.
Hamburg Hal Casey M o to rs Inc.
HarnuM Jhn McGlona M oton, Inc,
H am pitaad Small C a n , Inc.
Hloktvill* Waltan-Donaldson, Inc.
h a s h is p r ic e .
back) get up to 27 miles to a gallon.
Even the bjggest Volkswagen, our boxy station^
wagon, gets up to 23.
They all take oil by the pint. (Even the expensive^
looking Karmaon Ghia.l And never cost you a cent,
for anti-freeze because Volkswagen engines are]
air-cooled.
But If you still don’t care to sell out so cheap;
there is one way to raise the price of a Volkswagen
G et 0 lunroof.. With the beetle, Fastback or
Squareback. '
(For no money at all, of course, you can com^
In and see them all in person.1
Huntington Faam Motor*, Inc.
Inwood Volktwagan 5 Towni^ Inc.
hh aca Wplay M otor Corp.
Jam aica M anai Volkswagan, Inc.
* Jamastown Statailda Motor*, Inc.
Johnttown Vpllay Small Cor Corp.
Kingston Amarling Volkswagan, Inc.
La Grangavilla Ahmad Motor*, Ud.
Latham Acadamy M oton, Inc.
Massana Seaway Volkswogan, Inc.
Marriek Saker M o to n Corp., ltd.
Middletown O reenjpon Motor*, Inc.
Montlcello Route 42 Volkswagan Corp.
Mount KUco North County Volkswogan, fnc.
New Hyde Park Auslandar Volkswagen, Inc.
New RochelU County Automotive Co., Inc.
New York City Volkswagen Bristol Motor*, Inc.
New York City Volk*wagen Fifth Avanua, Inc.
H om dl Suburban M o to n , Inc,
HwiMkaod* H. R. AmacfcarA Son?, Inc.
Nawburgb F 4 C M oton, Inc.
N ia g a ra Fall* Amandola Motors, Inc.
O la an Olean Import*, Inc.
O naonta John Eckert, Inc.
Plattsburgh Celesta Motor*, Inc.
HMdtOA
Queen* Vlllag*
John Feora Motori) Inc.
Wei* Volkswagen Corp.
I
Ramealaar C oolay M otors Corp.
M vw I mcmI Don WaldK* Autohou*
llocfi«*t«r
,Rocha*»er
Rocha*l«r
Breton M oton, Inc.
P. A, Motor*, Inc.
Mt. Read Volkswagan, Inc.
Eatl Rocha*fer Irmar Volkswagan, Inc.
Rom«
Sath Huntley and Sons, Inc.
Rotlyn Dor Motors, Itd^
SayvilU Blanco Motors, Inc.
Schenectady Colonia Motors, Inc.
Smithtown G e o rg e and Dalton Volkswagen, Inc.
Southampton Brill Motors, ltd.
Spring Volley C. A, Haigh, Inc.
Staten Island Staten Island Small C a n , ltd.
Syrocut* Spragua Motors, Inc.
Boat SyrocuM Precision Autos, Inc.
TotMwando Oranvilla Motor*, Inc.
Utica Martin Volkswagen, Inc.
VaBey Siraani Vol-Stream Volkswagen, Inc.
W atertow n Horblln Motors, Inc.
We*» Nyack Foreign Cars of Rockland, Inc.
W o od b u ry Courtesy Volkswagan, Inc.
W oodsido Q ueensbora Volkswagen, Inc.
Yonkara
Ounwoodie M otor Corp.
•SUGOESrBffl S S T A IL PttiOfl. BASX OeAST P.OJI. LOCAL TAXES AND OTRRR'D R AT.FIR OBFLTVBBT (HIASOES.
AV UXTRA aO^V,
Autharl(«4
IF
ANT. A D U m O N A L , W U iT £W A L L 0
CIVIL
Eiglifi
SERVICE
Tue«day, Aiigiiet
LBADEft
20,
Wash Windows
At $2.45-Hr.
C I T Y 'E M P L O Y E E S
F i l i n g Ls s t i l l o p e n f o r N e
Y o r k C it y a r e a j o b s a s w in
dow w a sh er (W B -4 ).
T he Job pays $2.45 per hou
Posiitions ftre evaUable ftt th
Veterans A dm inistration Hosp:
tal ftt First Ave. and 24 S t., Ne
York CTity, and a t other City ari
State locations.
Applicants m ust have had or
year
of
exi>erience
as
windo
washer, Including the use of scaf
folds,
ladders,
safety
belts
an
other tools.
Applications for the job mf
be obtained by writing, visiting t
calling th e Federal Job Infoam
tion Center, 220 Ea.st 42 St., Ne
York City, 212-573-6101, or froj
the m ain post offices in the Bron
Jam aica,
Brooklyn,
Hempstea
Middletown, Newburgh, New R(
cheller
Patchogue,
Poughkeepsie,
Peekskil
Riverhead
a)
Yonkers, or the Personnel Offit
vTeterans Adm inistration Hospit
First Ave. at 24 St., New Yo:
City, 10010.
T h e n e e d t o c o v e r t h e h i g h c o s t o f s p e c i a l i s t c a i ’e i s
g r e a te r to d a y th a n
e v er b efo re.
N e v e r th e le s s , H .I .P . is s till t h e o n ly p la n in t h is a r e a
p r o v id i n g f u l l y p a id s p e c i a li s t s e r v i c e s - i n t h e o ffic e , h o s ­
p ita l a n d h o m e .
W H A T
H .I .P . D O E S
H .I .P / s M e d ic a l G r o u p s p r o v id e c a r e a n d c o n s u lta ­
t io n s b y q u a lifie d s p e c ia lis ts in f o u r t e e n b a s ic s p e c ia lt ie s
- - in a n d o u t o f t h e h o s p ita l.
T h e r e a r e n o s p e c ia lis t c h a r g e s . . . 710 lim it o n v is it s
, . . n o
d e d u c tib le s . . . n o
c la im
fo r m s.
W h e n n e e d e d in d iffic u lt c a s e s , H J .P . b r in g s y o u t h e
s e r v ic e s
o f
s p e c ia lly
q u a lifie d
s p e c ia lis ts
an d
su r g ic a l
t e a m s - a ls o w ith o u t c o s t to y o u !
A N D
T H E
O T H E R S ?
C o m p a r e H .L P .^ s b r o a d c o v e r a g e w i t h t h e s p e c i a l i s t
c o v e r a g e g iv e n b y t h e o th e r p la n s a v a ila b le t o C ity e m ­
p lo y e e fa m ilie s .
W e
Ixam Sept. 21
Sr. Clerk
T R O Y — T h e R e n s s e la (
C o u n t y C iv il S e r v ic e C o m m i
S io n h a s a n n o u n c e d t h a t
w ill a c c e p t a p p li c a t i o n s u p v
August 21, 1968 for a Septembi
21 open com petitive examinatji
for senior clerk.
The eligible list resulting froi
the test will be used to fill
propriate vacancies as they occ
in all R ensselaer County depai
m ents, towns, villages and sch«
districts.
Candidates m ust have bee
legal
residents
of
Renssels
County for a t least four montl
im m ediately preceding the dal
of th e written test.
A senior clerk makes from $3
600 to $4,800 per year, w ith sal
aries varying according to distric
An application form and detaile
announcem ent for the examina
tion m ay be obtained from Rent
selaer County Civil Service Con
mission. Room No. 35, Cou
House, Ti-oy, N.Y.
r e p e a t ...
DEPARTMENT O F REAL ESTATE
TH E CITY O F N E W YORK
PUBLIC AUCTION
September 10, 1968
Commencing 9:30 A.M.
170
IM P R O V E D
P A R C E L S IN
PAR CELS
& U N IM PR O V E D
A L L 5 BOROUGHS
Upset prices from $25.
Y O U
B E
T H E JU D G E !
H E A L T H IN S U B A N C E P L A N O F G R E A T E R N E W Y O R K
6 2 5 M A D X S O N A V E N U E , N E W Y O R K , N .Y . 1 0 0 8 2
Hotel Roosevelt — Terrace Ballroom
Madison Ave. & 4Sth St., M a n h a t t a n
Auctioneer: Adrian H. Muller & So"
103 Park Ave., N.V.C. 10017
M Urray Hill 9-7575
Fo r Auction Brochure, W rite or Call
Department of Real Estate
Carl Madonick, Comtniasioner
2 Lafayette St., Rooom 2002
New York, N. V. 10007
566-7636 — 566-7637
9:30 A.M. Session
Parcels 1— 93
2:00 P.M. Session
Parcels 94— 170
CIVIL
Tuesday, August 20, 1968
SERVICE
State Needs Teachers For Over
Fifty Positions In Institutions
LEADER
2 9 R etiring W orkers Honoreji
U T IC A — T w e n t y - n i n e D i s ­
tr ic t 2 e m p lo y e e s o f th e S ta te
T h e N e w Y o r k S t a t e d e p a r t m e n t a o f H e a l t h , M e n t a l D e p a r t m e n t o f T r a n s p o r t a t io n
H y g i e n e , S o c i a l S e r v ic e a n d C o r r e c t io n a r e s e e k i n g t e a c h e r s w e r e h o n o r e d b y m o r e t h a n
2 0 0 co-workers at a recent dinner
I n m o r e t h a n 50 S t a t e i n s t i t u t i o n s .
T h e p o s i t i o n s p a y $5,940 t o $ 7 ,280 f o r r e g u l a r v a c a n c i e s marking their departure from
S ta te service. The event was held
a n d $7,065 to $8,590 for senior
in Twin Ponds Golf Club.
positions.
T hose honored were Earl W.
Candicttttes
lo r
Institution
Scothon, 45 years service; Newell
teach er m ust have a bachelor’s
T h e N e w Y o r k C ity D e p a r t ­ M ontana and Charles Burke, 44
degree and extensive course work
years; Edward A. Geraty, Sr., 43
In th e specialty for w hich they m e n t o f P e r s o n n e l h a s t e n ­
are applying. Candidates for the t a t i v e l y a n n o u n c e d t h a t it years; Laverne Cheney, 42 years;
T hom as M cNaney, Lee Munz and
senior position m ust m eet this re­ w ill a c c e p t a p p li c a t i o n s fo r
John Hadala, 40 years.
an
exam
ination
for
office
appliquirem ent and have two years
W allace Ryan, 39 years; Frank­
cance operator in November. The
experience.
lin
L. Moon; former district e n ­
position pays $4,05;0 to $5,205 per
Persons seeking positions with
gineer o f District 2 and Charles
year. An exajnlnation date has
th e D epartm ents of H ealth and
White and Steve Taylor, 37 years;
not been set.
M ental H ygiene m ay need addi­
W illiam H. Becker, 36 years; Al­
T he office appliance operator
tional training relating to their
bert Nestle, 24 years; Dorrance
exam ination w^as last given in
apeclalty.
Rumble, 22 years.
April, 1965. A t th at tim e, requireFor applications and further in ­ [m e n ts were thi’ee m onths o f re­
Jam es O’Hara and Miarlon S ltform ation con tact the offices of cent, satisfactoiT , full-tim e, paid tig, 20 years; Lynn G. Clark, 18
th e S tate D epartm ent of Civil experience a t th e Job or recent, years; Louis P. Clemente and W il­
Service.
satisfactory training in th e opera­ liam Clemons, 17 years; Richard
tion of one o f the follow ing m a ­ Russell, 16 years; Andrew Moore,
chines: m ultilith, mimeograph, 15 years; Ernest A. Porter, 14
addressograph, ditto, microfilm, years.
inserting and mailing, or any
Harold E. Champ, 13 years;
equivalent am ount o f experience. Jam es R. Taurisano, 12 years;
Further Information w ill be Charles Addison and Asa C. Siver,
printed in The Leader as It be­
com es available fi*om the De­
partment of Persoim el.
Appliance Oper.
“A FILM OF SPECIAL
DISTINCTI0Nr-K5.r.
“SUPERB
Naluralizalion Aide
in .
^ f e %
a it is a
^ n d ^ %
in t c r
^ c h n k o lo re
*FiOin‘\V4incrBiO«.-SevencAiti
N O W P LA Y IN G
9m4wif kW 47|^ St.
In |h« ncA
Filing ends August 21, 1968 for
the Onondaga County naturaliza­
tion aide exam ination to be given
Septem ber 21.
Requirementa for the $4,800-ayear job are graduation from
high school and two years of
clerical experience w ith some
typing or any equivalent com bina­
tion of training and experience.
Inform ation and applications are
available from the Onondaga
County Dept, o f Personnel, 204
Public S afety Bldg., Syracuse,
New York.
*A GRAND
LOVE STORYI
^ Wcll-acted,
Ttiplei Iheitrti
|4l^ $1 f i l l
MURRAY HILL
A.«
!
w e ll-d ir e c te d ,
strikingly
|
photographed!” |
—William Wolf,
Cue Magazine
/r WJO
/O l/SS
Page !Vin«'
Dept. Doubles
ALBANY— Under
a
$500,000
grant from th e N ational Science
Foundation, the S ta te University
Center at B ingham ton will double
its present nine-m em ber geology
department.
11 years; Nicholas Scarafile, 10 term:
president,
Nicliolas
J.
years and Jam es E. Fraser, eight Cimlno; first vice-pr;.sident. Viij
years.
| n . Serio; second vice-prcsldent.
G uest speakers were Bernard Kenneth
E.
Ward;
(reri.siner,
Evans, district engineer, John J. Frank Roefaro; secretary, Evrlyji
Hennessey, Civil Service E m - Bell and financial srcietary, Gerployees Assn. S ta te treasurer from trude McSally.
Buffalo, and N icholas J. Cimlno,
president o f the local CSEA ch ap ­
ter They presented gifts to the
honored employees.
Guests Included the officers of
the Oneida County CSE a chapters
from Fort S ta n w ix at Rome State
School, M arcy and U tica State
^ _D_e p a r t T h e N e w Y o rk C ity
Hospitals, U tica chapter; State m e n t o f P e r s o n n e l is e x p e c t Sen. and Mrs. Jam es Donovan; ed to b e g in r e c e i v in g a p p li As.scmblym«n W illiam Sears and Jc a t i o n s fo r t h e t e s t fo r t h e
John Buckley.
position of plaster for the City In
Donald Ket-chum of Buffalo, November, The job pays $5.90
formerly of the U tica district o f­ per hour.
fice, was toastm aster and John H.
The exam ination has been set
Evans was general chairm an.
tentatively for December 14, 1968.
City Readies
Plasterer Test
John J. H ennessey Installed the Requirements Included, a t the
following slate for a two-year time of the la st such exam ination,
at least five years of full-tim e,
paid experience as a plasteier or
three years of experience plus su f­
S a t. T e s t s
ficient acceptable related educa­
tional training or full-tim e, paid
F o r
C le r k s
experience as a plasterer’s appren­
The
N e w Y o r k p a y m e n t tice.
