CMIL 0000000.'7-ru^,p.CGMP P R CSEa ELK S T y Afeeri--^ Americans Largest Vol. XXXIV, No. 1 ISewsjMper for Tuesday, April 3, Public 1973 - See Pages 8 & 9 Employees Price 15 Cents Talks Still Going On Between CSEA, State On New Pact Seen here are some of the more than 1,000 delegates attending the Spring meeting of the Civil Service Employees Assn. in New York City last week as they voted on one of the many issues involving the future of the Employees Association. Call For Support Of CSEA Now Set For Legislation Affecting The Civil Service EmployWorkers Already Retired ees Assn. will move toward decentralization of m a n y of There are an estimated 80,000 persons currently eligible for membership in r e t i r e m e n t chapters of the Civil Service Employees Assn. and CSEA is going a f t e r them by a t t r a c t i n g a t t e n t i o n to and urging support of several important bills in the Legislature sponsored or endorsed by CSEA. These measures, if enacted, could bring great benefits to already-retired public employees. In addition, a full-time position has been created at CSEA headquarters to give greater service to the more than 10,000 members now enrolled in retirement chapters. Membership, by the way, is in area chapters, not the chapter Central GonfSets Owego As Location For April Meeting SYRACUSE — The Central Conference of the Civil Service Employees Assn. will meet April 27-28 in Owego, according to Conference president Floyd Peashey. (The Leader draws attention to the fact that the site is the Treadway Inn In Owego, Tioga County seat, not in a similarly spelled city as has been listed recently in the Calendar.) The fourth annual scrapbook competition will also take place at this meeting, with prizes to be awarded to the top three scrapbooks submitted by member' chapters. Names of contest judges will be announced at a future date by chairman Helene ^ Callahan. Blnghamton and Broome County chapters are hosting the meeting. from which a CSEA member retired. At present these areas have been created In the Capital District, Binghamton, Ithaca, Rochester, Syracuse and Suffolk County. Metropolitan New York and Nassau County chapters will soon be formed. At the request of the retirees committee, its latest newsletter is as follows: The chief reason for writing you at this time is to urge that you actively support an important legislative bill that will benefit you. This is Assembly Bill No. 6484 Introduced at the request of the Department of Audit and Control by Mr. Suchin and multi - s p o n s o r e d by Messrs. Greco, Bell and DeSalvlo, to amend and continue the supplemental retirement allowance. This prp(Continued on Page 16) Western Conf Plans May 4-5 Meeting ROCHESTER — Dates for the next meeting of the Western Conference of the Civil Service Employees A-ssn. have been announced by Conference president Samuel Grossfleld. The meeting will be May 4-5, with the SUNY at Buffalo chapter acting as host. Chapter president Edward Dudek said arrangements for a site are being finalized, and will be announced In the near future. its operations next October as the result of restructuring of several activities of the organization. Final approval for reshaping CSEA operations was given by more than 1,000 delegates attending the spring meeting of CSEA in the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York City last week. Highlights of the changes Include the following: • Division of the Employees Association into six regions. They are now called conferences. • Conference presidents will be known as regional presidents and also will be vice-presidents of CSEA and serve on its Board of Directors. • The office of executive vicepresident was created to succeed the president if for some reason he should become incapacitated. • Regional offices will be provided with staffs for servicing such areas as public relations, legal representation and handling problems which are of a local nature. Albany will continue to provide services which are of an overall nature such as direction of general CSEA policies, legislative action, legal problems affecting the entire Employee Association, etc. In addition there was considerable realignment of Internal operations at the main headquarters to provide more efficient service. For a more detailed explanation of restructuring, see Page 16. Pass your copy of The L e a d e r on t o a non-member. At Leader presstime, the delegates' meeting of t h e Civil Service Employees Assn. recessed its session in New York • City last week because its coalition negotiating t e a m h a d not completed bargaining for a new work c o n t r a c t with t h e State. The c u r r e n t pact was due to expire at m i d n i g h t M a r c h • 31. Delegates will reconvene, a t a site to be n a m e d , when a new contract settlement is reached in order to express initial approval or disapproval of the pact. However, any actual agreement m u s t be ratified by the entire m e m b e r ship in the four bargaining units t h a t CSEA represents. In addition to any general benefits t h a t m i g h t result f r o m the talks between the Employees Association a n d t h e S t a t e Administration, members also will vote later on i n dividual contracts covering t h e special problems in t h e four units. Most of the five-day session was devoted to completion of recommendations on r e s t r u c t u r i n g t h e organization, b u t t h e c o n s t a n t topic of concern was the s t a t u s of negotiations. Because of m u t u a l a g r e e m e n t between the two parties the content of the talks h a s been kept secret but it is no secret t h a t progress h a s been disappointingly slow. There was a flurry of anger at one point during t h e meeting when a m e m o r a n d u m f r o m Mel O s t e r m a n n , s t a t e director of employee relations, was read. It said, in effect, t h a t all leaves for s t a t e workers were temporarily cancelled and warned against any kind of job action by reporting in sick, etc. The memo brought s h a r p reaction f r o m Anna Bessette, a Mental Hygiene d e p a r t m e n t a l representative, and Samuel Grossfield, president of the Western Conference of CSEA, who termed the directive "an undisguised t h r e a t and direct interference in the convention." The m a i n order of business, however, was t h e lengthy discussion on final changes in the r e s t r u c t u r i n g of CSEA. The m a r a t h o n session on this issue (whose highlights are reported elsewhere on this page) was chaired by CSEA. third vice-president Richard T a r m e y and directed by A. Victor Costa, c h a i r m a n of t h e r e s t r u c t u r i n g committee. Costa was later presented with a plaque for his more t h a n two years' service on the project. Also cited was T h e Leader for its presentation of the various phases of r e s t r u c t u r i n g as they were completed. Any action t h a t might be completed on a new c o n t r a c t will be reported in The Leader as soon as possible. Western Armories Meet Next Week DUNKIRK — Western New York Armories chapter of the Civil Service Employees Assn. will meet April 11, according to Lawrence Vogel, acting chapter president. The Governor's Chief of Staff, Gen. John C. Baker, Is expected to be among the guests at the 2 p.m. meeting In the Polish Falcons Club here. OGS Installation ALBANY — The Office of General Services chapter of the Civil Service Employees Assn. has scheduled an installation meeting for April 7 In the State Campus cafeteria, according to chapter president Boris Kramarchyk. The function Is slated to begin at 6:30 p.m. RepeatThisJ City Election More Raucus Than Ever E l LECTION campaigns in J New York City have been notoriously raucus in recent years, but w h a t is going on this year eclipses anything that ever happened In the past. Even political insiders confess their mystification over what is going on. None dares to predict how it will come out In the end. (Coatinaed on Pace 6) To Appoint 500 Pbliet Aides THE DELEHANTY INSTITUTE 60 years of education to more than a half million students. ASSISTANT FOREMAN SANITATION DEPT. Intensive preparation course starts April 17. College Secretarial Asst. College Office Asst. Course starts week April 2. To prepare for May 5 exams. The Police Department will begin calling eligibles this week to appoint more than 500 police administrative aides. A certification of numbers 1 through 800 from the open competitive list of exam 2251, established March 21, was made last week. The list contains 2.026 names. A Police Department official said that appointees will be replacing patrolmen peilforming office work and filling vacancies in various commands as part of the civilianization program to free more policemen for street duty. The official said that the department would be hiring "steadily for two or three months," although he would give no exact idea of the rate. The department hopes to ultimately hire 2,300 civilians to replace policemen now in office jobs. Allen, Rolbein Named