For more inform ation about the
c e n t e r o f t h e S o c ia l S e c u r it y
plasterer exam ination, follow The
A d m in i s t r a t io n h a s v a c a n c i e s
Leader.
in c a r e e r p o s i t i o n s fo r cleric__________
typist and file clerks, G S-2 ($4,- n
r
I
-r
231 per year) and clerk -ty p lst,'
E m p loyees To
GS-3 ($4,600 per year). Persons Treot 300 To Gome
accepted for G S-2 will be eligible
Postm aster Frank J. Viola a n ­
for promotion to the GS-3 posi­
nounced today th a t the Bronx
tion after com pletion o f six
Post Office Employees R ecreation
m on ths’ satisfactory service.
and W elfare Fund will play host
In order to fill these jobs as to 300 children o f Bronx*"po^st o f^ o n as possible, exam inations will, fice employees at a children’s
be held at the P aym ent Center, 'outing to Yankee Stadium today
Expressway, to see the Y ankees play the C ali­
Rego Park, N.Y. on Saturdays fornia Angels.
during the m onths o f August and
The children will m eet in front
September.
of the Bronx General Post Office,
All applicants are asked to re­ 149 St. and Grand Concoursc, at
serve a Saturday test date tn ad­ 11 a.m. Each child will be given
vance by calling the following a baseball cap, spending money
phone number: 699-3601.
and free admission to the Stadium.
M
IM M E D IA T E D E U V i R Y i
/IM M E D IA T E -^
/D E L I V E R Y
!/-
Alt Con d.t i onina ootiQOol
S p eti o l dii co u n li lo r civil w rv ict t m p l o y c t i
W
■t,. h y g u n c ONITROL?
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S
b
Ilcnow
But before
many more
P L A Y IN G
FORUM 4 7 th S t
T A R G E 1 5
A iM O l'N T S
NEW EMBASSY 46th
DTK
ON
0
0
AdOMiNO p« duCII N
OSl«\RWERNER
ysim FerrIs
Wnller by LEE LANGLEVand HUGHLEONARD
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Produced t>) OAV®DEUISCH
DKKted by KEviNBiLLiNGIONCOi iJMBiAOXOR
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Wrti><ie M e l i l I / l / f K i i i a n i i « ' l M c h l
H«-*<Kie M ( ‘b l i / l / t ^ l i i r l c y M < h l
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S t » ’i ) l i < n V i i ' o
A IM O l \ T S I I K I . n O K < H M N < i
N K IiO riA K I.K
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T i'fa h iin r-l'ily o f N * w
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f o i l h »n l o w . i i i i K a r l i o n i
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.\ve., U r o o U l . v n , N . Y .
Ilclinoiit
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“ :ti K . - h o I ’h i . ’
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;ii!t WC KI I’ d l l l S I
N. w Y o r k , N . Y
licKt-le Mfhl
COluMbiA piCIURES p«fSEMS
P R E S E N T S
57*C1 Ncrthtrn Rtvd., Woodiid«< 1.1.
(2121 RA 1-7500 — op#n 'lil 9 pm
.Iiinlo A r o j n
Ki i w i i mu I
10,12,1, 4, S:M, 7:40, l:M. 11:30
2 0 T H
Nonhcrn Blvd., Woodiidt, 1.1.
(2i2)RAl-7JOO-optn’lll9pm
ROYAL NATIONAL BANK OF NEW YORK
Broadway at 46th St • PL 7-2408
C E N T U R Y 'F O X
SALES LTD .
^ l e i Ki ho iJ K
i i . i n i e j m . l l;iM 1<m o w i i iul(tic>is ; i i c liet
t l i « H t - o n l H (i f t h e i i h ( ) \ f - i i : i m c ( l
o i- Ki ml z. -i l io n t o
D i o i x i t y i n J ii ii on ii t ii o f i w t i u . v - l i v e l i o l l . i r s o r m o r e .
4,'th Si ABfoadtwiy ft 7 83201
1
CAROS HONORED
SALES LTD .
N O T IC E O F N A M E S O F P E R SO N S
A P P E A R IN G A S O W N E R S O F CERTAIN UNC LA I ME D
PROPERTY
HELD BY
PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS
NO W
M
_
J S pecial discounts f or civil Mrvict c m p l r y c * i
BUYING SERVICE CAR DS HONOR ED
I OK T IIK r W M K S T
OK
( I K ( K K T I I I K I ) « IIK< h * i
iK ldif^s iin k iio w ii
:ul(li'i'KH i i n U i K i w i i
a i lil ic.^ H u i i k n d w n
adilrc-^s ii n l i n o w i i
N ew V ork C ii/
. M l i a i i y , .N'.Y.
N e w Y o rk , N .Y .
A r u i i o i t o f u ii f l a ii iH 'il p r o j i i - r l y h a s b i c n iiK ule
t o A r l l u i r I . t v i l t , Ui<- f ' < i i i i | ) t r o l l t »
v l tlie
S l a t b o f N r w Y ' o r k , i m r s u i i i U t o S im l i o n 3 < l l o f tl i t - . M i a n i l o i i i d I ' l o i u i i y I > a W i
A Ji N t o f l l i o n a m e s ( o n l a i n i ' d i n t<ii( h n o l i c i ^
on
f i l e a i u l o i i n i t o i m l i l i o in«-|i<< t i ( 4
at th e
ijriiu 'ip a l o f f i c e o f t h o b aiils, lO 'S tlrd a t J 'M l! A v iii ii c o f
llie A u ifri< a e , Ja
t h e C i t y o f N t w Y o r k , w h i- r o * in'lt M b a i u lo n c d i i r o p c r l y i s i i a y a b l c .
8 m h a b a n d o i iM l i i r o p c r l y w iM b e p u lil o n o r b e f o r e O c t o b e r 1 1 n e x t to iic in iiiti •►■ta lil i B h i n i f t o i ( « t i a l i h r a c t i o n t h e i r r i i f l i t t o r e c e i v e t l i e (i iiii ip .
I n t h e Kiic i
c e d i in : N o \ e m b e r , a m i o n o r l i c f o r e tlie t e n l h
d a y tlie re o f,
un<‘l i i i n i c ( l i i r o i i e r l y w i l l b e
iiaiii to . A r t h u r l . c v i l l , t h e ('o i ii iil i'u l le r
•t» t« ul
U b w I f u r k , l u u i U iU iiiii U i t r c u i J u i i
l u Im l i a b l e U i e i o i u r .
CIVIL
SERVICE
LEADER
Tuesday, Augiist
20,
IW i
r e p o r to d l t n H i « L e a d e r . F u r ­ taoting t h e D e p a ir t m e n t o f P a r «
t h e r I n f o r m a t i o n <m t h e e x a m - s o n n e l, 4 9 T h o m a a S t . , N e w Y o r k
I n a t l o a c a n b » o l> ta in e ( l b y o o n - C Jlty, N . Y .
ly.
P o lic e
D e p t. f .d m in is tr a tiv e
A id e E x a m S e t F o r S e p t . 2 8
C fV //
S e r v i c e
L a w
&
Y o u
(Continued from Pag* • )
S t a t e o f N e w J e r s e y , d is c u s s e d i n a p r io r c o lu m n , t e s t l m o n f
T h e N e w Y o r k C ity D e p a r t m e n t o f P e r s o n n e l h a s a n ­
c o e r c e d f r o m t h e e m p lo y e e b y t h r e a t o f d is m is s a l m a y n o t
n o u n c e d a n o p e n - c o m p e t lt iv # e x a m i n a t i o n fo r p o lic e a d ­
Do You N eed A
p r o p e r ly b« Intjnoduced a g a i n s t h im In a c r i m in a l p r o s e c u ­
m i n is t r a t i v e a id e to be g iv e n o n S e p t e m b e r 28. A p p lic a t io n s
tio n .
w ill b e m a d e a t t h e tim e o f t h e te s t . T h e t e s t i s o p e n t o
T H E S U P R E M E C o u r t h a s n o w m a d e p la i n t h a t ptitoUc
men only.
E nrollment In an appraved pub­ e m p lo y e e s m a y b e a d m i n is t r a t iv e ly p e n a li z e d f o r r e f u s a l t o
T his position l3 In salary grade
lic service career training program a n s w e r q u e s t i o n s p e r t i n e n t t o t h e i r p o s i t io n s o n ly If t h e r e
14 w ith a aalary range ot fi-om
g q u iva fen ey
may be substituted for the cleri­ i s n o I m p i n g e m e n t u p o n t h e i r c o n s t i t u t i o n a l p rivilegeis.
$5,570 to |7,ldO per year.
cal experience requirement.
The exam ination will be given
D ip lo m a
Appointees to th is position will
at BrandeLi High School, 151
work in the police depai*tment of
West 8 4 St., New York. N.Y.
MEN.WOMIN . . . HERE'S YOUR SHORT CUT TO A CAREMI
the Olty perfonndng responsible
f o r c iv i l g e n rlc e
AppliiTanta must be no lesa than
and
difficult
clerical
and
typing
f o r p e r s o n a l s a t is f a c tio n
19 years old and not older than
tasks and admiinistrative duties of
6 W e e U i ('i)iiisB A p p r o v e d b y
35 yeara old on tlw date of
N .T . S iit«
K d iication
D ep t.
limited responsibility and d iffi­
the test.
culty
and related tasks.
Write or Phone fqr_^Infojmatlon
Applicants m ust have graduated
T h e test will be a written exfrom a four-year hiqih iiohcffll
E a s te r n S c h o o l AL 4 - 5 0 2 9
course or posses, a h l , h - 8 ChooI
constetlnn o f short an 721 Broadway, N.Y. 3 (at 8 St.)
swer questions designed to test
equivalency
diploma.
Applicants
P laanH w rilo m e f r e e a b o u t Ih # H ig h
B sliool E 'tu lv a le n c y c l a n .
must also have, at th e time of the candidates’ general Intelli­
filing, two years of satisfactory gence, Judgment, clerical and ad­
Nii'iis ................................................
ministrative aptitude, verbal abil­
full-tim e clerical experience
............................................................
A T 2 5 9 B’W A Y ONLY
However, one year of full time ity, ability to deal with the public
B oro
........................................................P Z . . . L 1
Stenotype
opens thn door to a profes*
and
w
ith
other
City
employees
clerical study at an aocredlted
slonal
eareer
for you. You can earn
and
ability
to
perform
other
du­
college or university may be sub­
U ae Z ip -C o d es to h e lp sp eed
ties of the position.
from $8,000 to 114,000 per year. Using
stituted
for
tiie
two
years
of
cler­
y o u r m a il.
A B C i, yoa take down Trials, Hearings,
In addition, candidates will be
ical experience.
Hl-Speed Dio'tation, noislessiy, several
expected
to
pass
a
qualifying
typ­
Persons wlio expect to meet the
words at a tim e, on to a paper tape.
educational requirement by March ing exam ination a t a typing speed
YOU RECEIVE A WRITTEN GUAR.
31, 1969 will be admitted to the of 35 words per m inute for five
ANTES o r SUCCESS.
examilnatlon. Evidence of th is minutes, after a probationary
Yon are fn v fte d to a PREI
m ust be presented a t the time period.
T he particulars o f this an 2-HOUR LESSON & FILM
of the examination.
nouncemient are still subject to
C hoose
change. However, auch changes,
SECRETARIAL C O U R S E S
If they do occur, will be promptM K D If:A L .
I.R Q A r.
ANO
K X K C U T IV H .
H ig h S fjjf® *
T R Y
STENOTYPE
F R E E !
SANITATION
MEN
(C U S S 3)
.S liid y a t h o r n s i n y o u r N |ia r» tiniA t o
b » A p r o f n 'M l o n a l n e r r H l i r y . T lilii d lir n ifli* a n d H i - P a y p f o f f t s n l o t i n o i w l * t r a i n e d
peopla.
9 1 0 .0 0
iiioiillily
inciiid p *
all
b o o lM .
B’o r
friM
ltii'i> rin;ili(iii
oJief'k
o h n i u # a n d m a i l t o A i i n ' r i i ’ a n 8-. > li ool.
9 A P - » .1 . 1.10 W . 4 :;iid S t .. N « i r
Y o r k 1 0 0 3 S o r oall B R 9 -2 (iU i.
SPECIAL HATES
P .O .
T ruck
$ 1 0 .0 0
P r a c tic e
per
M « a , W o m e iH —E o s ily L t a r a t «
INVESTIGATE
ACCIDENTS
and
A D JU ST C LAIM S
Calleq* Traintd Instructors,
Privato InitruetioH.
7 DAYS A WEEK
[ q u iv tth n q
DIPLOMA
$ 2 0 0
,
$ i0 0
a
( F hii t i „ , |
R t t t r v * Y o y r FREE S e a t C a ll
l.ow «o«t oouri*, « nlghU wkljr for
IV w ki.
«l*Mm alaoK Rceltlag
■«cur« fiitura. Na
or
rMiiilremanta. Vre* ailvtiior^p plaefnieat
■•r«le«. 0*11
2 -7 5 4 7
O ur A d v r fl$ e r $ .
2 5 9 B r o a d w a y , D /.Y .C .
(T rain a to
•
•
•
•
For
For
For
For
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CIVIL
Tu^V^y, Augiwt 20, 1968
News Of The Schools
By A. L. PETERS
B row n S e e s G rou ps
W o r k in P u e r t o R ic o
Dr. Aaron Brown, vice-presl(tent o f the New York City Board
of Education and professor of
education a t Long Island U niver­
sity, h as just returned fi-om Puerto
Rico where he m ade several educ-ational obsei-vations.
Dr. Brown visited the Univer­
sity of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras
Campus, to investigate teacher
edccation programs, especially the
preparation o f teachers for large
urban centers of the United States.
He also inspected the vocational
education program under the supei-vision o f the Com m onwealth’s
Departm ent of Education.
Chairman
of
th e
National
School Board’s Association Coun­
cil o f the 50 large city boards
of education. Dr. Brown studied
th e causes of the difficulties
jn«ny Puerto R ican pupils e n ­
counter in the New York Public
Schools.
H e sp en t sevei’a l days w ith the
New York City Board of Educa­
tion’s H um an R elations Workshop
held in S an Juan for 35 days.
There are 40 participants in the
workshop o f whom 30 are public
school teachers from Brooklyn
and ten are native teachers who
will join the New York City school
system In Septem ber.
“T h e Role of H um an Relations
in D eoentraliation” and “The Cur­
rent Problems and Considered
Solutions
For
Large
Urban
School System s,” were the sub­
jects of two addresses made by
Dr. Brown to the workshop.
in it<5 third year o f existence.
T he interns, representing n ear­
ly all o f th e tw o-year colleges in
th e S tate University as well as
several private Institutions, spend
two sum m er sessions and one
I’egulftr sem ester on an intern­
sh ip assign m ent a t one of the
S tate conununity colleges. The
proram, w hich trains the interns
for professional careers In the
com m unity college system , leads
to th e master o f science degree.
It Is characterized by interdis­
ciplinary studies in education, so ­
cial and behavioral sciences, re­
search and statistics.
Z a c k A g r e e s W ith
P a r a -P r o fe s s lo n a fs
SERVICE
Page Elcvt^
LEADER
T e a c h e r E lig ib le
TRACHRR o r SOCIAI, STIIDlEfl IN
JUNIOR HIGH RTHOOI.S
Alan H. Krinsky, 883.T: Alfrwl W.
Qnlibord. 8700; Jame* W. Garalola, S4.'13;
B arbara L. Komorner, 8.T.'<3; Aplwd J.
M atathias. 8.100; Stephen B. V okpI. 8:!00;
P aul P. Kaplan. 8286: Sheldon R. G:mipel, 8266: H arriet Geller, 8200; Thomas
J. Dufiran. 8167: Ben Lewak, 8167; T.co
Ross. Sl.l.T; F ra n k J. Garbarlni, 8087;
Norm an M. Gutherz, 8020; Sn^an C. M.nrkowitz, 8020; B arbara WelnHlein, 8020;
Brnpe T^inOner, 796:i; Jeffrey A. Krinlurp.
79.3.1; Lawrence H. Feinbprg, 7920: Siit-an
Schmer, 78:M; A nthony T. DlBartolo Jr.,
7820: Jam es W. Tale. 7800; Paul H.
Elnschlajr, 7720; David S. Green, 7 '0 0 ;
Sol Brodsky, 7700; Ir a Rutlin. 7700;
Tliomas W. Comer, 7fifi7.
R obert J. Bolia, 7600; 'Wmiani York,
7587; David J. Majmin, 7687; David B.
Bal!ey. 7.586; Arlene C. Riehman. 7,'i7ri;
Sandra M. Albert, 7ri67; Robert Gerohoii,
7566; Jerome F. Goldman, 7.'i6(;; >larfraret M. Peouiiia, T.TS.I; Carolyn J, Foy.
755H; Tim othv A. Trapani, 7fi,'l.‘t: Rol'.in
D. Gold. 7487; Victoria F. Karris, 745.1:
Adalbert M. Zawada. 74.13: Alan S. Biume.
7400; Fern M. Arden, 730fi; M l.hael
H. Keler. 7.1.1.1; K sfhrr Spen<iner. '. ‘J.'ll;
Stoven K. Bjirron, 7*120; Sleplianie K.
Nasrel, 7267; Donal M. Morrissey. 72,').1:
Kdward A. JTnwal, 72.1.1; Allan R. Lon­
don 7233; WiDiam T. Nelson, 72O0;
Steven R. T,evy, 7200; Sleven R. Si-lnvartz,
7200; R ie hanl S. Davis, 7186; Ralph J.
Papaleo, 7167; Joseph S, Spiepel, 7133;
Vinvent I.. Ri«poli, 71.13.
E’vira F. Cioti, 71.1.1; Joseph P. ^fa^vn.
7067: M arporie A. Brahamfl 7067: Jo*eph Pearlm an. 7067: Howard S. Bayewltz, 7000; Jeffrey A. Semon, 7000; Gary
S. Hoohman, 6986; John J. Raslrar.
6067; Joel A. Reisber*". 6067: GeorKe H.
K.ahn. 6066: Dorothy E. T.ennon, 6920;
Fre<lerlck A. Schultz. 6800; T.arry B.
K rayat, 6800; Dnvid Goldner, 6787; S\ifan I. Lipkin, 6766:
Melvin B. Katz,
6734; Neil H.
Intrato r, fl7:t.1; T.ouise
M. Burke. 67.1.1; J udith R. Pri<*.
Richard Kaufm.nn. 6720; Fllen A. Cohen.
6700; H erbert Horowitz. 6700; Bcrnaiietfe
M. O’Keefe, 6700; Gene J. Boneiorni,
6686; Frederic E. Miller. 6667; Phylli*
L. Gitter, 663.'!; J a y M. Frishnia n. 6620;
Leonard D. S.anfilippo, 6620; C.'tlhrrn
Duffy. 6600: Janet S. Kelly. «.n»;6.
Sandra J. I.akritz, 6534; Kenneth M.
Baron, 6I>33: Nadine F. SternhcrK-, f.,')00;
Harvey C. Fertigr. 6500; Georce H. Isom,
6600; M ark H. Saideni. 6600; Theodore
J. Timmins. 6500: Antoinette Awrel'-y,
6486; Edward O. Keele, 6463; Toni K.
Holden, 6433; Bernard B. Donihrowsky,
6420; Ann R. Coppotelll, 6400; Barry R.
8chu!«r, 6400; Robert E. Gat to. 6400;
Jo hn W. Connell, 6367: Samuel C. Colins,
6367: Jac k T.,ennett, 6.133; Irvinfr Onart.
63.13; Annmarie B. Chinnery. 6320; n io m a« G. Demarco, 6300; Rochelle Hirsi'hnian, 6300: Robert Fund.y, 63 00; Elaine
Mcardle,, 6267; Z uzana Plesa. 6266;
B arbara B. Folk, 6266; Robert J . Arnone.
6167; Robert L. Oaleraro, 6166; Bar­
b a ra A. King', 6133; Carol E. Feinberir,
6100; Harry K. Johnson. 6033; Constantlna Mamoulaki«, 6033; Elisa Sarubbl,
5886: Brenda J. Riley. B067.
A ssistant Superintendent Jacob
B. Zack, special assistan t to New
York
City
Superintendent of
Schools Dr. Bernard E. Donovan,
recently inteiTiewed spokesmen
for a protesting group of paraprofessionals who have n ot yet
received some o f their pay. At the
conclusion o f a tw o-hour conference, Mr. Zack declared:
“Distribution of checks for
para-piofessionals for the tw oweek pay period ending with the
close o f the school session last
June h a s been a continuing prob­
lem although only 2 , 0 0 0 of about
50,000 s ta ff salary checks paid at
that tim e are still undistributed.
‘This is far too large a number,
however, and all those at today’s
conference agreed to work to ­
gether to see that the outstanding
checks are delivered a s soon as
possible to those who have earned
them.
“The problem arose because the
C la r k I s H e a d O f S t a t e checks were ready after th e school
closed for the summer, and in R e t ir e m e n t S y s t e m
co'mplete Information w as given
R ichard W ebster Clark, a viceto us by, am ong others, the parapresident and investm ent officer
professionals them selves.
of th e Com m unity Savings Bank
of R ochester, h a s been named
N e w T e a c iie r E xam
Investm ent officer o f the New
York S tate Teachers’ Retii-ement
A t t r a c t s ‘A le r t Y o u th ’
System , announced Harold N.
The Board o f Examiners recent­
Langlitz, executive director of the
ly held the first exam ination foo*
System .
license as regular teacher o f com ­
Clark will direct the System ’s
m on branches under the new pol­
security investm ents, w'hich cur­
icy o f the Board of Education dis­
rently are approximately $1.7
continuing th e is s u a n ^ o f sub­
billion.
stitute licenses on this level. In
H is appointm ent is effective Au­
gust 22. He will succeed Paul place o f substitute exam inations,
Crane, who became the Syste m ’s the Board o f Examiners will co n ­
first in vestm ent officer several duct regular exam inations on a
years ago after a long career with m onthly basis, w ith eligible list
th e M echanics 6c Pai-mers’ Bank available for appointm ent each
o f Albany and who is retiring on m onth.
Two hundred W ty two appli­
November 1,
Clark holds a bachelor of arts cants appeared for the written
degree from Brown University, test la st week. Including an e n ­
Pix>vidence, R.I., and a master of couraging number of minority
business adm inistration degree in group meimibei's. All th e appli­
Investm ents from New York U n i­ cants are holders o f a degree
versity. H e Is a graduate of Portia and th e required number of pro­
Law School, Boston, Mass., end a fessional courees to begin tea ch ­
mem ber o f the M assachusetts Bar. ing. T h e Interview tests are sched­
uled for Thursday and Monday.
Examdner Jay E. Greene, at th e
I n t e r n s E n te r S t a t e
scene o f th e test, declared th a t
C o m . C o l l e g e P r o g r a m the applicants generally were
Eighteen Interns are Involved in "youthful, alea-t-looking a n d well
th e graduate Cooperative Com­ groomed.” Approximately 80 perm u n ity College Pi'ogram a t S tate cen t ai-e malee. Appi’oxim ately 80
U niversity o f New York a t Al­ percent o f th e applicants are from
ban y this summer. T h e progi-am, out-of-tow n college* and a n u m ­
eonducted by the School of Edu­ ber are ou t-of-oity resident*.
T h e discontinuance o-f substi­
cation. depaa^tment o f guidance
an d pei'sonnel services In higher tute exam inatione in comm on
td u ca tio n . Ut under the direction branches wae to begin by Septem ­
o f Di*. David Hartley, professor of ber 1 , according to the eontract
•ducaU oa a t th e university. I t U with U J .T .
TEACHER OF COMMON BRANCH
S r B J K t T S (1A-<1R) IN I»AY
EI.KMENTARY SCHOOLS
William- T. La.vman, 8733; Linda P.
Frirdhrrg, 8733; Myra I. Friedman, 85.',:i;
Ann H. I>akhdhir. 8367: Barbar.i M.
Slrassberp, 8333; Alice Fuchs. 8267;
.‘Sherry A. Boyle. 8163; M arcy R. Mcrson,
8100; R hoda M. Healy, 8020; Carol J.
Scluisslcr, 7933; L inda
M,
Goldherjr,
VS;J3; Irwin L. Cohen, 7687: Ju d ilh L.
Teller, 7606: P a tricia A. Maloney, 7567;
Elizabeth Bnrzelewski, 7633 ; Alfred H.
Fischer, 7500; Eleanor R, Dublner, 7.')00;
Barb.ira M. LIpils, 7487; Ije<>lie E. WexVr, 7486; William E. Sullivan, 7466;
Vivian B. Starnes, 743:t; Virginia D. Corso,
7433; Linda S. Zipin, 7433; Adele R.
Greenspan. 7400; Susan K. Kaslow. 7400;
Roberta M. LIss, 7386; Mary E. McAuliffe, 7367.
TKACHRR OF KART.Y rHII.I>HOOI>
CLASSES IN PAY KI.RMKNTART
SCHOOT.S
William T. Lyman, 8066; Marjorie S.
Gros«man, 8767: Jeannette E. Dinerstein,
8600: Ellen J. Russell. 8620; Sheila M.
Katz, 8400: B arbara E . Fiehbein, 8333;
Pam ela J . Roberts, 8200; Dorothy R.
Schussheim, 8100; ,Tndith L. Teller, 7067:
Antonia E. Tafta. 7887: Nina J. D/.wonik,
7733: M ayda J. Schwartzer, 7733; Linda
S. Bresch, 7700; Ronnie Horowitz, 7687;
B arbara A. Pyes, 7687; Hope A. Goode,
7633; B arbara J, Sayer, 7633; Gail E.
Gelfand,
7600: .Tudith H. Corrao, 7620;
Karen Wool, 7600; Arlene E. Pnnfi^t,
7.’)00; An<lrea S. Gruher, 7467; Susan
M, Freinhar, 7433; Sheila E<le’p(eein,
7320; Alva R, SobeT, 7300; L a u ra E.
Gelman,
7287: Anna Y. Leone,
7266;
Celina Goldwasr, 7333; Carin M, Tomasuolo,
7233: Mary J. Bersrer. 7200;
Dianne E. Milstein, 7200; Beverly S.
Schneider. 7120; Bonnie E. Bojrntz, 7020;
Susan L, Stein. 6967: Rhea Penka, 6000;
Patricia L. Reilly, 6887; Alice J. Rn^^rnthal, 6887: Carmen Morales. 6833; Karin
Altman, 67.53; Susan S. Stein, 6633; Jane
Bianchini, 6633; Helen Brecker. 6600;
Minerva Benitez, 6500; Mozelle Murray,
6487.
„
TEACHER O F ORCHESTRAL M I'SIC IN
DAY HIGH S<'HO«I.S
Diana Baltipairli.r 9110; Victor A. Battlpairli?, 8511; Philip Rappaport, 8.173;
Sheldon M. Rosen, 8193: T-.e*lte I : Win­
ston, 8073; Stephen Jabolnaky. 8070;
Bernard L. Qlnckman, 7857; Kay F.
Livo’.<il, 7793; Samuel R. Weber. 7783;
S tu a rt H, Soffer, 7777: Emile B. Ellhericer,
7740; M artin Bard, 7737: Ronald Bennett,
7667: Allan Fried, 7697: Joseph Joffe,
7557: M urray A. Solomon, 7643; Jo hn M,
Habash. 7607: Joseph E. Sherman, 7457;
.Tame* P. McCarthy. 7.127; Philip L. Barr.
7270; Charles L. Hpolihelmor. 7250;
Michael Fla m ha ft. 72.17: Eleanof B. Schil­
ler, 7087: Harvey Kinif«ton, 7067: Roslyn Katz, 7060; le aac Comerchero, 6987:
Stanley Greenberg-, 6920; Michael T. Selden. 6910: S tu a rt E. Joseph, 6867; Dfnnls
S. Dunayer, 6833; Bernice Black, 6810;
Susan A, Ingernian, 6647: Kenneth D.
Meyers, 6600; Joel W. Greenw.Vd, 6577;
Steve Conwa.y, 6313; Richard F. Demarlnis. 6300: Joel K. Kolk, 6267; Andrea H.
Morris, 6243: Barry Wasserman. 6220;
.Toel Chernet. 6167; Michael A. Debetta.
6978.
SUPPLBMFiKT TO K I j r . I B I B LISTS
DAY HIGH SCHOOLS
Wiliam J . Kelly, T r. of Fin* Arts,
Verica N eumann. T r, of Muelc, 77.97;
Jeanne S. Krausm an, Tr, of Music, 76.87;
A rth u r H. Abrams. Tr. of Music, 80^17;
Daniel K. Schwartz. Tr. of Music, 78.10;
Cloud M. Crawford, T r. of Orchestral
Music, 74.78; o b ert M. Kane, Tr. of Or­
chestral M usic. 76.74.
H erbert E . Steinraei, Vr. «f Pby»1ef A
General Science. 76,80.
Thom aa L. Ross, T r. o f Iw lm m ln r a
H ealth Inetinictlon. 77.47.
Jo h n L. Panaiaoe, T r. o f Chemistry t
General Science, 73.10,
Lorraine Biieh, Chairman o f ®ept. «f
Mueio. 70.lt.
L is ts
LU ENSK A S A S S I S r . W T
l>IKK( TO R OV
EAKLV CHII.miOOI) Kill CATION
Adele I. Messinger, 8.1.62; Madelliw
Doni, 82.22; Naomi R. Hill, 76 44;
jorie McAllister, 74.60; Nesiina I. Thom*
as. 7;t.l2; Blanche SaVky. 72.87; R ablS
J. Gold, 71.83; M artha Neilf-on. 70.80.
LICENSE AS T R .\rH K R OF HEALUR
EIITCATION IN J I M O R HKIM M H O O t i
Men
Richard
E. Deroeck,
82.04:
Br
Weiner, 76.46; Michael H. Vo*;«l, 76.
Sliiart P, Epstein, 76,36; Joseph
IJccrisloforo, 76.29; Wiliam M. Revnolc
74.IH: Mark J, Y.inklewitz, 74 69; B*
iielt J. Ivombardo, 74.67; Michael C. He
74.02; Fred Messing, 73.94:
Roy
Savarick, 73.89; Barry M. Slein, 7S.8
Steve R. Kaminsky, 73.02; Ronald A ltnet
72.00; Robert A. BaldinI, 72.(10; W m ia |j|
H. Stern, 71.30; Glenn J. SipUin, 71 S 5 |
Frank J. Falcone,
71.18; Howard jL
A. M u e l i l l t
Waller Greenfield Jr., 7333: Nydia M. Greenberg. 70.88; Dalph
Novoa. 7267; Antoinette P. Lamb. 7267; 70.27; Stephen .T,
Lerner. 70.20;
Nell
J a n r t M. Goldberir, 72.13; R o.helle Levy, A. Schwartz, 69.66; Roger S. Hi-avernnaD,
7220; Linda J. Lnntierl, 72 00; Marcia 69.50; Michael J. Maloney, 68 99; SI«T*
G. Gooiif. 7200; Carin M. Tomasuolo, en W. Jjffer, 68.93; Robert H. SheM.
7186: William F. Wagner. 7167; Phyllis 08.78; Gerald N. Cohen. 67.72: Ric hard ft.