To BMCC Posts dent of the board for the Gouverneur Gardens Housing Corp., and now Is responsible for the construction of a $1 million shopping center for the cooperative on Madison Street. A resident of M a n h a t t a n , he has been a consultant to the New York State Department of Education, the New York City Department of Personnel, and the Danforth Foundation. Holbein was previously director of planning at Brandels University. He has been a consultant to the Korean Reconstruction Agency of the United Nations; deputy director of reparations. International Refugee Organization, Geneva, and an economist for the National Housing Agency, Washington. Rolbein also resides In New York City. The appointments of David Allen as staff assistant to the dean of faculty and David L. Rolbein as deputy to the dean of administration at the Borough of Manhattan Community College have been announced by Dr. Edgar D. Draper, president of the college. CORRECTION CAPTAIN Enroll now to prepare for June 3 0 exam. Patrolman, N.Y.P.D. Policewoman, N.Y.P.D. Continuous Classes to prepare for exams ordered by Civil Service Commission POLICE PROMOTION Intensive course featuring new CASSETTE STUDY SERIES Convenient Locations—Day & Evening Sessions FREE CASSETTE OFFER Exams ordered by Civil Service Commission for Sergeant and Lieutenant FIRE LIEUTENANT most important of all Fire Promotion Study Course DEPUTY FIRE CHIEF Exam. Scheduled f o r June 9th. Classes Resume April 2nd and bi-weekly thereafter. High School Equivalency DIPLOMA PREPARATION S week course-day & evening classes Enrollment note open Delehanty High School A 4-yeor Co-Ed college preparatory high school ACCREDITED BY THE BOARD OF REGENTS Vocational Division approved training in • AUTO MECHANICS • ELECTRONICS-TV • DRAFTING LICENSED BY THE NEW YORK STATE EDUCATION DEPT. The Delehanty Institute For Information on all courses CALL (212) GR 34900 MonhaHan. 115 E. ISth Strtat Offie* Open Daily 9 A.M.-5 P.M. David Rolbein David Allen Allen, assistant professor of social science, has been a member of the B.M.C.C. faculty since 1966. For three years he was presi- Structure Grp. D Jr. BIdg. Custodian The city Dept. of Personnel has summoned 560 candidates for junior building custodian to take written open competitive exam No. 2104 at 9 .a.m on April 7 at Charles Evan Hughes H.S., 351 W. 18th St.. Manhattan. The city Dept. of Personnel has summoned 728 candidates for structure maintainer trainee, grp. D, to take open competitive exam No. 2261 at 9 a.m. on April 7 at Seward Park H.S., 350 Grand St., Manhattan. Sr. Super Park O p The city Dept. of Personnel has summoned 929 candidates for structure maintainer trainee, grp. E, to take open competitive written exam No. 2262 at 9 a.m. on April 7 at W. H. T a f t H.S.. 171st St. & Sheridan Ave., Bx. The city Dept. of Personnel has summoned 55 candidates for promotion te senior supervisor of park operations to take exam 2647 April 7. Structure Grp. E Become a Stenotype Stenographer The career is exciting Stenotype Academy . . . the pay is good. can teach you how to enter this rewarding field if you have a high school diplonf>a or equivalency. You can study 2-evenings a week, Saturday mornings or 5 days a week. We'll teach you everything you need to know. Stenotype Academy is the only school in New York City teaching Stenotype exclusively that is A p p r o v e d b y the N.Y.S. Dept. of Educatiun, U.S. Gov't Authorized for non-Immigrant A!iens and Approved for Veterans. Approved for N.Y.S. Training Programs CALL TODAY rOR A FREE CATALOG Chief Court Reporters Court Reporters l i s with four years of permanent service In the New York State Court of Claims may file for Chief Court Reporter, exam 55-302 until May 4. The written test will be held June 2. Successful candidates will then be called for an oral test, and before appointment must have served 5 years as a Court Reporter 11. Salary Is $22,395. For applications and f u r t h e r Information, c o n t a c t John Wynne, Personnel Officer, Judicial Conference, 270 Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10007. Housing Auth. Police Name 18 New Sgts. Eighteen Housing Authority patrolmen were promoted to sergeant on March 20, marking the first use of the sergeant's list since Its establishment on Dec. 10, 1971. The last eligible reached on the 73-name list was number 26. The new HA sergeants are: Pasquale Cirincione, Andrew Melillo, Gerald Kempf, Cornelius Clark. Vincent Galuzzo, Robert Katz, Ralph Guerra, Rank Manzl, Roger Toppin, J a m e s Foley, Gustave Moorehead, Patrick Lynch, Robert Edwards, William Popper, John Rose, Nicholas Destefano, Peter Zarrella and David Cade. No Action In Bias Suit No decision or order was issued at the March 28 hearing in Federal District Court on the charges of discrimination brought by the Police Department's G u a r dians Assn. against the city's exams for patrolman. Judge Sylvester J. Ryan g r a n t ed a period of three weeks for the city and any Interveners, expected to be police line organizations, to submit legal briefs. A hearing will then be held on the petitioners' request for a preliminary injunction. They are asking t h a t appointments to patrolman from the existing eligible lists be halted, or temporary ethnic quotas be enforced, until new, non-discriminatory tests can be developed. Community Liaison The city Dept of Personnel has summoned 599 candidates for community liaison trainee to take open competitive written exam No. 2064 at 9 a.m. on April 7 at Julia Richman H.S., 317 E. 67th St., Manhattan. W 0 2 - 0 0 0 2 tllNOTYPEACADIMY '"ror:."".:hT"" Delehanty Scores Again With Fire Captain The recently published 805 name list for promotion to Captain, fire department revealed that Delehanty graduates again upheld the Institutes' 60 year history of helping men in the department obtain the promotion opportunities they deserve. The list showed that Delehanty graduates placed: 10 Out Of The First 10 80 Out Of The First 100 MONROE BUSINESS msiiiiiE •ACCEPTED FOR CIVIL SERVICE •JOB P R O M O T I O N •EXCELLENT TEACHERS •SHORT C O U R S E S ' L O W RATES VITERAN TtAINING • Til: 9 3 3 - 6 7 0 0 115 EAST F O R D H A M ROAD BRONX 1 0 4 6 8 9 3 3 - 6 7 0 0 C I V I L SERVICE L E A D E I A m c H c a ' t Leading W * « « k l y For Public E m p l o y * * * PublishcU Each TucMlay 11 Warren St., N.Y., N.Y. 10007 Busincu and Editorial Olficc: II Warren St., N.V.. N.Y. 10007 Kniered at Sccond CUm mail and Stfcond Clai» pouage paid, Octubcf V 19V>. at the Po«t Office, New York, New York, under the Act of March i, 1879. Additional entry at Flainfield, New Jersey. Member of Audii Bureau of Circulaiiun. Subuription Price J7.00 Per Year Individual Copies, l ) c Wenzl Warns Buffalo About Proposed Uniform Pensions BUFFALO—Civil Service Employees Assn. P r e s i d e n t Dr. T h e o d o r e C. Wenzl, s p o k e s m a n for a coalition of 29 S t a t e public e m p l o y e e u n i o n s , d e c l a r e d h e r e l a s t week t h a t t h e proposed new u n i f o r m bill w a s " s t a c k e d to h e l p t h e p r i v a t e s e c t o r . " Dr. Wenzl, o p e n i n g a s t a t e w i d e c a m p a i g n f o r u n i o n s r e p r e s e n t i n g 750,000 w o r k e r s , said in a Statler Hilton Hotel press conference the proposal before the State Legislature was "discriminatory and anti-labor." The new system. Dr. Wenzl said, seeks to cut government workers' pensions to reduce other unions' pressure for better pensions in private industry and business. 'There's no reason there should be retrogression in public workers' pensions because pensions in private industry aren't as good," Dr. Wenzl added. "The answer," he continued, "is that private sector pensions should be improved." Pledging to fight recommendations of the Kinzel Commission "every step of the way," Dr. Wenzl said the results of the study, which have been supportCSEA president Wenzl, right, carries the pension battle to ed by Gov. Rockefeller, were Buffalo. Sharing the rostrum with him at press conference "unbelievable, retrogressive, disare CSEA Erie County chapter president George Clark, left, criminatory and anti-labor." and Firefighters representative Patrick Mangan. He also predicted "complete the NYS Nurses Association; said was the average pension of chaos in public employment If Patrick Mangan, vice-president retirees. the proposed pension system reC O U N T Y EXECUTIVE M E E T I N G — At meeting of places the current pension sys"If you're looking for larger of the NYS Professional Firefighters Assn.; Joseph Rizzo, County Executive Committee, held prior to full delegates' meeting tem. "Our goal in this fight is pensions, you emphasize the stapresident of District Council 66, of Civil Service Employees Assn. last week, discussion on pensions not to demand more. Rather, tistics for employees with 30 or American Federation of State, was primary topic of interest. As result, state delegates were invited our sole objective is to protect 35 years of service. If you want County and Municipal Workers, a true picture you stick with to sit in for informational purposes. In top picture. Association the rights that civil service average figures." and Lou Kaplan of AFSCME workers have a l r e a d y won pension committee chairman Ernest Wagner discusses pensions with through the years," he said. He explained that the confer- Local 264 and 650 ia, Buffalo. Other unions participating inmembers of audience, as County Executive Committee chairman Dr. Wenzl claimed the state's ence planned to put the facts of Joseph Lazarony stands by. In lower picture, from left, are CSEA Pension Commission has used the pension question before the cluded: Uniformed Sanitationmen's second vice-president A. Victor Costa, director of local government scare tactics and phony statis- public and the lawmakers so Assn.; District Council 37, AFS"before this legislative session is tics "filled with flagrant use of affairs Joseph Dolan and treasurer Jack Gallagher. County repreover, the lawmakers will hear CME; Local 100, Transport sentatives passed several resolutions demanding firm stand on pen- typical examples to prove that Workers Union; Superior Ofretirement incomes are too high. enough about our movement to ficers Council; Local 237; New sions for chairman Lazarony to present to full delegates' meeting. He said: "I fail to see any- know what we want of them These resolutions were overwhelmingly approved, in turn, by the thing 'rich' about an annual and what support our vast num- York City Housing, P.B.A.; Correction Officers Benevolent delegates. pension of $4,100," which he bers have to offer in return. (Contined on Page 14) "We are asking for nothing more than what we have already won and what we are entitled to," he added. Another fault of the proposed system. Dr. Wenzl pointed out, was the possible discriminatory proposals that offer different by school district before the to have expressed intention to pensions to workers hired after (Special to The Leader) a date to be established by the SMITHTOWN—Civil S e r - count. They were then combined continue to work out of CSEA's (Special To The Leader) State Legislature if the measure vice Employees Assn. m e m - into voting blocks for the final Suffolk office. Temporary ofSARATOGA SPRINGS — is passed. b e r s w h o a r e n o n - t e a c h i n g tally. More than 3,000 employees ficers are to be appointed and M e m b e r s of t h e S a r a t o g a "From 40 to 50 percent of all in the county responded in the election plans for a new educaemployees of school d i s t r i c t s S p r i n g s City School D i s t r i c t referendum vote. tional chapter slate are under new employees entering public throughout Suffolk County voted employ are black or of Spanish- u n i t of t h e Civil Service E m way. The new chapter is reported late last moiith, by an overspeaking origin," he said. "To ployees Assn. have ratified an whelming margin, to approve a tell them they are to receive less unprecedented three-year connew organizational concept pay for perfoi-ming the same job tract with the Saratoga Springs which will bring them together is blatant and inflammatory dis- Board of Education, including a five percent salary increase for in one county-wide educational crimination." each year plus many fringe benchapter. The system figures to pit race efits. The election gave CSEA memagainst race in open hostility, A major provision of the new bers in 33 school districts in SufundeiTOine collective bargaining folk County the choice of reand reduce productivity, Dr. contract Is the application of unused sick leave toward retiremaining as units of the existing Wenzl contended. ment benefits. An employee may Suffolk County chapter, or be"Productivity is the coming accumulate up to 200 days of coming a distinct entity comthing and this dual pension sysprised solely of educational emtem throws an impossible road- sick time and apply up to 165 of ployees. block in the path of efforts to these days toward his pension. Voting results were roundly in Other contract Items include achieve it," he said. favor of the new concept. a boost in longevity increases; Some examples produced by an additional sick day; an adTwenty-five districts were talthe CSEA head Included: lied in favor, while only eight ditional holiday; an additional A sanitationman hired after personal day, and a night shift districts turned down the proJuly 1. 1973, stands to make 57 differential. posal. percent less than a fellow workThomas Kennedy, coordinator A seven-member team, assister hired 15 days earlier—a tran- ed by CSEA representative Aaron of elections for the Suffolk With hands clasped in solidarity, Suffolk County chapter sit worker 54 percent less; a chapter, conducted the election. Wagner, negotiated the agreethree chapter school unit presidents policeman 38 percent less; a city ment for non-instructional emHe said, "Ballots were sent to leaders congratulate teacher 58 percent less; a state ployees of the school district. every school district member in after elections that will unite 33 school districts in Suffolk teacher 41 percent less, and a the county. They were given the County into one county-wide educational chapter. From stflte hospital worker 36 percent The CSEA unit Is part of the opportunity to voice their new Saratoga County EducationE. Ben P.orter; Walter less. opinion and we feel that the left are Suffolk chapter president al Employees chapter of CSEA. Besides Dr. Wenzl, also on 70 percent participation rate inWeeks of the Mid-Island unit; France^ Bates of tjie AmityJohn Chase, president of the dicates that the plan and the ville unit; Pat O'Connor of the Lindenfiy^rst unit, and chap- hand for the press conference 135-member unit, called the conwere Al Sgagllonp, president of tract "the best settlement north election procedure were an outtep executive representative Thomas Kennedy, who was standing success." ,Qf Albany and better than most eltcttmt^rmtmim^'*^ " " " " ' ^ • YotTTHc.; Glorfa Cappella of south of Albany." Voting xesult& separated ch\immn'vf"the Suffolk School Members Vote To Form Educational Chapter Saratoga Spgs. Schools Unit Ratifies Pact n < r C/l PI P3 n PI r* PI > H srt QP a > "1 SO 00 books." Well it certainly paid off because the new Chief has a good brain on his shoulders and should continue to go right on up the ladder. Congratulations Chief and a big kiss for your beautiful ever lovin'! « « h <A if «) V 9 H tc i S u u Some of t h e D e p a r t m e n t Orders last week brought news which in t u r n m a d e me feel a lot older for one t h i n g and gave me a w a r m feeling of pride for a n o t h e r . One of t h e m stated t h a t Chief S t a n Hirshfleld got a steady spot in t h e 4th B a t talion. Chief Hirshfleld as a fireman was one of t h e first firemen to welcome me a t 40 Truck a n d when I be- gan my picture Harlem in 1951. career in Another order told that Captain Larry Molahan made Battalion Chief. I remember him In 23 Truck as a flreman and I remember even better the day I photographed his weddings His wife was one of the most beautiful women I have ever had the pleasure to photograph. He confided that she was the power behind the throne and sold him on the idea of "getting into the • Special Notice regarding your w CSEA BASIC ACCIDENT AND SICKNESS PLAN WE HAVE INCREASED THE LIMITS FOR THE DISABILITY INCOME BENEFITS... Now, if your annual salary is You can qualify for a monthly benefit of Less than $4,000 $100 a month $4,000 but less than $5,000 $150 a month $5,000 but less than $6,500 $200 a month $6,500 but less than $8,000 $250 a month $8,000 but less than $10,000 $300 a month $10,000 and over $400 a month Due to my stay in the hospital I was forced to miss the annual judging of the best pictures and stories about firefighters in the contest run annually by the U.P.A. I consider it a great honor and privilege to be invited to be on the jury and with the help of The Big Chief, I hope I won't have to miss any more. Thanks to you Nick Cavataro for the invite. Please print your name, address, place of employment and employee item number in the spaces provided on the coupon below. 