S. Rndf-rman. 7100; Eleanor Zanikoff, r/.crniaweki. 67.26; George J. BaumaDll,
7100; Mayda J. Schwarlzer. 7100; Kranccs 67.04; Rol)crt C. Ge?enler. 60.61; Jeffrey
R Sfhnpiro. 7100; Sylvia R. Garvin, L. Asbell, 66.32;
Michael I'. Ijamm,
7100; Arlene E. Sonfiet. 7100; M ailin e fl5.34; Lawrence
.T.Fa<ber. f,4.68; Carl
H('<ker. 7066; SheiI.a E<lelstein, 703:1; Bar­ Xcdcii. 04.20; Howard 1‘nro. ♦14 17; An­
bara Fein, 70.13; Nadine Mandei, 6907; gelo V. Vivolo, 62.91; Gary Wf.i.n, €2 20.
A rhen J. A’perl. 6<t33: H arriet N. Avner,
6900; Harvey S. Baron, 6867; Antonia
Women
E. Tatia, 6867; Marilyn L. Brodle, 6820;
Franclne Tnrlel, 84,10; Elaine S. T4U1B arbara A. Walker, 6800; Bernadelle dau. 80.23; Rnthellyn Ball, 79 43; Carol
Lupo, 6767;
Carmen
Morales. 6766; A, Kifielcn, 79.01; B arbara J. GoodmoD.
Ruth B«ukowitz. 6733; .Tudith Weingast. 78.82; Marie A. Joiinson, 76 3f<; Helfn*
6720: Joan N. Cahn, 0720.
J. Unger. 76.99; Dianne B. .Manhfimer,
TT Mnnchvk. 70 0; Lucille L 76.76; Edith P. Bresloff, 7r..:)1 ; Dene
W innirk, 6453; J'anrf S. Stein, 04 33;
Tobv L. Friedman, 6433; William M.
Damelir., B433: Susan E. Wilansky. 6400;
Rii»:*mai'.v A
Rnseell. 6367; Bari L.
TVi^er, 6367; M aurene C. Donovan. 6366;
Eilrn A. O’Sullivan, SOO; Gwendolyn M.
Ho'mee, 6267; Susan E. Frisch, 6267:
Sylvia Karp, 6267; L inda I. Meyers,
0266; R ona E. Axelrod. 6187; Ellen J,
Travis. 6167;
Arlene M. Teitelbaum.
6086; .Tojinn M. Vetrano, 6033; Catherine
M. Mp.rone, 5967.
D. Edwards. 02.82.
TEACHER OF E \ R I ,Y f HII.TIIIOOI>
CLASSES IN DAY ELKMFVTAHY
iiCWOOLS (Siippleinetii)
Gertrude Bernstein, 8633; J a n f t K Trill*
Ing, 8906: Andrea S, YRti.-< r, 87 0 0 ; Sunaii
C. Lafferty, 8538; Bar<-y B Silver. PBOO;
Nilde M. Cavallari, 8600; M aiy L. Chriitie, 8400; Madeline S tty n ick . 8 )6 6 ; Bct*
er!y Parness, 8133; S i / a n L. Bind, f 0 8 7 j
Toby S. Moskowit*, 8f)66; Su>au K. Mor­
rison, 7966; Kathle en N. B ru s h ttt, 7800;
LICENSE AS TEACHER OF SWIMMING Sally Gottlieb. 7 8 67: Linda J. Wollira.
IN VACATION PL A YGROINOS
7800; Iris S. Feldman. 7700; H arriet
Soffe#. 7558: Susan F. Frieilmnn. 7300;
M.iureen A. Wiehart. S2.70; Nancy A. Dorothy 8. Haynes. 7233; H arriet Kaplan,
H artford. 81.60; Terry J. Gootblfttt. 81,10; 7233; Helen B, Shapiro, 7167; J eanne N.
Catherine P. H abert. 79.60; Howard A. Ogrady. 7166; Frances E. Tynee, 7183;
Krieger, 79.60; Richard I. Kantor, 77.20; Harriet E. Jacobs, 7067; L inda C. H ja me,
Alice S. T rattner, 76.40; Maxine A. Mor- 7066; R ita Gordon, 7066: T.«is J. Feld­
rin, 76.00; Cary N. Pollack. 76.90; The- man, 7033: Susan M, Rolelli, 6933; Marrea« S. Schwartz. 76.30; Dennis T. Chris­ cie A. Rubenstein, 6867; Susan Mandei,
ty. 76.20; Anthony P. Pucclarelll. 74.60; 6787; B arbara Bialstock 0767; Maryann
Aaron Ma.lini.ky, 74.20; J u a n S. Cock- N. Fama, 6667: Evelyn V. Springer,
bnrn, 73.60; Vincent J. Harkins, 72.90: fi(i.’)3; Cathi S. Biilkls. 6.13.M; Linda J.
M,T,rT C, Trotto, 72,90; Fre<1 D. Siegel, Giick, 63.13; B arb ara A W i^mr. 6300;
7 2 80; H arold D. Hoffman. 72.40; Aaron Maxine
O.
Schl«se1, C«67; E)14i £.
Suiam, 72.00; Michael J . McMahon, 71,70; Glassman, 6233.
J,ack T. Daniels. 71.40; Catherine B. N oon­
an. 71.40: G’enn O. Herm an. 71.20; DcnT^ana A. Sdorow, 81.67;
AVine E.
1i9 W. Golub. 70,90; Sandy R. Antonuccl. Dcmarcliis. 77.67; Lole A. llaes. 77.67;
70,70; Stephen S. Wa.yman. 70.60; Cheryl Juliann a While. 75.66; Riioda Schneider,
E. DInslry. 69.90; Anthony S. Monle- 7.').3.'); Rosemarie A. Dcrogatis, 74.66;
marano, 69.20; .Toseph P. Mulvey. 68,70; B arbara R. Pcllzman. 74.20: Rosemarie
WilMam P. McGarry. 67,40; John D. Mc- R. Gardclla, 71.20: Doreen M. Allmnn,
Lailghlin, 67..10; Joan B. Neje*. 67.30; 70.00; Arienn G. Berola. 70.00; Robin
Israel N. Risenberg, 66.80: Robert Ray­ A. Simon. 68.00; P a tric ia A. Russo,
burn.
66.80: Bmce M, Billig, 66.10; 66.67; Diane Scarcella, 66.:i3; Faye Sher­
H arriet J. Rotchford. 66.90: Glenn J. man. 64.67; Maureen A. R<illy. 63.67;
Greennian. 66.50: P eter J. Accardi, 66,20; Susan T. Zimmerman. 82 63; Judith GreenJ a n e t Goldberg, B6,20; Roliert E, Gallo, WHid, 76.33; Rose M. Nrrl. 70.00; An65.00; Jeffrey L. Weisel, 64.90; Peter B, ncllp Conlicello, 68.00; Carol A. Doucet,
Doyle, 64,60; .Tamee E. Glligan, 63 SO; Nellie R. Jones, 61.67.
Jam r« K. Smylh. 63.20; Louis W. Focnlerer, 61.80; Stephen M. Nape<‘ki. 60.90; LICENSES AS T E A C H E » OF COMMON
Stephen J. Turner, 60.30; Ja<‘k J. F e rn ­ BRANCH (lA -ftB) IN DAY ELKVIKNTARY
andez. 76.40; Alan M. Livingston, 76,20;
SCHOOLS (Siipplemeiil)
Ira G. Morley,
72.90; Steven Mailzm.-m, 72.80; Kenneth A. Klousky. 72 40;
May E. Dirlam, 94 90; Marg.iret A.
M arlin Goldberg. 70,10; M arjorie A. Rus- Oslcycp. 93.00; Anne C. Gallajrher, 82.80;
sack, 67.90: I r a J . Gartner, 67.70; R ob­ Ronuian J. Cooper, 91.60; Joan A. Spiro,
e rt P Reichman, 63,80; Steven M, T^ip- 91.00- Irm a Goldwa*!-er. 89.60; R uth 8.
son, 63 10; WiHiam N. Knopf. 61.80.
J.K'obi. 89.60; Millon V. Rot-e, 88.60;
Gertrude S. Hyman. 89.5^; Rotlyn Bloom,
TEACHER OF ENOI.ISH IN
89.00: Eleanor R. Skelly. 88.60; H arriet
E. KinUelslcin, 88.00; Anna RocUitter.
n m i O R HIGH SCHOOI.8
87.00; Mildred Coleman, 86.90; Mary E.
Carol L. Goldberg. 8280; Betty C. Bcnee, 86.60; Lorelei Quirk, 86.40; K ar­
Schaiim, 8030; Richard T, Bellew, 7870; en R. Terban, 86,60; I^Jorencp R, LicrJzabeth Obler, 7670; Catiierine J. Pren- l.crt, 86.50; Adele Schwartz, 86.00; P a t ­
sky, 7640: Elizabeth A. Ransom. 7610; ricia Lehrm an, 86.00; Frances A. Wojtf,
niomi**on, 84.r/>;
Pearl Wieeen, 767Q: Mary B. Tucker, S.ii.OO; William E.
7630, P e U r A, Hood. 7470; Philip E, Jeffry Ackcrman, 84.60; Joan I. App’eSegan, 7420; M ary E, Clark, 7410; R^se bjuim. 84,60; Iris A, Rifkin, 84,40; Willi­
G. Kelly, 7380; H arriet Glaaer, 72 «0; am E, Sullivan, 84,00; P a u l F, DeMarse,
H erbert C, English, 7200: Corinne A. I»w e, 83,60; Sheila H. Goldberg, 83,60; John
7190; Maryellen R. Newbrand. 7180; F, Banzhaf, Jr,, 83,60; Mary T. L«wls.
Nemeth. 83 60; Irene
Sandra Salzman, 7180: Arlene I-Kjre, 7170; 83.50; Selma S.
B.trbara F, Newman. 7110; Jean R. Slein. Simon, 83.00; Mona Finkelhf^iit, 88.00;
7010; Jo hn Clark, 6980; J u d ilh 6 . A lt­ Joan S. K ornbluth, 83,00; John T, Mcman, 6970; Gary A, Aspenberg, 6900; Auliffc, 83.00; LiWiy N. Brandvine, 82.90;
Jame# P. Hen wood, 6890: MaiT L. Sle- Rose Plolkin. 82.90; Eleanor Silver. 82 80;
\ i n , 6880: Pa tricia A. W right. 6880; Hilda K, Kirsch. 82.60; F lorn ice P. Pernick,
82.60; Sarah A. Grilfin, R2.eO;
Geraldine Connors, 6870.
R obert H. Weinl>elg, 6860; Ellen B. Cecelia I.ipschll/, 82.00.
Chervl
L. Cohen, 77.00; Friincine Mack,
Burslfcin, 6860; Mark A. Sonnen*diein,
M. Altman, 74,.13;Janet
6840; Bemiwi EisenBtein, 6770; Louis E. 7 6 :i3 ; Doreen
Kammerer. 6760: Elizabeth P. Grab,im, A, Gooilnian. 74.00; John T. MtAnliff*,
6730; Iiene E, Parisl. 6710; Sigmund 7:l,67; Uosemarie A. D«R<i>.alis, 09,00;
Seltzer, f.700; Kay C, Cremoninl. 6650; Nancv A. Kane, 68.67; A1i(^ M Strong,
tili.OO; EtileMe
M.S<Oia.-hl, 67 66; Shar­
on L. Levine. 67.33; B arb ara E, S<hneidfiCHOOL TRYCH0I.0GIRT9
erman, 67.00; Leon
.Aron*-ky,
66.67:
Joan L. Sie«el. 8200; A rth u r A<Tolf. r a b te rin e S. Diaz. 66.66: ‘landra
C
f
i
.
K
l
l
z
a
b
e
l
h
Jackson.
66
67;
A|iiu>
7990; .ToHeph Morguese. 7960; Dolores E.
Astin, 7860; Ann S. Marsico. 7750; Bar­ M. Flood. 60.67.
b a ra G. Chasen. 7660; Augnete Green­
LICENSE AS CHAIRMAN OF
berg. 7560; Em anuel Fineberg, 7PS7;
Marvin Turkewltz. 7610; Keith C. Good­
DKPART.MENT OF KN«;i.lsH IN
man. 7480; Gustavo E, Ssosa, 7470; B ur­
DAY HIGH SCHtMH.S
ton C. Schucker, 7330; Howard E. FriedJolin P. Gebhardt. 89 68; Josephine E.
lin, 7 2 90; Seymour B. Hirechman, 7110;
Herbert Adler, 7080; Sidney Rabin. 7080; Ernsl, 82.90; Seymone J Parisick. 82.18;
Fr«’d a S. Deulscb, 6890: Sylvia R. T-oy. Malcolm G. Largm ann. 82.03; B ennett Lu6960; Frederick Zipimeniian, 6810; Rob­ beil. 78.88; Milton Katz. 78 68; Toblaa
e rt C. Cassinera. 6710; Seymour B. I Wolnian. 77.C4; Eleanor K. Kriedrnnfi,
Naohmuo. 6700; Laoira N . Bdries, 6400; 76.61; Philip Volchok, 76 26; M a ly S
Krupilsky, 76.26; H o ^ r t M. P h i l i p
Kit L. W onr, 0910.
76.16: Irw in M alm an. IB 18;
Mait&A
•D PPLK M EN T S TO EI.IAIIILB M S V
Gorman, 76.07: Albert Bortnick, 78
Sara Anne Naddell, 71,61: E<1ward
DAT SCHOOLS
71.66; Ann Jt, Damrau. 71.86;
A nthony Ferrifcno, T r. of Classes for Singer, 70.63: Hiartiey D. Cohen, M .vflf
Ohil«lrt.n 'tvith H «taid«l M ental Develop­ Krwleriok Goldborr. 6 8 7 0 ; B arbara L.
('iirlsten. 68.8I); Beini« W.
Ml
ment, 80 86.
> . J ro ik .
R o m 8. fia rtw a n n , School Pcyehiatriit, 1 I'earl T ho m at,
i7 .1 « .
97.00.
CIVIL
Fag« Twelr#
SERVICE
LEOAL KOTICB
TO HUP YOU PASS
CET
THE
ARCO
STUDY
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1 .0 0
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k t f t t o r A p p r a i t t r --------—— --------A H c n d a n t ______________________ ——
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C iv il S e r v i c e t i a n d b o o k _________
C l e r k N .Y . C i t y __________________
C l e r k G .S . 4 -7
C o m p l e t e G u i d e t o C .S . J o b t
C o n i t . S u p v . tr I n s p e c . ______
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F e d e ra l E n tra n ce Exam
F in g e rp r in t T e c h n ic ia n _
F i r e m a n , P.O.
F i r e m a n In A ll S t a t e s
F o r e m a n ______________
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H ig h S c h o o l E n tr a n c e & S c h o la rs h ip T e s t
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H o m e s t u d y C o u r s e f o r C .S . __________ _______
H o w t o g e t a f o b O v e r s e a s __________________
H o s p i t a l A t t e n d a n t ___________________________
H o u s l n q A s s i s t a n t _____________________________
f n v e s t i g a t o r - l n s p e c t o r _________________________
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M a i n t a l n e r H e l p e r G r o u p B ------------ —
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M a l n t a i n e r H e l p e r G r o u p E -----------------M a n a g e m e n t It A d m i n i s t r a t i o n Q n l n e r
M e c h a n ic a l E n g in eer
M o t o r V e h icle L ice n se E x a m in e r
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P o l i c e w o m a n ____________________________________ _
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P r e l i m i n a r y P r a c t i c e f o r t h e H .S . K q n l v a l e n e y D l p f o m a T e s t
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P a r o l e O f f i c e r _______________________________________________________4 . 0 0
P r o f e s s i o n a l C a r e e r T e s t s N .Y .S.