2. Mail form to: TER BUSH & POWELL, INC. CIVIL SERVICE DEPARTMENT * • * It is suggested that all blueshirts take a very close look a t the latest copy of "Fire Lines" just in the mail. Column one, page three will let your imagination run rampant on the t r e mendous amount of time a n d thought which goes into being an officer of the U.F.A. The list of bills put into the hopper by the Legislative Committee composed of Chairman John O'Sullivan, Richard Vizzini, Joseph La Femmina and Herbert Peterson, is nothing short of staggering, Unfortunately, a large portion of the general membership isn't even aware that such a committee exists. Good luck John and your boys for complete success in Albany this year. You're doing a real fine job. • • • We had some mail this week. Let's start by saying that I pay no attention to an unsigned letter. If you haven't got the guts to sign it then forget it. However, in this case, the bird who signed himself "subscriber" and was shocked by my use of the word "hell" and said so, has a lot to learn. In my 47 years of living close to firefighters, there are several things about which all agree, an anonymous letter writer is one of the most dangerous people alive. I have more hell caused by such letters than I can take space to describe. A Pint Of Prevention .. . Don>ate Blood Call UN 7 - 7 2 0 0 Today Men 17 to 35 - Women 18 lo 28 G o o d pay with military benefits, retirement and survivor plan. Schooling and training in most civilian trades and careers. H i g h school seniors welcome. Veterans try us for one year — your prior service is worth f i v e for one for $retirement. State and Federal G o v t workers allowed extra leave yearly with pay. | j JJ^'^TorTTir Niagara Falls Schnectady O 716 297-4100 518 372-5621 | . r - o I Syracuse 315 458-5500 White Plains 914 946-9511 j Roslyn 516 621-2600 | Beach An 516 288-4200 Equal Opportunity male/female Outfit national guard/dpr Westchester County Airport ' I I w h i t e Plains, n . y . i0604 \ AirCuard j ^ame j Address I j City/Zip ] 5ex | Prior Service? | to you to your chances of promotion to your job to your next raise and similar matters! Or, call your nearest Ter Bush & Powell representative for details. P O W E L L . SCHENECTADY N E W YORK place. Congratulations to the 7th Division. That was using the old beaneroo. If you want to know what's happening 956 SCHENECTADY, NEW YORK 12301 B U S H y & • Westhampton 1. T E R • In a fire on McCombs Road a few nights ago, one of the brothers collapsed on the fire floor of the building and was in very bad shape. Even though it was a Bronx location, the 7th Division scooted him to Presbyterian Medical Center where they give firefighters "AAA" plus tieatment. That dovetailed with ^ column I had written a few weeks ago on the same subject and I was pleased to know that the poor guy was taken to the right Phone ANG Recruiter FOR FULL INFORMATION AND RATES: 3. just be 20 Truck. Good luck Cap! * * * • There have been changes! Box • The third item was the news that Lieutenant Sylvio P. Del Rosso had made Captain. Lieutenant Bill McGowan (ret.) once used to say that a man's leaving a company never caused a "for sale" sign to go up on the building, but Sylvio Del Rosso's departure from 20 Truck via the promotion route will come pretty close to it. As you know, 20 Truck is down in the middle of that horrible area which Commissioner Ed Cavanagh used to call "hell's hundred acres" which It continues to be. Sylvio used to go around the area on his off time looking over every building for unusual characteristics so that If he ever got a Job in one of them he would know exactly where he was going and what to look out for. H e even constructed an exact replica of a general standpipe system with all the unusual features that might toe encountered in some of those old rat trap buildings in the district. I knew him as a probie in 111 Truck when I was an auxiliary there during the war, so all in all, he's learned his lessons well and will make a terrific company commander when he gets a spot which by some happy coincidence might INC. BUFFALO SYRACUSE FILL OUT AND MAIL TODAY . . . T e r Bush & Powell, Iric., Schenectady, New York Please furnish me with complete information about the changes in the CSEA Accident and Sickness policy. FOLLOW THE LEADER REGULARLY! Here is the newspaper that tells you about what is happening in civil service what is happening to the job you have and the job you want. Make sure you don't miss a single issue. Enter your subscription now. The price is $7.00. That brings you 52 issues of the Civil Service Leader filled with the government job news you want. You can subscribe on the coupon below: Name Home Address- CIVIL SERVICE LEADER 11 WarrtR Street Place of Employment- N e w Yorh, New York 10007 Employee Item No I enclose $7.00 (check or money order for a year's subscription to the Civil Service Leader. Please enter the name listed below. P.S. Don*t forget, new employees can apply for basic CSEA Accidentand Sickness Insurance non'medically during the first 120 days of employment^ providing their age is under 39 years and six months. NAME ADDRESS Zip Code This Weeks New York City Eligible Lists EXAM NO. 2040 ASST. PROJECT SERVICES SPECIALIST This open competitive list of 181 eligibles was established March 28 after training: and experience evaluation of the 271 applicants who filed in December, 1972. Salary is $12,100. No. 1 — 105.0% 1 Harvey Fox, Theodore O Will, Nathan Burkan Jr, Murry Levinson, Charles N Volplnl, Vincent J Sama, Miriam Kerpen, Bernard Groom, Edmund E Pitt, Benjamin Jacoby, Benjamin Rottenstein, Emanuel Prince, Ibrahim K Doss, Boaz L Brandmarker, James C Britton, Joseph Sweet, Vivian A Robinson, Louis A Stone, Kenneth G Creightney, Alfonso D Neis. No. 21 — 90.3% 21 Elsie L Gill, Abraham Brenner, Charles Attinson, Robert E Werner, George Baker, Calvin Terry, Norman Cohen, Hamate Macrigiane, Santo P Fiscella, Charles W Bolecek, Peter T Taras, Jeffrey A Betancourt, Morris Glickman, Perry H Soskin, Alex Liberman, Mariann G Wiater, Julius Washlnsky, Elizabeth Nordhaus, Mary Schulman, Medhat M Rizk. No. 41 — 87.9% 41 Shaker K Doss, Jose A Rey, Gennaro A Saffioti, Natalie Rusgo, Luis E Reyes, Samuel W Elijah, Parid E Botros, Joseph Cohen, Joseph V Cawley, Felisa V Carrera, Morton Weinberg, Yaly Carroad, Kenneth W Jarvis, Modesto A Carrion, Alfred A Prince, Arthur Eckhaus, Daryl L Friedman, Solomon Rosenfeld, SVJlUVAN COUHTY a man's home is his castle when if s a Cottage IN THE Daniel A Collins, Adrlenne M Drlben. No. 61 — 84.9% 61 Philip Haber, Juanita Gilbert, Milton C Selzer, Robe'^t Ratteray, Andrew Winter, Tibor P Winter, S Carlyle Broady, Isadora R Burke, Michael J Cipolla, Benjamin Strum, Joseph M Leichner, Clifton Deblasio, Joseph Singer, Joseph Levitch, Alvin Jolovitz, Hazel Sealy, Nusshy I Saraya, Carol Kover, Gladys Lipschitz, Margaret D Scherff. No. 81 — 82.3% 81 Daniel H Coleman, Henry Goldstein,, Thomas H Mcintosh, Martin Serber, Blaine E Smith, Martin Graber, Fayek H Elkommoss, Jeno Rosenberg, Robert L Scott, Vishnu R Joshi, Margot J Fox, Ruth I Frey, Richard L Go, sky, Morris Grosinger, James T Poulos, Edward A Bernard, David Meisel, Paul M Feder, Almira M Tannenbaum, Morris Rosenberg, Porfiria G Jimenez, Charles F Puleo, Hirsch C Wulllger, Stanley I Cohen, Mark G Steinberg, Naim I Henein. Richard L Katz, Marven R Pearce, Milton Hochberg, Marvin Knott, Nehama Bales, Attiat A Gaafar, Murray Weiner. No. 101 — 79.0% 101 Dumas F Ransom, Gerard W Sherry, S Riesel, Raymond P Meglio, Morris Grosinger, Jacob Teitelbaum, Paul L Tannnenbaum, Mable C Franklin. Luis E Reyes, Simcha Rubin, Charles Joshua, Melchiore Cucchlara, Henry M Friedman, Joyce Giordano, Antonio S Carrera, Marty S Paikoff, Irving S Phillips. Anthony L Julian, William Jacobs, Jonas Weinberg. No. 141 — 74.0% 141 Menachim Glazer, Joseph Rosenfeld, Attillo D Ragogna, Helen L Weinberg, Benjamin D Anosike, Mendel M Adolf, Wingate I Khalil, John Kruk, Albert Lipins, Michael Vincelli, Milton M Wolf, Bruce H Klang, Ivan Gottlieb, Aileen L Bush, Tuly J Tanenbaum, Ahmed I Elsaady, Edward Rendelstein, Jacquelyn Henderson, Dilip K Hajra, Abraham Schuldenfrei. No. 121 — 76.3% 121 Mordecain Bryski, Charles E Pierre, Karl Diamond, Joseph Rosenfeld, Henry J Ress, Michael G Rechner, Abraham Papil- No. 161 — 72.0% 161 Gwendolyn Nichols, Fredrica Liss, Vernon D Green, Isaac Catran, John Tarrago, Stephen H Rugg, Harold L Bunce, Rilla B Underwood, Mordecai Parnes, Alfred Schoen, Minna Fox, Frances Volpini, Marlene C Sigman, Olivia S White, Salvatore Tortora, Edward F Ciarletta, Virginia S Kort, Alyce I Slosberg, Stanley Seldenfeld, Edith Watson. No. 181 — 70.0% 181 Helena Newman. Assessor The city Dept. of Personnel has summoned 86 candidates for promotion to assessor to take exam 2540 April 7, This may be the last time you have to worry about automobile insurance. COMPLETE REQUESTED Every time your automobile insurance comes up for renewal you have to face the same old problems all over again. What to do about the large lump sum premium payments that always come due at the wrong time. What to do about the coverage? Is it enough? Should you get more? Can you get more? We could go on and on but the point is this. CSEA MASTERPLAN has made automobile insurance easy to buy and even easier to pay for. All this at reduced costs through the marvelous convenience of payroll deductions. NAME THE BELOW (Exactly ADDRESS (No.. as INFORMATION AND MAIL it appears Street, on City. CSEA M A S T E R P L A N 80 Wolf Road Albany, N.Y. 12205 TO driver's Town. State, license) Zip Code) W H A T ARE YOUR P R E S E N T L I A B I L I T Y LIMITS 7 TELEPHONE I N W H A T MONTH EXPIRE* COST OF P R E S E N T DOES W U R PRESENT N S U R / N C E PLEASE ANSWERALL QUEST10 CAR N O . (Resideixce and Business) INSURANCE CAR NO. 1 2 YEAR MAKE YEAR MAKE MODEL STYLE MODEL STYLE D r i v e n to a n d from w o r k ? (If " Y e s " » h o w o n e - w o y m i l e a g e distance) YES NO YES NO U s e d for b u s i n e s s p u r p o s e s ? YES Y e a r o n d M o k e of A u t o m o b i l e M o d e l ( G o l o x l e , N o v o , etc.) Body Style (Sed.. C o n v . , etc.) Horsepower T o w n w h e r e Principally G o t a g e d (If other than a b o v e ) • • • • MILES • NO • MILES YES • NO • Avg. Annual Mileage LIST ALL Here's how CSEA MASTERPLAN works. First, fill in the Request Form on the right and mail it to us. We will send you a quotation displaying the low monthly costs for various plans available. Select one and you'll start enjoying the easy way to buy and pay for Automobile Insurance. CSEA MASTERPIAN also features Homeowners and Renters Insurance plans. N o m e ( S h o w l a s t n a m e o n l y if different from a p p l i c a n t s ) L I C E N S E D D R I V E R S IN YOUR APPLICANT NO. 2 HOUSEHOLD NO. 3 NO. 4 M a r r i e d or S i n g l e D o t e of Birlh M o l e or F e m a l e D o t e of L i c e n s i n g (If l e s s thon 3 years) % Onving Car No. 1 ( M u s t totol 1 0 0 % a c r o s s ) % Driving Car N o . 3 ( M u s t total 1 0 0 % a c r o s s ) 1 . H o s ony driver l i s t e d a b o v e h o d a m o v i n g traffic v i o l a t i o n or a c c i d e n t in t h e l o s t 3 y e a r s ? (If " Y e s " g i v e n a m e , d o l e , o n M u n t of c l a i m ond Yes • No • D E T A I L S TO Q U E S T I O N S 1 AND 2 2 . H a s a n y c o m p a n y d e c l i n e d , c a n c e l e d of r e f u s e d to r e n e w i n s u r a n c e for any d i i v e r during the l o l l 3 y e o f s ? (If " Y e s " , g i v e d e t a i l s ) „ „ Yes • No • I h a v e p e f i o n a l l y l e o d l h i i l e q u e d a n d d e c l o t e l(ic s l g l e m e n l s o(e true. I u n d e r i l o n d lhat f h i l i s a l e q u t s i for q u o t a t i o n o n l y a n d that I a m u n d e t n o o b l i g a t i o n . (SIGNATURE AND DATE) Treat your family to a • second (EMPLOVEO BY) I DESIRE I N F O R M A T I O N C O N C E R N I N G HOMEOWNERS h o m e in b e a u t i f u l S u l l i v a n C o u n ty. Summer sun, m o u n t a i n air fresh pure . . . t e e up, in, g o h i k i n g o r sv^ing a racket . . . to name NO DOWN PAYMENT NEEDED-PAYROLL DEDDCTIONS dive tennis a few sports c o n v e n i e n t to all C o t t a g e Coloniev Cottage Rent your very in t h e Sullivan own County C a t s k i l l s for less t h a n you think. Have the Summer Sullivan Publicity Monticello, & of Y o u r Tourism New Life County York Dept. 12701 It could make any other way of buying Automobile & Homeowners Insurance obsolete. | Th. ^ ^ TravcUrs Iniuranc* Companies arranged by T«r Bush & P o w t l l , Inc. 03 vO M nmflm w America'^ tMrge»t Weekly tor Public Employees Member Audit Bnrean of Cireulatloiis Puhliahmd w & < 0) u Tuetday by LEADER P U B L I C A T I O N S . I N C . Publishing O f f i e * : 11 W a r r e n S t r e e t , N e w Yorli, N.Y. 10007 B u i i n e u & Editorial OfFiee: 11 W a r r e n S t r e e t . N e w York, N.Y. 10007 212-BEeekman 3 - 6 0 1 0 • r o n x Office: 406 149th S t r e e t . Bronx. N.Y. 10455 J e r r y Finkelstein, PubllshT Paul Kyer. Editor M a r v i n Baxley, Exeeeffve Editor K|ell Klellberg, City Editor Stephanie Doba. Assistant Editor OS I every N. H . Mager. Buslnoss Managor Advertising Representatives: A L B A N Y — Joseph T. Bellew — 303 So. Manning Blvd., IV 2-5474 K I N e S T O N , N.Y. — C h a r l e s A n d r e w s — 2 3 f W a l l St.. FEderal 8-8350 15c per c o p y . Sebscription Price: $3.70 t o members of t h * Civil Service Employees Association. $7.00 t o non-members. u TUESDAY, APRIL 3 , 1 9 7 3 Another Pension Area Needs Immediate Action W ITH all t h e uproar over w h a t New employee pensions may be in t h e lature would do well to look over some adequate pensions now being received by been retired for years. York State public f u t u r e , the Legisof t h e really i n persons who have The numbers r u n into t h e tens of thousands of workers who gave a lifetime to public service but retired before galloping inflation hit t h e country and who can barely eke out a n existence. Certainly, there have been some cost-of-living increases granted in some sectors of public employment in the State a n d there have been increases in social security payments. No boost of increased r e t i r e m e n t benefits, however, h a s been enough to give any real relief to those u n f o r t u n a t e enough to retire when a dollar was still somewhere worth a dollar. News stories of pensioners being forced to supplement their diets with canned pet food are disgusting and a disgrace to a country of this wealth and a supposed highly developed social conscienceness. We urge the legislators in Albany to t u r n t h e spotlight of a t t e n t i o n to this other area for a change and show some concern for the plight of some of our most sorrowful citizens. Questions . and Answers Q. An Moident at work left my husband paralyied. He's 50 yean old, and our doctor sayi lie probubly will never be able to work affaln. Can he eoUeet both eoolal seoority disablUty payments and workmen's eompcnsatlon? A. Yes. but there's a limit. Social security and workmen's compensation payments combined can be no more than 80 percent of the disabled worker's average monthly earnings. Because of' recent changes In the social security law, average current earnings now can be based on a worker's highest year of earnings In any one year of the 5 years before he became disabled. This change will mean higher monthly payments to some disabled workers. Q. My husband and I were divoreed after St yean of marriage. I never remarried. My exhnsband died a few months ago. Now that I'm 65. ean I eolleei social security on his work recei^r A. Yes. Since you were married to your former husband for at least 20 years, you can get social security payment on his work record. Before January 1973, a divorced woman also had to show that her former husband was providing one-half of her support, but a recent change In the law ended this requirement. a I'm only l i . bat I want to start looking for a part-time Job. Do I need to get a work permit before I eome In to get a soeial aecuitty numberT A. No, you dont need a work permit, but you should apply for a social security number as soon as possible. The Social Security Administration must s c r e e n every implication against the national fllee In Baltimore, Maryland, to make sure that duplicate numbers aren't issued or that an applicant hasn't been Issued a social security number before. This process may take several weeks. (Continued from Page 1) A number of legislators, familiar figures on the Albany scene and well-known throughout the State, have nevertheless determined to move into the quicksand of city politics. Leading the parade are Senator John March!, who has the Republican nomination for Mayor, and Assemblyman Albert H. Blumenthal, who is one of a half dozen contenders in the Democratic primary for the Mayoral nomination. Both Rank High In Albany Four years ago, Marchi. defeated Mayor John Lindsay in the Republican primary only to lose in turn to Lindsay, running for Mayor on the Liberal party ticket. For some years, Marchi had been chairman of the Senate Committee on New York City Affairs and has intimate and detailed knowledge of city problems. He is now chairman of the powerful Senate Finance Committee. Marchi is a classical scholar, a polished speaker, who can use his tongue like a rapier. Assemblyman Blimienthal is a Reform Democrat from the politically volatile Manhattan West Side. He is the Assembly Deputy Minority Leader and is generally regarded by Albany observers as among the most skilled debaters in the Assembly. There is no way of estimating realistically Blumenthal's p r o s p e c t s in the Democratic primary. Six candidates have declared for the nomination. Some may drop out and former Mayor Robert F. Wagner may enter. Changes in the entries may radically alter the course of the campaign and the results. Blumenthal has the support of the Democratic reform movement. Prom the opposite end of Manhattan, the lower East Side, Assemblyman Anthony G. DiFalco is in the Democratic primary for President of the City Council. His opponent for the nomination is Paul O'Dwyer, who was the Democratic nominee for the United States Senate in 1968. DiFalco's major legislative programs have been in the fields of housing, education, and Civil Service. North of Manhattan, in the Bronx, Senator Harrison J. Goldin has entered the race for the Democratic nomination for City Comptroller. This is the second attempt by Goldin for that office. Four years ago, Goldin was defeated in the Democratic primary by Comptroller Abraham D. Beame, who is entered this year in the Mayoral primary.. Like Blumenthal. Goldin has the endorsement of the Democratic reform movement. Also contending in the Democratic primary for City Comptroller is Bronx Senator Joseph L. Galiber who had previously