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S c h o o l S e c r e t a r y _________________
S e r g e a n t P.D.
S e n i o r C l e r i c a l S e r i e s ____________________________
S o c i a l C a s e W o r k e r _____________________________
S o c ia l I n v e s tig a to r T ra in e e R e c re a tle n L e « 4 n r
S t a f f A t t e n d a n t & S r . A t t e n d o n t _______________
S t a t i o n a r y E n g . It F i r e m a n _____________________
S t o r e k e e p e r S t o c k m a n ____________________________
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and
Other Suitable Study M aterial fo r Comlnq Cxams
Contains PrevTous Questions and Answers
O R D E R D IR E C T — M A IL C O U P O i
BSc f o r 2 4 h o u r s s p e c i a l d e l i v e r y
C .O . D . 's
40e
ex * r«
LEADER B OO K STORE
97 D uane St.. New York 7, N. Y.
P l e a s e s e n d m e --------------- c o p i e s o f b o o k s c h e c k e d a b o v e .
I e n clo se check o r m oney o rd e r fo r t
N am e
A d d re ss
<»fIPRKM* CODKT CT THB 8TATB ^
Onondagft C ounty w ill give an
YORK. COUNTY OT NEW T O R < |
IDRr.L MONTQOMERT, Plalntlfl, T». exam lnatloa for th e position ot
RICHARD W. OARSON, Defendant,
M « t . tm ergenoy ralve operator on
No. 9 o o a /i* e s .
PlaintiS d M lm afM N»w T o r k Ooiinty Septem ber 21, 1968. F llin f oloses
M th« place of trial. Tb« basis « f the
yenu* !• plaintiff rM ldct l a K tw T e r k Auff. I I . S alary for th e Job is
County.
I4.B00 to fO.MO.
TO T H « ABOnS-NAMED DEFENDANT!
Tou ar« baraby •ummooed to anawM
The Job requires * New York
the Complaint In thla action and to
driver’s lloense en d two
• e r T * a copy of your A i M w e r , or If th e S ta te
Complaint la n o t iwrTcd w ith th U Sum*
mon», to MTT* 0 Nottc* «f Appearaaoe.
on th e plalntlfl'a attornejre 'wIthIn tw eoty
(20) dara a fta r tb a aervlre of thla Summont, exolualT* o f tb a data of aorrlos DRrVERS-TAXtS. fxtU o r F a r t Tim*, If
4 o r wHhln tb lr ty (8 0 ) da.Ta a fte r tha
rott don't h a r e • B ac k LIcenM, w*
anrvira U tompleto, if th la Summons
Hill help you r e t on*. SOS W, SB St..
i» not peiionaJly dellTcred to you within
KTO. Tal.t 848-04M .
the State of New T o r k ) ; and In caaa of
your failure to a ppea r or anewer, Judff*
nipnt 'Will ba ta k e n airalnst you by da>
fa u lt for tba relief demanded la tbo
Complaint.
Dated: Ju ly M , 196?.
HOROWITZ A PERLMAN. Atfomeya for
PUInlifr, Offloo A P.O. Addrec* 211 Ea st
4.Trd Street, New Tork , New Tork.
TO; RICHARJ) W. CARSON, the De­
fendant and Person to be lerved la
th e above-entitled a tllo n :
Prominent company h a t Immed open*
PI.EASB TAKE NOTICE, t h a t th e Summonii In thla action le being* aerred on
Ingi, all boroa. D ay ahift. Must have
you by pnbllcation Durauant to an Order
N Y C piftol “ carry" permit. Uniforms
of M r. Juetloo Irw in D. Davldaon, rr a n tprovided.
nd on Ju ly 18. 196P. In an action by
the plalnUff herein. TDKIJ. MONTGOMC A L L M R . lA N K S
7 6 S .3 7 4 7
K R T, to recover $100,000.00, to re th a r
with ooste of tbl« action.
Said action la fo r pergonal Injurlee » •
celved by th o plaintiff. ID ELL MONTROMRRT, on Ju ly P. 1P60, Weet I8 6 th COULD YOU BOARD SOME
Street and M o m in fild e Avenue, In New
York, New T o rk , and due to y o u r nasll*
OP OUR CHILDREN?
(fence and w ith o u t any contributory nafll* CAN TOU find room la y o u r h e a r t and
irenoe on th e p a r t of th e plaintiff.
home for a child who needa you deeDated: New Torli. New York
p a ra ttiy ? T o u oan be a foeter parent
J u ly 28, 1&6».
and riv e a lonely ohild lov* and underHOROWITZ * PERI.M AN, A ttorneyi fof
ata n d ln r . . . It doeen't ta k e much,
Plaintiff, Offioo A P.O. Addresa 211 Kaat
la your h e a r t aa b i r M r o u r house?
43rd Street, New York. New York.
!Fh* Children's Aid Soeiety pays all of
th e ohlld'a expenses.
F o l lo w T h e L e a d e r .
Call or w ritet MRS. BROOK a t th e
Ohildran’s Aid Sooietr, 150 B. 4 6 th
T o K e e p In fo r m e d ,
St., New T o rk N .T . 10017. MU S-9040.
Help W anted - M a U
RBTXRBB t* learn dental la b work, p r o M
Queena o r N assau realdent. S a m ITnlle
r o « l*ara. CaU (SIO) S85-7SSS 9
S26-SBS7.
Help W anted - M o l*
A rm ed
DISPATCHER
TRAINEE
$ 2 .5 0 h r p lu s a ll b n fts
Supervisory Posifrioii
A vailable
If you I
1. Ar* available between • and I t M
S. Have a good handw ritine
S. Know the streets of M anhattaa
4, Know the subway system
I. H avs a rood phone voice.
An excellent position awaits you w iA e
r ro w in r messenger delivery service. Hlgli
pay and many fringe benefits.
W rite : MR. S T A N L E Y K A Y B
ARCHER MESSENGER
SERVICE. INC.
SSI Avenue of the Amerdicat
New York, N .Y . 10001
or call Mr. Stanley Kaye. (212) 194-0077
Also I Many part-tim* position*
loading to advancement.
............ ......................................................... .................. ..
.................................... .................................................... ..
C ity......................................................... State.................
Vacation
i»>Lake
Adirondacks!
Y e a ^ ro u n d recreation al feollltlet e n d convenle n c e s ab ou n d in this 400 eo re v tcatiofi h o m e
oommunlty. T he beautiful $100,000 c o m m u n it/
c lu b h o u se for re sid en ts fe atu res private b e ac h
for swimming, b oatina a n d eelllna. a s well a e
badm inton a rea , sh u ftleb o ird .courts, te th e r
ball and o th er organized ep o rte en d activities.
Inside th e clubhouse, a handsom ely d e co ra te d ,
m oderately priced dining room e n d cocktail
lo u ng e aw ait your p leasu re.
ONLY
10%
DOWN
Hunting, h o rse b a c k riding a n d hiking In th e sur>
rounding S ta te F o rest Is e o n v e n ie n t. . . with
ekljng available a t Q ore M ountain chiy 20 m inutste from th e property. U rban o o n v enlen ces \n»
e lu d e year-rou n d w a ter su p ply a n d full width,
well built ro ads, a a well a e fire hydrants. Find
o u t m o re ab o u t this four s e a s o n v acation h o m e
oommunlty. W rite o r drive o u t to d ay a n d s e e
th e variety of m odel h o m es o p en for Inspection.
STA R TS
YOU
ON
YOUR
WAY
R A IN B O W L A K E
ATINDIANLAKE. NEWYORK1 2 8 4 S
TELEPHONil B i t • S4S-348I
FromN ow YorkCityAreei Take the NowYorkState
Thruwsy to Exit 24, thon to the Northway at Albany
to IxIt 23 to Warrtntburg and west on Route 28 te «
Indian Lake. Turn laft on Route 10 and followalgne j
to properly.
J
From Albany Aroai fle north on the Northway te
IxIt 8t to Warranaburg and woet on Route M te
IndianLake. Turn Ianon Route 80 and followalgne
te property.
f ^ oompiate illuitfstfd snd dm riptivs matarlaf.
Ilf
«ITV
Xtf
IMS
T e K eep InforaMd,
Follow T he Leader.
Help WoNttd
G u ard s -
20,
yeert o f w ater maintexvanoe ei>i
perienoe or an y satisfactory equl*
valent combination o f experience
and training.
Mbre inform ation le a vailab lt
from th e Onondaga County D ep l.
of Personnel, 204 Publio S a f e t f
Bldg., Syracuse, N.Y.
_ 4 .0 0
.3 .0 0
_ 3 .0 0
.4 .0 0
.3 .0 0
.4 .0 0
.4 .0 0
.4 .0 0
.
____
V a lv e O p e ra to r J o b
_S.OO
L a b o r a t o r y A i d e _______________________________
Lt. F i r e D e p t . ___________________________________
I t . P o l i c e D e p t . _________________________________
L ib ra ria n
.
H e alth )
TuMday, Aufpitt
NKW
BOOK
■O O K S
ERXDER
IKONf
CIVIL
Jue»d«7 , Aiigiiit 20, 1968
Dr. Harry L. Prlscih, profeseoir
of chemJsta-y, i« the recipient of a
$61,000 grant from the N ational
For R e se a r ch W ork
Science Foundation for research
ALBANY— Research grants tot­ into chem ical Instabilities.
aling mor« th an $140,000 have
H e also ba« been gi'anted e n
been awarded three S tate U nladditional
$40,000 by the Anveilverslly professors a t Albany.
can Chemical Society for a pro­
ject in -th e petroleum field, w hich
I
Civil Servic* TV
1i related to h ii other grant.
SERVICE
LEADER
Pagtt Thirteen
T h r e e G e f G r a n ts
(C o n t in u e d f r o m
P are
4)
“Orime Scene T actics.”
Sunday, August ZH
t p.m.— H um an Right* Forum—
see F ilday, 11 a .m .
10:30 p.m.—With Mayor Lindsay.
Monday, August 26
4
p.m. — Ai'ound the d o c k :
"Stops— Persona a n d Oars.”
7:30 p.m.—On th e Job.
The American Cancer Society
haa granted Dr. Earl A. Rollin*
of the Albany College, who 1a
assistant
professor of
biological
sciencea, $30,447 and Dr. Harry
Tedeschl,
professor o f
sciences,
$11,841
lo r
biological
two
other
research projecta.
AR3
a
> R EA L E ST A T E V A L U E S ^
Housa For S ait
Lynbrook. L I.
LYNBROOK, L I.
ijoyYour Golden Days in
$38,500
Legal, 10 y«ar old, fully d etach ed
6 over 6, 2-family houie on overllze corner plot with tide parking on
property. Completely modern and
immaculate
inside and
outside,
private entrances to each apts. Quiet
free-lined residential street. Walking
distance to Buses, Railroad (Lynbrook
Sta.), Schools and Houses of W o r­
ship. Low taxes, wall to wall rugs
)iot water heat. Also laundry room,
kitchen, bath, washing machine, aircondition air and heater combination
In a full finished basement. All pro­
fessionally landscaped and many
more extras; with tenants' rental apt.
• t $180 « month.
CALL O W N E R . 516 LY 9-1691
.H o u s e
NEW
F o r S a l* ,
O ran g e
Venice, Florida
SAVB OM TOUR MOVE TO FI/ORIDA
Compare on r coat per 4,000 Iba to
St. Petersb u rr tm m New Tork City,
9406:
PbiladelpM a, $3 8 3 ;
A lbanj,
$483. Wot an M tlmate to an? destloatlun in Florida write SOUTHERN
TRANSFER A STORAGE CO.. INC.
Dept. C. P.O. Bo* 10217. St. P«‘*niburv, Florida
RETIREM ENT HOMES
. . $«,B00. up
EVERYTHING IN REAL ESTATE
L. FDLFORD. STUART, FLA.
WRIT® REQUIR EMEN'IS. Ph. 287-1288
Fla. Retirement Home Show
F l ’L L e l z e m o d e l h o m f e i n H i c k s v i l l e , L . I .
O ld C o u n try
Rd. at Jc ru ja V m
A ve.
616) W E 8 4 4 8 8 ; (2 1 2 ) 623-6160.
F lo rid a
A D IR O N D A C K
KARLY
A M K R IC A N
FARM HOUSE:
1 ’4
a^'re s,
bo ,au tlf\i4
T i e w , el e c - t r i c i t - . v , t t l p p h o n e , w e l l , r o a d
fro n tag e.
Nee<l (i
pomp
redecoratinir.
f4 B 0 0 . 8 E N D F O R F R E E C A T A lX K i:
T rl-L iik es
R p;ill.v,
C h ceterto w n ,
N .Y .
l*boiie 6 1 8 4 0 4 - 3 1 1 6 .
3-4 BEDROOMS
$225 to $250 depending on finish; other ARspeaker systems begin
at $57
FR $20,500
LOW CASH DOWN
$29,990
AI-MOST NEW
O om w
B rlfk — Lppal
S
F am ily .
5 - r m ai)t8 a v n ll. o n t i t l a p l u s «t
l e v e l »tu<1lo
apt of 2 '^
rm s. 4
y m o ld . g a r , « n t o b t. w jill o v e n
k lt „ m in e fiiibw ay. $ 1 0 0 0
dn on
••o n traft.
V A C A T IO N
—
R E C R E A T IO N
t b e d ro o m n e w 1 0 x50 trailer, 12x16
a d d e d ja lo u s ie r o o m , 1% w o o d e d ac re s.
A ll utilities. A d jo in i n g fo r e s t p re s e rv e .
P r ic e $9,000.
K O P P O F K E R H O N K S O N , N .Y .
D ial (914)
626-7500
n o WEST 40th STREET
NEW YORK. N. Y.
BRyant 9-4050 - 1 - 2
If y o u w a n t t o k n o w w h a f s h a p p e n i n g
to
to
to
to
an
you
your
your
your
d sim
c h a n c e s o f p ro m o tio n
jo b
n ex t ra ise
ila r m a tte rs !
». ptl<in
K i.'trd S t . R e n t o r b u y S l im i, 1 0
Rm s.
C ^ 'J n d S t . 4 B e d r m ? , $ 1 2 0 0 l> n . D c t .
7 Rms
R O 'x lO O ’ |tara ).p .
.T. J . L A W R E N C E - O L
2.1 0 0
8 ‘i O S W h l t a P l a i n * R d . O r e n 7 d a y n .
BRONX SPECIAL
T e r r if i o b u y . Y o u n r b r k , 7 rn i d iip li x,
2 b lk s
to
shopper *
tra n K p .
N i iir
sclinolfl. $ 1 8 0 0 d w n .
A SK IN G
$ 23.,'iO O
10 T r* T m in irl
rm e, 8 bedrni#.
H o ly w o o d b i b — 4 0 x 1 0 0 la n d s c a p e d
K ro iin d t,
B uto
b t.
E x tras
Incl.
O n ly f 7 6 0 dn o n p o n lrao t.
FIRST-MET REALTY
BOSTON K(». ItKONX
OL 4-5600
HILLSIDE Av Sect
$20,990
WA1.K
House For Sole - St. Atbons
TO M B WAT
S T . A L B A N S — W e l l l a n . l t - . i i i . . .1 . e.i iir r ,
g:o( ii l f o r p r o f e e s l o n a l o r r i r i \ a t p . l ) f t .