served a term in the Assembly and was elected to the State Senate in 1968. A member of the CCNY varsity basketball and LcCrosse teams, Galiber also served as a delegate to the 1967 State Constitutional Convention. He has the support of the Caucus of Black Elected Officials. Borough Races Also from the Bronx. Assemblyman Alan Hochberg is running for Bronx Borough President against incumbent Robert Abrams. who had previously served in the Assembly. The Democratic race in that borough is part of a long-standing feud between the regular and reform Civil Service Law & You By R I C H A R D G A B A Mr. Gaba is a member of the firm of White. Walsh and Gaba, P.C., and cliairman of the Nassau County Bar Association Labor Law Committee. Determination Of Tenure A public school teacher has prevailed in a n Article 78 proceeding against his employer ir^ seeking to uphold his t e n u r e and seniority rights. (McCarthy v. Board of Education, UFSD No. 3, Town of H u n t i n g t o n , 340 NYS 2d 679 (Supreme Court, Special Term, Nassau, 1973).) The teacher in this case — who h a d achieved t e n u r e — was informed by the s u p e r i n t e n d e n t of schools t h a t he would not be rehired in September 1972. The teacher (petitioner) t h e n brought an action protesting t h e alleged violation of his tenure and seniority rights. The School Board contended in its defense t h a t the proceeding in question was barred because t h e collective agreement provided for arbitration. The court f o u n d t h a t a r g u m e n t to be without merit. It noted t h a t while t h e petitioner submitted his claim to t h e arbitration procedure as provided by t h e collective a g r e e m e n t between t h e School Board and the Teachers Association, t h e a r b i t r a t o r f o u n d t h a t t h e agreement simply did not deal with t h e rights alleged in the present grievance. » « » IN ANY EVENT, the c o u r t pod'n'ted out t h a t the a r bitration related only to the petitioner's rights under t h e contract, although, even t h e n it would be judicially reviewable if claimed to be a r b i t r a r y or erroneous as a m a t t e r of law. Moreover, arbitration c a n n o t foreclose or even impinge upon review of a claimed denial of rights arising outside of t h e agreement, such as t h e s t a t u t o r y t e n u r e a n d seniority rights as asserted by t h e petitioner. The controversy was t h u s considered de novo without any prior substantive det e r m i n a t i o n of its merits. The facts of t h e case were t h a t t h e petitioner was first hired and t a u g h t as a junior high school speech and d r a m a instructor in September 1968. I n J a n u a r y 1971, he requested a c h a n g e in position to the English D e p a r t m e n t where a vacancy was due to open up in September of t h a t year. After t h e s u p e r i n t e n d e n t h a d written, in J u n e 1971, t h a t t h e petitioner's services were t e r m i n a t e d "as of t h e end of t h e school y e a r due to t h e abolishment of a teaching position," t h e petitioner was placed in a n o t h e r position in the District in the English D e p a r t m e n t where a position had become v a c a n t because ,of a n o t h e r teacher's m a t e r n i t y leave. In February 1972, petitioner was informed t h a t no position would be available t h a t fall. « « « THE BOARD OF EDUCATION contended t h a t the petitioner's four years of teaching could not be aggregated, but were split between 2VA years spent as a speech and d r a m a teacher, and the one year, 1971-72, spent as a member of the English D e p a r t m e n t . The court found, citing Van Heuser v. Board of Education, 271 NYS 2d 898, t h a t t h e definition of t e n u r e as adopted by the Court of Appeals in Becker v. Board of Education, 211 NYS 2d 193, is t h a t of "area tenure." Area tenure is descriptive of certain grade levels and certain specified subjects, i.e., "physical education, music, art, and vocational subjects." Apart from these specified subjects, t e n u r e is not available according to course subjects, but is only descriptive of grade level. For example, a m a t h teacher in a secondary school gains t e n u r e as a secondary school teacher r a t h e r t h a n a secondary school math teacher. T h e court could find no authority for creating a s e p a r ate tenure area for speech and d r a m a . On the contrary, t h e speech and d r a m a work done a t the petitioner's school was a n integral p a r t of work generally done within t h e English D e p a r t m e n t . Therefore, the court held t h a t the petitioner was entitled to aggregate his years of service for tenure and seniority purposes. The Board of Education was directed to reinstate the petitioner to his former position retroactive to t h e beginning of t h e 1972-73 school year. elements of the Democratic party. The only safe prediction about that race is that it will be extremely close. Assemblyman Vito P. Battista of Brooklyn is seeking the Republican nomination for that Borough's Councilman-at-large. Before he became an Assemblyman, Battista was a known figure at City Hall as the representative of civic groups interested principally in the welfare of the small homeowner. In view of his past backgiound and activities, city government rather than Albany seems like Battlsta's more natural habitat. It is a long, hard road from here to primary day and then to election day, when the voters will decide which of the Albany solons will make it in the next City administration. PaymenlOfLumpSum Leave Money Granted To Compelitive Aides A new rule concerning payment of accrued leave and overtime to competitive class employees was approved last week by the city Department of Personnel and by the Mayor. It took effect March 23. Competitive class employees, on retirement or termination of services, may now be granted a lump sum payment in lieu of terminal leave. This payment, based on unused accrued annual leave and not creditable for computing a retirement allowance, may be compiled from the amount that can be accrued in two years at the current rate of accrual, plus active overtime credits. The total may not exceed 54 work-days. M SS n > o w w H G «CD eu B > This amends Section 4(b) and 3.0 (c» of the "Regulations Governing Leaves for Employees and Officials whose Salaries are Established Under the Managerial Pay Plan and/or the Executive Pay Plan." The lump sum option, formerly applicable to employees in unclassified, exempt class or non-competitive class positions, was made available also to competitive class employees. Three optional methods of payment were also established: (a) In one lump sum payment in the calendar or fiscal year of retirement or termination; (b) In one lump sum payment in the calendar or fiscal year immediately following the year of retirement or termination; or (c) In two installments made in the two periods mentioned above. C/9 vo w Payroll Auditors Sought By State Many vacancies in the New York City office of the State Insurance Fund exist for payroll auditors, paid $9,535 to start plus a $200 annual differential for metropolitan area residents. Applicants must have a •bachelor's degree and 24 undergraduate and/or graduate hours in accounting. Those who expect to meet these requirements by June may apply now. Applicants in the top third of their class or with a master's degree in accounting may qualify for a higher starting salary. There is no deadline for receipt of applications, but those who file by May 14 will be considered in the initial evaluation of training and experience. There is no written exam. For more information and application forms, contact the New York State Department of Civil Service. See "Where To Apply." A ' »• • • d o s e d on DtN 70030 i »0l" Waste not. Want not. Beetles h a v e t r a v e l e d h u n d r e d s of billions of miles. At a b o u t 2 5 miles per g a l l o n / imagine h o w much gasoline they've saved. Imagine h o w much money. F e w t h i n g s in life w o r k as w e l l as a V o l k s w a g e n . MABSTOA Jobs The Manhattan Bronx Surface Transit Operating Authority has appointed 29 bus drivers out of 200 eligibles called. They will continue calling eligibles every Monday until 100 are appointed for present positions. The last number appointed was 149 from tlie 3.572-name eligible list resulting from the written j test held Oct. 14. 1972. SINGLE? EXPAND vauH cMcu or ruiup* A NEW Ntbble way to sodaltn «rith your Kind of p«apl«....your age, your lifistyle, Privatt noncanniMTcial pvtici In your an* to ««hich yoa cm aba brins your Mm Ja; 'JiulyrGtrch rmr»t£ COORDINATION CCNWI BnthOTb aaEASV 42 STREET T/^O^Oftn Mi<M«(Mfc NEWYOBK.N.Y. 10017•/OOIDOL/L/ Visit your New York Volkswagen dealer and find out why there are over 4 million Volkswagens on the American road today. ® AUIHOai^iO otAkta CSEA Delegates Represent Their Chapters A t Meeting n PI. PI > o P3 H c n to u u ea u CSEA president Theodore C. Wenzl, commuting between Albany and New York City, makes one of two appearances at meeting to report on progress of negotiations, as Association secretary Dorothy MacTavish listens. > 'a 1 w CSEA executive Joseph Lochner question during on pensions. Suffolk chapter president E. Ben Porter, left, and chapter first vice-president George Harrington, right, huddle with insurance departmental delegate Solomon Bendet. u (Leader photos by Ted Statewide education committee chairman Celeste Rosenkranz delivers report, delegates listener DOT Headquarters chapter president Joseph McDerinott refers to restructuring booklet as he speaks. to Nassau chapter George Koch is delegate Ruth attentive Braverman. Nassau delegate Augie Lanzellotti has microphone as statewide salary committee chairman Randolph V. Jacobs waits to speak. Three county leaders, from left, Albany chapter president Howard Cropsey, Rockland chapter delegate John Mauro and Nassau chapter president Irving Flaumenbaum compare problems from their three areas of state. Intense look on face of Ray Gallagher is typical of most delegates ivho were concerned with down-to-the-wire negotiations over contract due to expire April 1. Binghamton Lojig Island Conference president CSEA vice-presidents Richard Tarmey, left, and A. Victor Costa alternated duties as chief presiding officer in absence of president Theodore C. Wenzl and first vice-president Thomas McDonough, both of whom were in negotiations. Kaplan) Oswego chapter vice-president Thomas Elhage, left, and ^^chapter president Francis Miller have hurried conversation as they move between meetings. Niagara chapter president William Doyle has the microphone and East Hudson Parkway Authority chapter president James Lennon loaits for his turn to make a comment. director answers discussion State Hospital from his chapter, chapter president Leo Weingartner from left, Doris Campion, Estelle is flanked by three Major and Beth other Stover. Joan Nickerson of Delaware Valley City chapter, explains her views. Seymour Shapiro, treasurer of New York City chapter, and John LoMonaco, president of Metro DofE chapter, contribute to debate. CSEA insurance committee chairman Michael DelVecchio, left, and SUNY at Buffalo chapter president Edward Dudek exchange views. Western Conference presi^dent Samuel Gross field was frequent speaker during debates. Jefferson chapter president Eleanor Percy proposes memorial for the late Fannie Smith. Sullivaji County chapter president Arthur Bolton confers with Rockland State Hospital chapter's George Celentano during a break in the business sessiojis. Associatioji fifth vice-president Hazel Abrams leans forward to cojifer with Rebella Eufemio, of Rockland State. so CO Clerk Eligibles EXAM NO. 2063 CLERK M Ov CO b <a CS S H ec u o s u u cn »—< u This list of 7^784 eligibies, establislied Feb. 7, resuited from a written test held Oct. 21, 1972. A total of 24.145 candidates applied dnrinr the Sept. 6 to 26 filing period. They were all called to the test, at which 11,7S3 appeared. Salary starts at |5;200. A Department of Personnel spokesman said that list numbers of candidates with the same scores were assic^ned on the basis of their test paper numbers. Test paper numbers were ^ determined randomly by where each candidate sat when taking the written exam. (Continued from last week) No. 2641 — 88.8% 2641 Norma E Salas, Kate Fink, Iserline Willis, Sophia G Johnson, Robert L Rosenberg, Sandra Wells, William S Simonetti, Helen Cooper. Helen T J a nis, Esther Feinstein, Joseph E Clem, Audrey Gadinis, Valeria Dabbs, Harold Goldrich, Edith N Falk, Joan A Samicola, Hartford Punter, Fred Saphirstein, Sylvia Weinstein, Marie Lowens, Concetta M Colomhiero,. Clara Mllgrim, Maria C RivWa, Vivian Y Campbell, Kenneth E Burton, Lottie J a n o f f , Honorah M Lane, Richard J Murphy, Cynthia A Kelly, Sara S Sacker. No. 2661 — 88.8% 2 6 6 r Helena L Conde, Shirley L McLean, Joseph C Roberts, Philip Messer, Gary Neville, Betty L Shinn, Irving Gordon, Velma M Melvin, Lillie M Cameron, Sharon L Williams, Mildred A Babich, Edward W Bemer, Patricia A Macon. Loretta Dickson, Roslyn Lynn, Maxine Bedford, Ercell B Williamson, Helen A Krivohlavy, William H Campbell, Celeste Fahie. No. 2721 — 88.8% 2721 Angela R Dipasqua, Rose M Taliaferro, Sharon A Jones, Ellen Sullivan, Eileen A Cavalluzzi. Anna M Morrison. Mary A Cappelluti, Jean Marotta. Lillian S Vanwart, Margaret Carney, Margaret M Moran, Michael F Disogra, Assunta J Thaisz, Agnes Jennings, Cheryl A Jones, Elmira Francis, J a n e t Zerega Ann Chicolo, Phyllis S Decker, Dennis P Bastian. No. 2681 — 88.8% 2681 Suzanne B Hooper, Luis Bernacett, Michael S Stewart, Peter S Coyle, Anne Fein, Sylvia J Bastian, Elaine T Coleman, Melvin A Wright, Frances R Perkins, Carlotta I Elliott, Isabelle Smith, Kevin R Alleyne, Gwendolyn Ketchen, Alexis Stewart, Laurina Holmes, Cecilia Moffatt, Thomasina Judge. Howard Murray. Barbara McQueen, Betty Shumate. No. 2701 — 88.8% 2701 Michael L Goode, Jeanette Gordon. Veronica N Maxwell, J a m e s Corioett, Joseph A Galaburri, Jessie M Flowers, Martin J Smith, Elizabeth Daly, Gerald Eng, Rita O Abatemarco, No. 2741 — 88.8% 2741 Thelma H Manas, Frank Cusick, Beverly K Brown, Douglas B Beers, Charles P Grannum, Benjamin N Herman, Morris Blumer, Israel L Williams Jr, Kenneth C Seaman, William M Wunder, Harry Corriel, Earl C Williams, James W Boyd Jr, Emilio Pimentel Jr, Anthony M Caragliano, Robert Jackson, Abe Lieberman, Harry J Warren, Anthony M Diggs, William H Anderson. No. 2761 — 88.8% 2761 Edward W Quinn, Philip E Nicholson, Cono C Cimino, by M A N N I N G V. by GROUP HEALTH 2 3 Back 4 5 6 7 12 8 9 10 11 A P A A* Bridges 1 LR 32 31 30 ftarfSjygffc I I B A D K K , Frsnt A P » INCORPORATED Back Teeth 29 28 27 26 25 24 22 23 21 13 14 15 16 A P A A** 20 19 18 17 Front Back UL LL Back L L — L o w e r Left L R — L o w e r Right U R — U p p e r Right U L — U p p e r Left A — A b u t m e n t : tooth used for support in fixed bridge work. Primary Abutment: tooth adjacent to the missing t o o t h or teeth and directly involved in supporting the replacement for the missing tooth or teeth. Secondary Abutment: tooth or teeth adjacent to the primary abutment but not directly involved in the supporot of the missing tooth or teeth. P — P o n t i c : replaced tooth or " d u m m y . " In cases where the front t e e t h are so badly broken down t h a t they cannot be repaired by filling, GHI Dental would pay its scheduled allowance toward the secondary abutment as prosthetics if the subscriber's ccntract covers prosthetic benefits. * * l n cases such as the one above, GHI Dental would pay its scheduled allowance toward a three-unit fixed bridge involving t e e t h 18 & 2 0 as the primary abutments and # 1 9 as the pontic. The secondary abutment on tooth # 1 7 would be considered as a crown used in lieu of a filling if this tooth is not restorable by filling. However, if # 1 7 on its own did not require crowning but was mainly used to add strength to the 3-unit fixed bridge, then payment would be denied because double abutments in fix^d bridgework are not covered by the Contract. EDITORIAL NOTE: ThU weeWi column includes a few final questions and anstvers concerning GHI DentaVs evaluation of and contractual iiability for bridgework. We hope the diagram and information contained in this and the last two columns have cleared up some of the misunderstandings identified with this rather complex benefit area. Q. TWO YEARS AGO, MY DENTIST MADE A REMOVABLE BRIDGE FOR WHICH GHI PAID ITS SCHEDULED ALLOWANCE. NOW, AT MY LAST EXAMINATION, MY DENTIST INFORMED ME THAT HE FEELS I NEED A NEW REMOVABLE BRIDGE AND I WOOLD LIKE TO KNOW, WILL GHI DENTAL COVER THIS SERVICE? k . No. GHI Dental has a contractual limitation on the replacement of prosthetic appliances for a three-year period, from the date of the original insertion. In your case, since GHI Dental paid its scheduled allowance for the original removable bridge two years ago, it would not be liable for any further allowance for replacement of that bridge within a three-year period noted above. Q. I JOINED GHI DENTAL IN OCTOBER, 1 9 7 2 AND ALREADY HAD A 4-TOOTH FIXED BRIDGE THAT HAD BEEN SUPPLIED LONG BEFORE THAT DATE. MY DENTIST RECENTLY REPLACED THIS BRIDGE WITH A 6-TOOTH FIXED BRIDGE. CAN I EXPECT GHI DENTAL TO MAKE A PAYMENT FOR THIS SERVICE WHEN I FILE MY CLAIM? A. Yes. GHI Dental will make its scheduled payment for the particular type of bridge your dentist provided. Q. A YEAR AND A HALF AGO, MY PARTICIPATING DENTIST PROVIDED ME WITH A REMOVABLE BRIDGE FOR WHICH GHI DENTAL PAID H I M ITS SCHEDULED ALLOWANCE. DURING THE NEXT SIX MONTHS MY DENTIST EXAMINED MY TEETH AND CHECKED THE REMOVABLE BRIDGE FOR COMFORT AND FIT IN RESPONSE TO MY CONTINUOUS COMPLAINTS. HE SUGGESTED THAT HE MAKE FOR ME A FIXED BRIDGE TO REPLACE THE REMOVABLE BRIDGE. CAN I EXPECT GHI TO COVER THIS SERVICE? A. No. Here GHI Dental's three-year limitation on payment for replacement of prosthetic appliances would apply and your claim, when submitted for this .service, would be rejected. Of course, as t h e i p a t i e n t , you might go ahead with the dentist's recommendation and have the work porformed at your own expense. 