8 R m s . I V i B a t h s . O i l (> t ( a i i i li r.- il, K > i > .
A ttic,
G aratre.
S illB .O Oo
J'liD iie
lo r
SD Pt. O w n e r — G L 4-5K R 4,
B rlo li all a r o u n d 1 7 rm s , 4 b « d rm « ,
<ol tile b tb , fin b * m t. G a r, a\ito
h t , r e f r i r , ■w aplier. O n l y $ 6 5 0 d n
CO r o i i l r a o t t
CAMBRIA HGTS $20,990
BUTTERLY & GREEN
C A M K K I.V
IIIC IG H T S
A ll b r i c k r a n c h t y p e b n n t ; i l o w . A ll
r n i s o n I fir. E x c e l l e n t o o n d l n . Mod»i’n
k lto h ,
3
tone
eol.
t i le - V;i1h.
s u m p t u o u s b aj< enipnt,
r i n M K c , f( n < « ili n s ' l f i l e n p l o t . A l l ai>pliiiM ci-s jik -I iu Ind. O n ly
$ 1 , 0 0 0 C a ^ h (Ionw i. I i m i i t d ia ls o ccupancy.
3 6 » -2 0 n iL I X I U K A V B
LONG ISLAND HOMES
KEADl’ TO MOVE IN
DETACHED HOME — 6 m e .
8
Itpdrme, b«mt, Ige (arden, fa r.
Va<'Uiil * dc<tiratpd. $600 dn on
f<m1ra<t.
IlillNlde A vp.. J a m i iit a
JAmaica 6*6300
RE 9-7300
Farms & Country Homes
Columbia County
.^ u d lo
'\V i(h
T. j i i k p
EAST 218 STREET
B R irK RANCH
Farms & Country Homes
Ulster County
C olo n ial
A b ath .
ninnlh.
QI'REXS HOMES OL 8 -7 6 H».
E.
SPRINGFLD GDNS
$23,990
IM M E D IA E O C C U P A N C Y
F U R N IS H E D M O D E L O PE N 7 D AY S
D IR : FR O M
N .Y .— N .Y . S tate T h ru w a y
to e x i t 1 6 ( H a r r i m a n ) n o r t h ( R i g h t ) o n
R te 3 2 f o r 1 2 m i l e s to V a i l s g a t e H e i g h t s ,
m a k e left tu r n a t C h e s te r N a ti o n a l B a n k
( j u i t b e y o n d R ig V S h o p p in s C e n te r ) to
m o d e l s , O R , N o r t h on R o u t o B W t o R t e
307
C ornw all,
ta k e
left h a n d
fork
to
R o u te
32,
tu rn
risht
and
proceed
as
above. F r o m N e w J e r s e y , N o r t h o n R o u t e
IT to R o u t e 3 2 a n d p r o c e e d a s a b o v e .
M O D E L : (9 1 4 ) 561-9843
S to n y
P o in t O ffice: 014-942-0600
D eta< 'h o d
modern
kltf-bpn
to
■>uy.
$]fi0
Houses For Sale - Bronx
$143 M O
PAYS ALL
1
R E T IR IN G
U N S P O IL E
B usinesses
age. F ree
H udson,
•51-3804.
S3731
Houses For Rent - Queens
HOLLH.
E.
QUEENS VILL
G A R A G E , CITY SEWERS
NEAR EVERYTHING!
AR’s 5 year speaker guarantee covers parts, labor, freight and
new carton if you need Itl
C S .L . M u llin s, D e p t. 1212, C S L 8 -2 0
C h a m b e r of C o m m erce, S t. P e ttis b u r g
Farm House For Sale
W IN D S O R
JUST 55 MINS FROM N.Y.
Now they say they can, and they have. The new AR-3a has the
same clean, honest SO-^cIe bass as the AR-9, and Is in the same
compact cabinet, but everything else Is different (1} Move around
the room; sound Is surprisingly uniform. (2) Smooth, even mid*
range, already remarkable, Is even more natural-sounding now.
(3} New crossover removes mid'frequenclei from woofer range.
ST. PETE — th# City for Living
FREEI "LIVING IN ST. PETE" beoklef. Packed full of f a c h , figures end
fofoi of SUNNY ST. PETE. Popular
resort for 1,350,000 viiiiori annually
— ideal retirement center. Pricei here
•r e kinder to your b udget. W id e
choice of accommodations and re*
tirement hornet In all price ranges.
Wonderful b each et for swimming,
fishing, boating, golf, horse and
dog races, baseball. WRITE TODAY
for this informative book.
Stuart, Florida
Dis+incilve Towne H ouses
Home music listeners and professionals alike took to the AR-3
'Immediately when ARfirst produced It 9 years ago. High Fidelity
magazine went all out *7he sounds produced by this speaker ara
probably more true to the original programthan those of any other
commercially manufactured speaker system wa have heard.’' AR
laid that they couldn't make a better speaker#
VENICB r t,A .
INTERKSTED?
SEE H. N. W IMMER9. REALTOB.
EIP CODE 83586
C o u n ty
VAILSCATE
HEIGHTS
T r u th in S o u n d
Florida
D
C o lu m b ia
C o u n ty .
S m all
— F a rm s — H o m es — A cre­
L ist. W . T u rn e r. 408 W a rr e n ,
N .Y .
(5 1 8 )
828-0800.
R es,
New York State
Farms & Country Homes
N E W S u m m e r catalo g of h u n d re d s of R eal
E s ta te & B u sin e ss B a rg a in s. A ll T y p e s,
B iz e i & P ric e s. D a h l R e a lty , C o bleskill,
N .Y .
Village Home — For Sale
Au Sable Valley
$21,990
LAURELTON
ALL BRICK TUDOR
LUXURY & SPACIOUSNESS
6 Va
xoooiifi, 3 airy master bedrooms, Hollywood
colored tile bth, modern eat-in science kitchen,
w w d b u m in g in family size living room, banquet
dimJineroom, parage.
UNDERPRICED FOR QUICK SALE
A B C O
O L 7 -7 9 0 0
REALTY
E X C E L L E N T
con d itio n ,
4 bedrm s,
2
b a t h s , h a r d w o o d f lo o rs , m o d . k i t c h e n , oil
h eat, in su lated , 2 porches, 1 screened,
Y4 a . l o t $ 2 0 , 0 0 0 . K . W . B E L M O R E ,
A u S able F o rk s. N .Y .
169-12 HILLSIDE AVE., JAM AICA
W HY PAY RENT?
COLUMBIA COUNTY
$19,9110
$14,990 L .llR E L T O N
\M I)OW S SACRIFKK!
Oom«r English Stucco, Owner Det. Legal 2 family consisting
m ust Bell this home at a Baoi'i- of 6 room (3 bedrm), apt, .>^emi
fice consisting of 5 lai*ge rooms, fin ’d basem ent for owner, 3 rm
sun porch, gar. Stream line klt- apt for income. Modern kitchen
che,n & bedh. AH appliances. No & bath, gar. Set on a large
waitin*.
landscaped
plot. Everything
goes.
ST. A U SA N 8
FO LL O W T H E L E A D E R REG U LA RLY I
H e r e Is t h e n e w s p a p e r t h a t t e lls y o u a b o u t w h a t is h a p p e n ­
in g i n c iv i l s e r v ic e , w h a t Is h a p p e n in g t o t h e Job y o u h a v e a n d
t h e Job y o u w a n t
M a k e s u r e y o u d o n 't m is s a s in g le Is s u e . E n t e r y o u r s u b ­
s c r ip t io n n o w .
T h e p r ic e is ^ . 0 0 . T h a t b r in g s y o u Sa Is s u e s c f th e C i v il
S e r v ic e L e a d e r , f i lle d w i t h t h e g o v e r n m e n t Job n e w s y o u w p j it .
Y o u c a n s u b s c r ib e o n t h e c o u p o n b e lo w :
C IV IL S l R V i C I L E A D IR
f 7 D h o m S H -e e l
N e w Y o r k 1 0 0 0 # , Na%i
H om est
E statee,
Farin><, Cani*,>s, Acreage.
C O X O N R E A L E S T A T E , in c .
Ohathum, N.V. a U M U l l or S U 'M l'il
Lots & Acreage fo r Sole
Orange Co. - NY State
W I I J . S B I.L
4 L o v e ly w o o d e d acre s. A ll s u r ­
veyed —
O nly
$.‘1 ! 2 0 0 . I h a v e
o th e r
p arce ls.
MARGB
H IC K ­
M A N , P . O . . B o x 14, W e s t b r o o k V ille, N . Y .
ACRE.S, 3 l>edruom retirem ent home,
modern & cute. Love’.y grounds. ’I.S
minute# NV r ily . $16,000. BKN’IXIN
AGKNCY, Aliddlelown, N.Y. (» 1 4 ) I>I
S-03HO or K f 6-'2461 Evenings.
Forms & Country Homes
Orange County
I9 A M X
Zip code
B u lk
A crea«*
R etirem en t H nm ee.
B u sinew pik
ii<
th e
T ri
S tate
area
G O I.D M A N
AGENCY
• I PUm, P o rt Jeryta. M I ( 9 1 i )
123,990
L A U R E L T O N
Houses for Sale
Orange Co. - NY State
Y e r>
1 enclose 19.00 (check or money order for a y e a r s ■ubscrlptlon
to the Civil Service Leader. Please enter the nam e listed below:
ADDRB8 I
C o u n try
b T it
n iD O R BUNGALOW — 4 B E D ­
ROOMS, 2 baths. Detached
I'anch type home consisting of
4 large- bedrms, baths, nite club
bjusement apt. fully equipped,
all apUances. Im maculate thruout. Modeon kitchen and bath.
M ANY
OTHER
1 & 2
CAMBRIA HTS TROrER
$32,500
DETT 2 FAM — Desperation i^alc
Legal 2 family 5 & 4. Ultra
modern kitchen & bath, rent
able ba.sement apt, gar, fire­
place. all appliances. Set on a
tree lined street in a garden
ai’ea. Move right in.
FA M ILY
HOMES
A VAILABLE
QUEENS HOMES OL 8-7510
170-13 HILLSIDE AV>^.. JAMAICA
CIVI L
Tmgm FourteM
4k.------------------
SERVICE
LEADER
Tuesday, August
20,
1968
M t. P l e a s a n t S c h o o l
A id e s R a t if y C o n t r a c t
(S p e c ia l to
The
L e a d e r)
M O U N T P L E A S A N T — ^Adoption o f t h e n o n - c o n t r ib u t o r j
l / 6 0 t h p e n s i o n p la n , a s a l a r y s c h e d u l e a n d a d d it io n a l paid
h o li d a y s w e r e p a r t o f t h e b e n e f i t s ofcftained b y t h e T h o r n w o o d u n i t o f t h e W e s t c h e s t e r C o u n t y c h a p t e r o f t h e Civil
Service Employees Assn. In their
In session;
recent negotiations with Mount
• Time and o n e-h a lf pay
Pleasant Central School D istrict
for
overtime and triple pay
No. 1.
for holidays;
McQueen Riley, unit president,
• A total of twelve sick
Eva Jones, vice-president, and
days, granted annually. Two
Booker
Jefferson,
secretaryunused personal leave days
tx-easurer, represented CSEA at the
can be accumulated annually
negotiations. Riley signed the con­
as sick leave up to a total
tract, which also included the fol­
of 200 days;
lowing benefits won by CSEA:
• F inancing of 60 percent
• A right to post notices
of both th e em ployees’ and
concerning em ployees’ a ctiv i­
dependents’ health premiums;
ties;
• A m inim um of two hours
• A ruling th a t allows em ­
pay for employees who are
ployees representatives to visit
called to work a fter their
members
during
w oiklng
n o n n a l working hours;
chapter of CSEA recently. Also shown are Ed
G A R D IN E R
S P E A K S —
D r. j . h . o . r hours In order to give in ­
Dudek, left, president of the State University of
• A new and more direct
diner, director of th e Campus School, S t a U Unl>
form ation on contract term s
Buffalo chapter, and John Warren, right, former
grievance system ;
versiip College a t Potsdam, addresses crowd a i
and grievance procedures;
president.
dinner intallation dance of ih e Buffalo S t a t e
• A on e-year probationary
• A reasonable time for
period for all non-com petitive
employees to process griev­
employees and full rights and
ances;
benefits for th em under the
• Two hours a m onth for
Civil Sei*vice Law.
employees’ m eetings in school
U nit officials were pleased wltli
Hacllltles, provided they are
the negotiations and predicted
not conducted while class Is
success in future bargaining talks
ALBANY— T h e
fa o t-fln d e r
In
t
h
e
c
o
n
t
r
a
c
t
d
is
p
u
t
e
b
e
­
(F r o m L e a d e r C o rre s p o n d e n t)
S M IT H T O W N — T w e n t y - f i v e - c e n t - a n - h o u r w a g e b o o s ts t w e e n t h e O s w e g o B o a r d o f
I n b o t h 1969 a n d 1970 a r e f e a t u r e s o f a n e w t w o - y e a r c o n ­ E d u c a t io n a n d t h e O s w e g o
t r a c t n e g o t i a t e d a f t e r m u c h d if fic u lty b y t h « L in d e n h u r s t Classroom T eachers’ Association
V illa g e u n it o f t h e SufTolk C o u n t y c h a p t e r o f t h e C iv il has recommended:
• A $6,200 starting salary for
Service Employees Assn.
A L B A N Y — I n a s i g n if ic a n t
a bachelor’s degree, wtlh incre­
Tlie agreement waa signed Au­
s t a t e m e n t b y t h e P u b lic E m
m ents of $250 for length of serv­
gust 8 after CSEA had won a
(Special t o T h e Leader)
ice stepa 1 and 2 and $300 for
p lo y m e n t
R e la t i o n s
B oard
recognition fight following a year’s
A L B A N Y — T h e n a m e s o f h e a r i n g o ffic e r In t h e H u n t
ste p s 3 to 14.
Cffeort and then filed an Im• A $200 Increase for each of s e v e r a l m e m b e r s o f t h e p a id ington teachers case, George H
IMusHO declaration with the State
the eight preparation levels.
p r e s i d e n t ’s c o m m i t t e e w e r e Fowler held:
Public
Employment
Relations
S M IT H T O W N — N e g o t ia ­
• A salary schedule for su m ­ I n a d v e r t e n t ly l e f t o u t o f a
“The Taylor Law Imposes a
Board when the village failed to ti o n s h a v e p r o d u c e d a n 11
mer school that equals one- story w hich appeared In last moral a n d legal obligation upon
negotiate.
ten th o f the teacher’s salary. week’s edition o f T he Leader.
p ercen t a cro ss-th e-b o a rd pay
the parties to give serious oon
With the efforts o f State con­ b o o s t fo r e m p l o y e e s o f t h e
• Establishment of three new
Omitted from the list were John sideration to the acceptance of
ciliator Cleon Applewaite, an Elwood School Ddstriot, according
positions, drama coach, choral W. Raymond. D epartm ent of faict-ftinders’
recommendations
agi'eeiuent on the wage boosts to th e Elwood Schools unit of
director and clubs advisor and Ti*ansportatIon, secretary, Albany; The law, however, clearly does
and fringe l>enefit8 waa reached the Suffolk chapter o f the Civil
Increase of $150 for co-currl- Thomas
McDonough.
Motor not m andate th a t either or both
on beiialf o f 70 employees.
cular activities.
Service Employees Assn.
Vehicle Departm ent chapter pres­ of the parties accept such recom­
• A $300 raise for 35 years of ident, Albany; Bernard Silberman, m endations.”
The pact may be the first for
T he agreement, reached after
service and $ 1 ,0 0 0 for a doc­ Departm ent o f State, Albany;
public employees running to D e­ the chapter had been forced to
Fowler, a PERB board m em ­
cember 31. 1970.
torate.
appeal to th e S ta te Public R e­
Maurice Sokolinsky, Binghamton ber recomm ended a 1 2 -month
• Extra services to be com ­
T he contract, negotiated by unit lations Board to order recogni­
chapter; Joseph C. Sykes, State suspension of the dues deductloi
pensated at the rate of 1 / 2 0 0 th
for
the
Assooitated
leaders with the aid of CSEA field tion, also Includes fringe benefits
Thruway Authority, representa­ privilege
o f the teacher’s regular pay for
repte«entative Edwin R. Cleary, and is retroactive to July 1.
tive, and Joseph Ti'occla, Elmira Teachers of Huntington.
each day of extra services perT he teachers contended that
Includes piovisions for: non -con ­
Reformatory and Reception Cen­
fonned.
the Board of Education failed to
tributory
liospitall/.ation, wliich B u f f a l o S t a t e H o s p .
ter.
Basso also I'ecommended m ili­
saves employees an average of
The other members o f the com ­ negotiate In good faith, and cited
tary service up to three years be
1 160 a year; additional vacation P i c n i c D r a w s 3 0 0
m ittee Include, Immediate past that the board had refused to
credited towards seniority.
tlmie to tiu ee weeks after five
Statewide
president Joseph F. accept th e recomem ndations of
(From Leader Correspondent)
a fact-flnder.
y ejrs and four weelcs after 1 0 ;
Felly o f the Miscellaneous Tax
BUT’PALO—^Nearly 300 m em ­
Fowler decided th a t the evld
uniform: free, innoculations for
Bureau
at
the
S
tate
Campus
In
bers o f Buffalo S tate Hospital S t . R o s e C o l l e g e
ence
supported the boai-d’s con
hlgiiw ay and sanitation depart­
Albany, who Is chairman; S olo­
chapter, Civil Service Employees
tention that it had given seri
m ent woricers and a safety com ­
mon Bendet, S ta te Insurance D e­
Assn., attended the chapter an­ O p e n s F a l l C l a s s e s
lous consideration to the fact
mit tre to oversee the oi>eration of
partm ent In New York City, vicenual picnic and dinner August
finder’s
recomm endations
bul
vehic'ps. Tiie safety Idea is one
ALBANY—The Fall session at chairman; Felice Amodlo, Middle­ then rejected them.
10 in the Cheektowaga Orove.
o f Hie first guaranteed by con ­
town
S
tate
Hospital
chapter
pres­
The
College
of
S
ain
t
Rose
will
Guests included Dr. Tlieodore
It Is pointed out in the record
tract.
Wenzl, CSEA president; John offer graduate and undergraduate ident; Mrs. Ann Chandler. Brook­
that there had been private meet
Hennessey
of
Buffalo, QSEA coui«es in the fields of biology, lyn S ta te Hospital; Edwai’d Dudek, Ings betw een th e ch ief negotia
treasurer, and Joe Deasy. city education, English, French, h is­ S tate University representative tors for both sides, and, Fowlef
R e H r e m e n t D in n e r
editor of the Civil Service Leader. tory and political science, mtisic from Buffalo; Irving Flaum en- declared:
Iti.spector Joseph O ’Connor of
Wesley Dem m on is president of and sociology. The session Is open baum, Nassau County chapter
“Whether this method of bar
to both nuen and women. R egis­ president;
Sam uel
Grossfield,
th e ne[)arlment of Motor Vehicles
chapter,
gaining offered the best promise
tration will be held in the S ci­ State Division o f Employment,
•will be lionored for 30 years of |
of settlem ent is moot.”
ence Hall, 432 W estern Ave.
Rochester; Herbert C. Harwood,
civil service at a retirement din­
Graduate registration is sched­ F iank lln County chapter presi­
ner F rijay night, August 23, at
O n e id a E le c t io n
uled on September 12 and 13 dent; Mrs. R uth Heacox. Niagara
A p p r o p r ia tio n
th e R.'^ency House at 175 St. and
(Continued from Pago S)
from 3 to fi p.m. and from 7 to county chapter president; S tate
Jam aica Ave., Jamaica.
ALBANY—Governor Rockefelle
table. Among the demands the
Morris Gimpelson will be m as­ chapter plans to present are a 9 p.m. Classes begin September 16. Treasurer ■ John J. Hennessey o^ and the legislative leaders hav<
Special
programis
include Buffalo; Randolph V. Jacobs, approved' a $48,000 special ap
ter of ceremonies for the dinner. general pay inci'eaae, a review o f
courses J'jplude In the field of State Insurance Fund chapter and proprlatlon out o f the S ta te’
V incent Carney, former deputy employee allocations and classlcom m issioner of Taxation and ficatlons, adoption o f the S ta te’s menital I'etwdation and speech Metropolitan Conference presi­ em ergency fund to pay for a spe
F inance and Lawrence Meighan, l/6 0 t h retirement program retro­ correction and hearing. Tuition dent; Roger Kane, Marcy State cJal progm m of com m unity guldedi
district director of the Depart­ active to 1938, Increased sick leave grants are offered by the State Hospital chapter president; and
m ent of Motor Vehicles In J a ­ t>enefits, and liberalized vacation Education Department to teach ­ Mrs. Marjr McCarthy, Syiacuae comm ittee represents * ci’oss
ers or future teachers of m e n ­ S tate chapter president.
maica will ba speakers.
section o f CSEA members fron
schedule*.
tally retarded chlldien.
C h a ir m a n F e lly n o te d th a t th e
thi-oughout the S tate.
L i n d e n h u r s t V illa g e
A id e s W in C o n t r a c t
Facts Found In
Oswego Dispute
Full Listing Of
Paid President
Comm. Members
E lw o o d
A id e s
G et
11 P ercen t Pay B oost
PERB
R u le s
H u n tin g to n
On
T each ers
' ' c i T i L smi v f c i : l c a d k r
iroe»XtiT, Xiifn«t 20, 196(!
LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR
for def«nltfc>n« m» l e b ow m an y
additional fire o ff io e n «oid t i n flchters are needed to cope with
th is crififl.
(Continued from P a < « i )
ficiftk iwtho could «olv« It. P ot a
lonff tim e our pleas fell on deal
ears. According to tho CJity •d m ln fetiratlon, there waa no such prob­
le m exlating.
However, aa we all know, there
Ss thl* crlsla. W e have the »tattotlce to prove It! W hat couree
la y open to us?
W e w en t to the new s media, w ith
fids, w ith stories and with out
statistics. T hese facts and oiir
frien d s in the media did th e rest.
W ithout th e dedication o f the
newfi m edia, w ith ongoing em p haels o n th e fire crisis in New York
CUty, w e do n ot know if even yet
th e problem would have been
recognized by the City adm inistxation.
W e can say th a t now, because
o f all o f th e public spirited peo­
ple o f New York City such as edi­
tors,
reporters,
photographers,
n ew s an a lysts, some political fig­
ures and other responsible citizens,
yve have a resolution at the initial
pha<se to adequately protect the
people o f New York.
I t now rem ains for the City
a n d ourselves to sit before an im partial p>anel, review th e facts
on th e City’s fire crisis situation,
W e hope th r o u i^ i < w r o w n e f­
f o r t s , a n d t h e e iff o r t e o f a l l o f
o u r fu lc n d a t o p r o p e l t h i e h e a r in g
to a n I m m e d ia t e a a s e fla r o e n t a n d
s o lu t io n .
»
S p e c ia l F un ds
ALBANY—Governor Rockefeller
haa authoi-ized a $492,000 epecial
allocation from tlie State’s em erg­
en cy ftm d to pay for ad m in istm tive costa for the State Division
o f H um an B igh ts.
T h e reason the appropriation
wea necessary, he said, waa that
(h e Legislature failed to appro­
priate th e funds ao th e division
could o a n ’y out added responBlbintlea.
JOSEPH LOVETT, President
Uniform ed Fire O ffic e n Assn.
Local 854. lA F F , AFL-CIO
•
P r a is e s
•
•
B e n d e t
Editor, T lie Leader:
Please p iin t m y letter of thanks
(and I ’m siu’e I epeak for m any
other S tate employees aa well)
to Solom on B endet and his key
conxmittee in the Civil Service
Em ployees Assn. Mr. B endet has
long and loudly epoken out to
help all o f us.
W'es, a salary Increase is in
order for us S tate workers, vi-ho
are still being paid under par with
private Industry. Better salaries
and better on-the-Job training
v^ill atti'act a higher caliber of
employee.
Above all, le t m e say th a t Mr.
B en det and h is fellow com m ittee-
m en *‘h it the n ail on the h ea d ”
when th ey noted th e 2 0 -year reth^ement p lan for th e S tate Legis­
lature w hich w as recently a p ­
proved, How about the rest of u s—
especially th ose working w ith the
m entally ill In institutions and
schools? I t ’a hazardous working
with th e m entally ill at all times,
but after 40 years your reflexes
ai*e n o t w hat they wei*e a t 2 0 and
you’re actually and literally tak­
ing your life in your hands at
tim es, paa-ticularly during a d is­
turbance. Let ua retire after 20
yeara o f haad work and long
horns and let us live a litUe.
MIRS. SOPHIE GRAHAM
Commack, N.Y.
R e p ly
Editor, T he Leader:
W ith reference to your “D on ’t
R ep eat T h is” colum n of June 11,
1968, in w hich you Indicate the
groundswell building up for gun
control laws, I m ust take is.sue
w ith your ai-ticle.
Y ou are correct when you state
th a t em otion Is the m otivation
behind those w ho would register
all firearm s and license their
P o lic e C o n tr a c ts
owners. You are wrong w hen you
ALBANY—P olice contracts In sta te th e following: “th at it will
local govem m en t unita in the end th e violence th a t destroys the
S tate are stie ssin g fully-paid life fiber o f our country.”
insurance policlea aa recom m end­
A respect by all for the laws o f
ed in a dispute In the Town of our country and the fair and im ­
Harrison and tlie H o n iso n Police p artial enforcem ent of th e law
Association.
a gain st all lawbreakers reaardThe Public £lm(pk>yment R ela ­ less of race, color, creed, national
tions Board fact finder aaid a oilgin , or financial and political
$10,000, fu lly-p aid life Insurance influence, la the key to this issue
policy for all membera o f the
police depai'tmieiit in th e dispute
waa wai ranted.
D E W IT T C L IN TO N
S T A T I & E A « L I m . A L tA N Y
A KNOTT H O n i
BOOKS
c • n li
J 0 f5
n
u
BOOK
‘
and all such issuea.
In stead o f fin d in f fault w ith
th e countiT in thia vein, why n ot
find o u t w h a t’s right with it and
editorialize this. I m ight add, th at
th is particular column aeemed a
strange departure from the usual
ones and the usual fo iw a t of your
paper.
ANDREW , T. WITTMAN, JR.
Bayport, N.Y.
Xxp«r)»nccd cold typ« opcrktor want*
poMtion w ith progrcMiva 4 e p trtm tn t
Aoin| printing. Can train, 4o layout,
Mtpy lit, aatimata and aupervia*.
N.Y.S. EMPLOYEES
of them. The remaining 20 are In
m ediation or fa ct finding.
The n in e-m o n th summ ary o f
the Board’* activity in resolving
disputes arising out of contract
negotiations In th e public sector
follows:
SHOP!
A IX M lS IC A l. INSTKl MKNTS
HILTON MUSIC CENTER
I I I
S e r v i c e
I ’d
63 COLUMBIA ST., near NO. PE A B l.
▲L B A N T
H 02 094ft
M v a n ie d
S e r v i c e
w
iV o
i t h
C h a r g e s - "
c o n ta c t • • •
H am bar V JD .l.a
HIDDEN
VALLEY
F in a it
R an ch
S p o iu
•
SwimininK •
•
'Sandy
R id in g
•
Golf
Heatvd Pool •
B cach
•
S ec.
a c re s o v e r lo o k in g
LAKE GEORGE
!
Lo«ated on R t. 9N. HOTEI..-MOTRlr-LOCI
0ABINS-H0U8EKBEP1NG
COTTAOB«.
AU S porti. SwlmmlnK Pool— K M t a o r a n ^
Cocktail Lounge. Special acronim odatioM
fo r FKinlliet. Bend for frM color BroehuMb
Wrlto Frftnk A Ann Dej-Ic, Bo> 749
LMko George 10, N
^
518 66 «-a«n
O ar R « t e « S K
S ta rt a r
L’er C oupio
ARCO
R a io rt
G AYEST— SM ARTEST
'A D IR O N D A C K V A C A T IO N
A ll
HEARTHSTONE liODOE & MOTEt
7
T h e R « r« s c v IU e N a t i o n a l B a n k
K e e i e v U le . N . T .
834 -7 33 1
A m a rlc a 'f
•
Lakt
V ir a c to r
•
Kesidant -Orch.
•
Coq^tail
Lounca • Fina Food • Congenial
•
Informal •
O p tn All Y«ar.
• A N Q U r r PA C I L I T I t l ? ^ V A IL A IL I
CIVIL SERVICE BOOKS
and oil tests
PLAZA BOOK SHOP
380 Broadway
Albaey, N. Y.
M all & Phone Orders Filled
W rifa for Color Booklat
C a ll A lb a n y H I 4 4 1 1 1
CALL 518-482-9098
PERB R e p o rt
(Continued from P a « e • )
ON
;
‘ ■
OVBB M
TE A RS U IT B IT A T B TKAVKMCSI
SPECIAL RATES FOR
F ifiA M i
Total disputes
284
(a) School districts
(82 on Long Island)
S29
L ib r a r y T e a c h e r
(b) Other governments
SO
T otal Settlem ents
A t M illb r o o k S c h o o l
(a) School districts
A fflJl opening for teacher of
(62 on Long Island)
321
tral School District has been a n ­
(b) Other goveinanents
BS
nounced by Supervising Principal
Process
Used
In
Settlem
ents
G len E. Manning.
(a) Mediation
8B
Salai-y for the position is $6,500
(b) F act findJng
with a bachelor's degiee and no
(c) Other
0 ♦
experience, and $7,300 per year
Cases Open
127
w ith a ma.ster’s degree and no
(a) In mediation
expea-ience. The school will pay
(7 in Long Island
$ 2 0 for each extra credit hour
School Districts)
68
beyond a degree. IVCllbrook is 00
(b) In fa ct finding
m iles from New York City.
(13 in Long Island
Candidates miay w d te to M an­
School D istricts)
69
ning a t Millbrook Centi-al School,
Millbrook, N.Y. 12545, or call him
collect a t 814-677-8212.
2 0 % O FF TO IT A T f W ORKERS
A FA TO R ITB l « m
DEPT. NEED HELP 7 7
P a fe
L A K E L U Z E R N E . N.Y^____
■ ■ ■ I T a l . B 1 8 -6 9 4 -2 4 3 1 H B H I
TBOMAS H. eOBM AN. Ora. Mgr.
ALBANY
BRANCH O F F IC i
A P P L Y
F A L L
FOR IW O R IIA T IO N r(.far<]ln( a d w l W B f
N O W
m
S E M E S T E R
THE COLLEGE OF SAINT ROSE
A lb a n y ,
N e w
Y o rk
MEN AND W O M EN
F U L L Y A C C R E D IT E O
UNNRGRADUATE AND GRADUATE DIVISIONS
C O U R S E S O F F E R E D IN :
Biology, Education, Englith, FroneK,
Muiic, Sociology
S F E C IA L
History
PleMe write or e*U
«nd FeliticcI ScUne*,
PROGRAMS
Montal Ratardation
Spaach Corraction and Haaring
Raading
Cooparafiva History fro g ram with Srena C«ll«ga
( 6 r«duata ttu d a n t may t a l a up to 12 arW H heuri In H>« co«
•p a r a tin g institution toward dagre* iequiF«m«nt)
A D M IS S IO M
Naw itudant* applying t o tfva G ra d u a ta Divfswn m int fila an
application for admiition, •ffie«l tra)««erpti of aradtt, and tw«
M t a r t of racom mandatien for g ra d u a ta study or a confkJantial foldar.
TUITION FOR SEMESTER HOUR: $40.00
REGISTRATION
"Albert Magnut Science Hall, 432 Wetfern Avenue
GRADUATE: Sept. 12, 13. 3:00-5:00 P.M.. 7:00-9:00 P.M.
Sept. 14. 9:00-11:00 A.M.
Classes begin Sept. 16
UNDERGRADUATE: Sept. 12, 13, 4:00-5:30 P.M.
Ctasiei begin Sept. 14
FOR FURTHEk INFORMATION, w r lf* or cofi
Diractors of the Graduate Division or Saturday Division
TKo Colle^o «l Saint Roto
Albany, Now York 12203
Phono 438 .3567
ABC
JOSBPH T. BBLLXW
•OS SO. UAMMINO BLTD.
AL3AHT «. X.T.
P kooM IV r M U
0
• REGISTER NOW FOR
EVENING CLASSES
STARTING SEPT. 16
M AFFLO W ER
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APARTM ENTS
—
SOYAL
C 0U B 1
F u r n is h e d . U n>
fu r n is h e d , a n d R o o m s . P h o n e H E .
4 -1 9 9 4 . ( A l b a n j i .
i t ACCOUNTING, SECRETARIAL or RETAIL
BU SIN E SS MANAGEMENT DIPLOMA PRO­
GRAMS
i t CERTIFICATE COURSES*. • TYPEWRITING
• GREGG SH O RTH AND REFRESHER
• S T E N O S C R IP T ABC SH O R TH A N D
• STENOGRAPHIC REVIEW • PRACTICAL
BOOKKEEPING • HIGH SCHOOL EQUIVA­
LENCY • AUDITING
i f SPECIAL PUBLIC RELATK)NS INSTITUTE or
DATA PROCESSING SEMINAR
H O T IL
A R E A ^ MOST UP-TO-DATE 34-WEEK COURSE
IN
Wellington
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P R O G R A M M IN G
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u sin g th e IBM /SYSTEM 3 6 0 d a ta p r o c e t s in g
s y s t e m In A BC ’s o w n c o m p u ter InstaNafion.
. *Vstfran's Approval' *Eventngs or Sat. Classes
CALL 4 6 5 -3 4 4 9
FOR FREE
BULLETIN!
at
b e te l • . . w ill
Alb«fiy'« •Mly
e«raf«< Ym K 1 ^ Ik*
H rt
MiiveAlvM*, M el
Pw iM y re tM . C *d il« H I t v n f
I M
w m
aT A T B •
m w A tie A w io L
AN ACCRKOITCO INITITUTION O P H ie H M
a U S I N E i a ID U C A T IO N I I N C I 1 W 7
ALBANY BUSINESS COLLEGE
1 3 0 W 4 1 S H IN G T 0 N A V ff^ A L 0 A N Y , N .Y . 1 2 2 1 9
S P E C IA L
¥0R
W ESKLf
E X liN D E D
JU T U
fT J V f
CIVIL
Slfttemi
C5£A Victorious h
M ajor Erie Co. Fight
( C o n t i n u e d f r o m P a ffe 1)
cess of preparing programs to be
neiiotiated with the county. It
■yi'a.s not announced when bargain­
ing talks would begin, but the
chapter already has laid the
ground work for its contract dematids. and is working out a
m utually agieed to schedule with
the county.
Dr. Theodore C. Wenzl, CSEA
president, has sen t hLs congratu­
lations to the Erie County chap­
ter and cited th tm for tlieir suc­
cessive achievemen/ts, continued
8 up[X)rt, and progressive outlook.
“Erie County ha.s always had a
fine chapter, and I ’m sure that
thi.s added Impetus will only make
tiiem a more successful organiza­
tion.” Wen/,1 said.
Rat h had announced on June
Kassau Unit
Selects Officers
At a recen t general m em ­
b e r s h ip m e e t i n g t h e O.A.S.
u ni t o f th e N a ssa u ch a p ter of
t h e C iv il S e r v ic e E m p lo y e e s
Assn. ratified their constitution
and by-laws and elected officers
and delegates.
Tlie new officers are;
Dudley Kinsley, custodial work­
er II. president; William M cKin­
ney, equipment operator II, vicepresident: Charles Avondet, store­
keeper II. treasurer; Helen W il­
liams, tel. operator II, secretary:
Helerx Todaro, clerk steno II,
oorres. secy., and Joseph Myers,
custodial worker I, sgt. a t ai-ms.
Tiie new delegates are:
Anthony Croce, auto mechanic;
Josephine McCoy, telephone op­
erator II; Anthony Bellissimo,
m aintenance carpenter; Charles
Merritt, purchasing
supervisor;
Jam es Denvis, personnel special­
ist IV; William Rider, chief sta.
Engr. II; Hank La Bella Jr., chief
sta. engr. II, Elwyn M. Hoke, pro­
grammer I; Dominick Cascio, data
process; Irving Haiversen, bldg.
iut*r. II; Gil Siiadwick, m ainten­
ance paint foreman; Dorothy K ehoe, clerk typist III; Robert TurE^spinosa, dup. mch. oper. II.
28 that the 7,000 county employ­
ees would be placed in three bar­
gaining units but had not recog­
nized any employee organizations
to represent the employees in the
units In collective negotiations.
R ecently Neil V i Cummings,
chaptc-r president, announced that
another employee organization—
the Erie County Competitive Civil
Service Association—has agreed to
have CSEA represent it In bargainiog matters.
Playing key roles In winning the
right to negotiate for the em ­
ployees, besides Cummings, was
Thom as Christy, fourth vicepresident of the Erie chapter.
M e n ta l H y g ien e
(Continued from Page 1)
"In fact,” Wenzl pointed out,
"last year the Departm ent of
M ental Hygiene conducted
a
large-scale recruitment drive and
spent thousands o f dollars on ad­
vertising and personal contact, but
the drive fell flat on Its face. The
reason for the lack o f Interest
was obvious to everyone — not
enough money, poor working co n ­
ditions and many other factors."
Continuing, the president of
the 170,000-member Employees
Association said, “This certainly
Is not a new problem: it’s one
that has existed for a good num ­
ber o f years. And when an op­
portunity to rectify the situation
through our appeal presents It­
self, It is arbitrarily and casually
dismissed. This appeal affects
more than 21,000 of the 48,000
persons employed by the Mental
Hygiene Department. It cannot
be taken lightly, especially when
the majority o f these employees
are m aking less than $ 6 ,0 0 0 at
theli' highest step.
“Recruiting and retention aside.
Just the responsibility given to
those in the attendant series In
the care of the patients mandates
that they receive higher salaries.
“Morale has ebbed to a danger­
ously low point. These people feel,
and rightly so, th at they are being
discriminated against. They are
working In overcrowded wards—
one attendant beitig responsible
M E E T IN G —
M .,n b e » . r u .. ClvU Serv­
ice Employees Assn.'s orrievance comm ittee gather In Albany for
the final meeting prior to CSEA’i annual delegate meeting. Seated,
left to right, are: Roger Cilll, George DeLong, chairman, and Elmer
Martin. Standing, Nicholas Cimliio, and E. Norbert Zahm and John
J. Reddish, CSEA staff members. Committee members not present
for the picture were Olive Allen. Daniel Daly. Mary G onnley, John
Lariiejr, Rose Lefink, Lois MIimbzI, ajid Thpni'j^ AlADouougli.
G R IE V A N C E
SKRVICI!
tKADER
Tue«J«y,
*»o 7Q55
C S E A -D . o f E . M e e t O n C le rK ^
R e p r e se n ta tiv e o f th e M e t­
r o p o lit a n D iv is io n o f E m p lo y ­
m e n t c h a p t e r o f t h e C iv il
Seirvice
E m p lo y e e s
A ssn .,
along with Dr. Theodore C. Wenzl,
president of the Statewide CSEA,
met with S ta te Industrial Oommlssloner Martin A. Catherwood
last week to resolve an apparent
Impasse on the hiring of grade
three through grade five clerks in
receptionist positions in the Divl
sion’s New York City area offices.
The meeting, w hich was held in
Commissioner C a th em o o d ’s office
at 80 Centre St. in M anhattan,
ended with an agreem ent calling
for the im mediate adjustments in
the M anhattan office involved,
with clerks assuming the recep­
tion duties, and the Initiation of
further studies of the need for
such adjustm ents in the Long I s ­
land and W estchester area o f­
fices.
S U C C E S S F U L M E E T I N G — s . . . . Indu».rl.l C m m . ^
Division of Employment ch ap ­ sioner Martin A. Catherwood. center, freeta Dr. Theodore C. W en il,
on the riffht, president of the Civil Service Employees Assn., and
ter president John Lo Monaco
John Lo Monaco, president of the CSEA’s Metropolitan Division of
stated that the problem arose
Employment chapter at the Commissioner’s offices at 80 Center
when It was pointed out to the
St. In New York City. The successful m eeting was held to resolv*
personnel officials of the division the problem of the appointment of grade three through five clerka
and State Civil Service Commis­ In receptionist positions in most of the metropolitan area’s D. <»f
sioner Mrs. Ersa Poston that E. ofTices.
Grade 14 and 18 personnel Inter­
viewers were doing reception reported, the D. o f E. personnel Commissioner Catherwood as bh«
duties in the Metropolitan area office* m aintained that there was need for the clerical appointment*
offices of the division. It was no need for «uch appointments was again verified.
At the successful m eeting at th «
agreed at th at time, Lo Monaco in the offices involved.
Two weeks ago Lo Monaco and Commissioner’s office, the D ivi­
said, th at gri’ade three through
grade five clerks should be in ­ other metropolitan D. of E. chap­ sion of Employm ent personnel de­
stalled in these offices for recep­ ter officers w ent to Albany to partm ent’s previous recalcitrance
tion duties. T he appointments discusa th e problem with CSEA seemed to have evaporated. W enzl
were never made In compliance president Wenzl. At the meeting and Lo Monaco were satisfied th at
with the agreement, the chapter were Wenzl; Lo Monaco; Nicholas assuiances were given In good
Polllclno, chapter vice-president; faith th a t th e proper appoint­
official said.
Paul Greenberg, chapter vice- m ents would be made at the o f­
Failure to comply with the dir­ president; John Payne, the chap- fices involved.
ective waa noted In one M anhat­ ter'j grievance com m ittee chair­
Other S ta te officials at th «
tan division office and In the man; R alph Pabiano, chapter m eeting besides Catherwood wer«
entire W estchester and Long Is­ vice-president and consultant to Harry Sxnith, the division’s dir­
land areas.
the grievance comm ittee; Thomas ector o f personnel, Irving W eln“When we inquhed o f the divi­ Coyle o f the CSEA research de­ stock, a ssistan t director o f th e
sion’s personnel sta ff why the ap­ partment; S eth Towse, CSEA Division o f Employment; Sam uel
pointments were never made we counsel and New York City area Diamond, deputy industrial com ­
got nothing but doubletalks,” Lo representative’ W illiam Farrell.
missioner and Edward Caine,
Monaco said.
It was agreed at the m eeting to Division o f Employm ent metro­
As late as last week, it was ask for last w eek’s m eeting w'lthl politan area director.
for an overly large number o f
patients. They are not only deal­
ing with bed cases here, but with
(Continued from Page 1)
persons, m any o f whom are phy­
Further attacking the Thruway
sically healthy, who require a t­ leadership in a letter to R. Burtentive Individual care.
dell Blxby, Authority chairman,
“Not Only are salaries too low, Lochner said: “R efusal to grant
but once in the job, attendants these benefits and the refusal of
find them selves a t a dead end the Thruway A uthority to meet
as far as promotions are co n ­ with CSEA h a s convinced our
cerned. This, coupled with the members and our leadership that
poor working conditions, contrib­ the Thruway Authority Is using
utes to an excessive turnover rate the Taylor Law to avoid dealing
in personnel, resulting in many with the duly-designated repre­
cases o f untrained people work­ sentatives o f Its employees.” CSEA
ing with patients who need ex ­ has 1,700 o f the 2,200 employees
as dues-paying members.
perienced care.
Continuing, the executive dir­
“The S tate o f New York pro­ ector said, “The failure o f the
fesses to have a progi-esslve, su c­ Thru way Authority to recognize
cessful m ental health program. CSEA has deprived the employees
How can this be possible w hen the of repi-esentation w ith reference
people who administer the mental to their salaries, retirem ent and
health program in the institutions terms and conditions o f employ­
— attendants especially— are re­ m ent during: th e last year, and
quired to wash floors and w in­ it Is alm ost certain th a t your
dows, sweep down wards and per­ action will deprive CSEA o f nego­
form other housekeeping duties tiating w ith the Thruway A uth­
Instead o f devoting 100 percent of ority for benefits to be provided
their working time to the p a ­ in the n ex t budget, w hich takes
tients?” Dr. Wenzl asked.
effect, as w* understand It, on
“I t ’s « sorry day for the State January 1, 1(^99.
“Pm’theiinore,
th e
Thru way
— the so-called Empire S ta te —
Authority
disowned
Its
own
statewhen such deplorable conditions
L o c h n er D enounces T h ru w a y Auth.
are allowed to continue behind
the walls o f our m ental Institu­
tions and away from th e eye* o f
th t publia.'*
T « K e ^ Informed,
F < ^ o w T h « lie « d « r.
m ents o f employee relations, to
w hich another organization as
well as CSEA agreed in writtng,
w ithout any written notice to
CSEA . . . Based on this record,
we are amazed at the poor labtv
relations practices followed by
your Authority.”
Lochner blamed the Authority
for the loss o f additional retire­
m en t compensation by a number
of employees who retired between
last April 1 and the date th*
Authority’s approval o f the l/ 8 0 t h
plan retroactive to 1938 becam®
effective. “Had
the Thruway
Authority recognized CSEA in
September or October o f 196T
as it should have, we are certain
th at a number o f your Thruway
employees who retired during th«
aforem entioned time would no 6
now be deprived o f the benefits
o f the new l/ 6 0 t h plan negotiated
by CSEA for State employees,’*
Lochner told Bixby. T h e benefit#
for S ta te workers became effectiv#
Apill 1.
Units Rftcognlxed
M I N B O L A — U n i t s o f th e N a s ­
s a u c h a p t e r . C i v i l S e r v ic e B i n - I
p lo y e e t A s s n ., h a v e g a in e d e x c lu s iv « r e c o g n it io n f o r e m p lo y e e s o f
t h e O r e a t N e c ic P a i*ic D i£ » tr io t a n d
U e w l e t t - W o o d m e r * P u b lic U b r a i y
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