0. MY HUSBAND IS NOW WEARING A REMOVABLE BRIDGE PROVIDED BY HIS PARTICIPATING DENTIST TO WHOM GHI DENTAL MADE ITS SCHEDULED PAYMENT. AT HIS LAST VISIT, THIS DENTIST SUGGESTED EXTRACTION OF HENRY'S TWO FRONT TEETH AND REPLACEMENT BY A FIXED BRIDGE FOR THE MISSING TEETH RATHER THAN ADDING THEM TO THE PARTIAL DENTURE IS GHI DENTAL GOING TO PAY SOMETHING TOWARD THIS? A. Yes. GHI Dental would make its schedule payment for a fixed bridge replacing the two extracted front teenth. Because these t e e t h were not part of the original partial denture and the dentist is not replacing the original appliance. GHI Dental would also pay its scheduled allowance if your husband's dentist chose to add these two teeth to the partial denture rather than make a fixed bridge for the same area. Q. MY WIFE ACCIDENTALLY LOST HER BRIDGE WHILE SWIMMING UNDER WATER IN THE PHYSICAL FITNESS CLASS AT OUR Y.M.C. IS THERE SOME WAY GHI DENTAL COULD REIMBURSE HER? A. No. GHI Dental's contract specifically excludes any payment toward replacing any lost appliance. NOTE: The above answers apply genarally to most greups. However, some of our subscribing groups have provided n o r e extensive benefits for their eligible members and dependents at additional premium cost. This extensive coverage increases the prosthetic benefits in terms of GHI Dental's scheduled payments, particularly when crowns a n d / o r inlays are used in place of fillings. Nott: Mr. IRMET'S GIJIDE h<i*ct (smmol sf(*pt Ultpbomt qutttiomi. Pltstt u-ritt to him in tmt of THE LEADER. FELIX'S ^^^^ ^^ ^"P®^ Luncheons — Dinners — • ** Music. Musical memoir . . . Congenial atmoosphere . . . Felix, son of the late f a m e d opera star Felix Felice De Gregorio, host . . . Sing along with Felix. — Lobster Dinner — Closed Sunday. GIAN MARINO ^^^ unexcelled Italian food. M i m i n m i i i i i v Handsome decor. Gracious service. A place of distinction. John Scarcella, Managing Director. PERSIAN - KEY: editor's 2841 R u t h Goodman, Cynthia M Walker. Judith Weschler, Anthony J Rusinski. Sheila M Diamond. Karla M Dickerson, Estelle Bergman. Sylvia Tilles. Jeanette T Boenzi. Debra Greenspan. Jacob A Secular. Catherine Shipley. Cynthia B Hardison, Ursula R Assante, Serman Rappaport, Jose Ruiz, Shirley A Williams, Barbara J Wheeler, Barbara A Tucker, Kadijah Elam. (To Be Continued) ST. at MULBERRY ST. Jimmy Davino w i i w i I M MfafaWiiiiH host. Famous for Italian food since 1909. Open daily except Monday for Luncheon, Dinner, Supper until 2 A.M. Popular approval. The discriminating gourmet — one of the most exciting Italian restaurants in New York. Rendezvous of notables. Relations Provided as a Dental Service to Readers of the A No. 2841 — 87.5% ITALIAN GRQTTA A77liRRA 337 BROOME ISAACS Vice President, Group 1 No. 2821 — 87.5% 2821 Harvey Novick, Paul Rodriguez, Diane R Murray, Donald Ledbetter, Carrie M Rochester, Gladys P Burke, Carolyn Clark, Pauline Richardson, Eva L Marshall, Shirley Lane, Judy A Harvey, Mary R Hayes, Louis Basch, I d a Pizzo, Mary G Archa, Mark Elias, John J Cook, Marvin C Neville. Richard G M a t a razzo, Ruth Katz. MANHATTAN "DENTALLY SPEAKING!" UR No. 2801 — 87.5% 2801 Pearl I Williams, Thomas R McMahon, Barbara G Willoughby, Eunice Hill, Lila Berlinsky, William A Martin, Evelyn S Orland, Sharon L Applewhite, Carolyn A Heath, Beatrice Mink, Grace D Amaker, Marie M Arnold, Ann C Mentor, Elizabeth Felnberg, Madeline Klammer, J u a n l t a J Polhill, Agnes R G a r t h a f f n e r , Carrie Gilliard, Edna D Labella, Paul F Martusciello, (AdTenisement) (AdTcrtisemcnt) Teeth James E Story, J o h n M Alexander, Vernon Thorpe Jr, Ceasar M Mitchell, Mattle L Bloomfield, Gerald S Attanasio, Morris Kirschner, Joseph Balchunas, Dominic Mangino Thomas J Melucci, James Cantalupo, Dominick F Prestiano, Robert Taylor, Audrey Johnson, Mary E Pierce, Abraham Janicki, Marjory A Smith. No. 2781 ~ 87.5% 2781 Penelope Allen, Mary J Masi, Rhoda L Peterson, Marion Greenspan, Udean M Meggs, Laura C Yearwood, Carmela T Parks, Delphine Mitchell, Yvonne A Erinna, Reuben Epro, Gerard C Tolve, Isabelle Jones. Jeanette Marchiano, Marie A Messina, Selma R Lipner, Ardie L Freeman, Geneva I Ryan, Lauretta M Isaac, Marie A Longmore, Bernard Sakely. TEHERAN ^^ ^^^^ ITALIANO ^ • hors d'oeuvres. Howard Hillman, a top authority in New Guide Book Inside N.Y. Famed for Seafood — Steaks — Persian and Italian specialties. Curtain time dinner. After theatre cocktails. Parties of 4 0 0 . — Luncheon — Cocktails — Dinner. BROOKLYN SEAFOOD BAY RIDGE SEA FOOD CENTER Z Deep Blue to you." Famous for Sea Foood Luncheons and Dinners. Also take-home dinner. Open all year. This two-in-one sea food establishment features all varieties of sea food from steamed finnan haddie to lobster. Also features a sea food store. Luncheons from $ 2 . 7 5 to $ 3 . Dinners rom 3 P.M. to 9 P.M. Daily. Saturday dinners served to 11 P.M. Sunday dinners from 12 Noon to 9 P.M. — $ 3 . 9 0 to $7. Also A la Carte. JOE'S CLAM BAR^^'^^ EMMONS AVE., SHEEPSHEAD BAY. Open all * * w t i p f i m W M I I yg3f pfgg parking. Air conditioned. Lee D'Acunto Mgr. Famed Sheepshead Bay landmark restaurant. Superlative sea food. Lobsters with that home cooked flavor. A comfortable place for family dining. Famed over 50 years. Open 11 A.M. to 2 A.M. ITALIAN - BRIONES ^^^^ ^^^ AMERICAN Classic Italian home-cooked cuisine w i i i w i i k v — Neapolitan our specialty. Convival cocktail lounge with unusual arched ceilings. Entrees from $ 1 . 9 0 to $6, A la Carte. Open every day 'til midnight; parking after 5 P.M. Luncheon — Cocktails — Dinner — Supper. AMERICAN GEORGE'S SEAFOOD STEAKHOUSE " f HIGHWAY, B'KLYN. 3 7 7 - 7 6 7 4 . George and John Panagakos of "The Famed Jimmy's." Open 7 days. Luncheon — Dinner — Supper. Free parking. LONG ISLAND AL DOWD'S STEAK HOUSES CENTRE. 5 3 6 - 5 5 5 5 . Friendly Hearty man-sized portions. prises. Also Manero's L.I. Jericho Turnpike, Syosset, ROUTE 25A, CENTERPORT, informal atmosphere. Superb steaks at sensible prices. One of America's most progressive resetaurant enterSteak Houses, Northern Blvd., Roslyn, MA 7 - 7 6 9 8 I WA M 6 9 0 . BROWN'S LOBSTER HOUSE DEAR FRIENDS: Drive out to "BROWNS" for a delicious Seafood, Beef or Chicken dinner. We are a real " M a i n e Lobster House" on the water. See you all soon. — C h e t , Elaine & Jim Brown. NEW JERSEY URISON'S TURKEY FARM INN Families olve Larison's country style hospitality. Famed for tails — Dinner. Succulent turkey, sizzling steaks, superb baked pies. Large groups welcomed. I,",',',;!"" Luncheon — seaford, and Cockhome vmmnmiRipmiRr The city Dept. of h a s summoned 599 for community liaison take open competitive on April 7. Personnel candidates trainee to exam 2064 » Asst Deputy W a r d e n The city Dept. of Personnel has summoned 271 candidates for assistant deputy warden to take promotional exam 2542 April 7. Radio O p e r a t o r The city Dept. of Personnel has summoned 37 candidates for radio operator to take open competitive exam 2140 on April ,4. LEGAL NOTICE L I N N E T T ASSOCIATES. — Substance of Certificate of Limited Partnership filed in N e w Y o r k County Clerk's office on February 14, 1973- Business: to acquire, own, lease, operate and dispose of equipment and otherwise to acquire, own, lease and deal in real and personal property. Principal place of business: c / o Kent M. Klineman, 888 Seventh Avenue, N e w York, N e w York 10019. General Partners: Equipment Management Corp. ("Manajting Partn e r " ) , 888 Seventh Avenue, N e w York, N e w York 10019; V T R Incorporated ("Associate Managing P a r t n e r " ) , 1 Lincoln Plaza, Box 302, N e w York, N e w York 10023; Kent M. Klineman, ( " C o n sulting P a r t n e r " ) , 888 Seventh Avenue, N e w York, N e w York 10019; Robert S. Sinn, ("Consulting P a r t n e r " ) 303 East 57th Street, N e w York, N e w Y o r k 10022. Limited Partners and contributions: Stanley Schuman. 991 Green Meadow, Mamaroneck, N e w York, 534,042; Standard, Weisberg, Heckerling 8c Rosow, 38 Park Row, N e w York, N e w York, $34,042; Weston P. Figgins, 12845 Hanover Street, Los Angeles, California, $34,042; H e r b e r t Engelhardt, 10 D o w n i n g Street, N e w York, N e w York, $34,042; Doris Schwadron, 4925 C>ollins Avenue, Miami Beach, Florida, $27,013; H o w a r d S. Tierney, 1130 Mine Hill Road, Fairfield, Connecticut, $51,063; Jack O. Scher. 150 East 6l5t Street, N e w York, N e w York, $17,021; Marlene Freedman, 84 Pollands Hill N o r t h , London, SW 16, England, $100; Harold Parker, 14144 Dickens Street, Sherman Oaks, California, $68,085; M. J. Schwab, 1831 Lombard Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, S35,744; Joseph X Yaffe, 1006 Aboretum Road, Wyncote, Pennsylvania, $66,383; William Kleinberg, P h . D . 50 W o o d l a n d Drive, Princeton, N e w Jersey, $30,639; Nancy G o r d o n , 102 Middlesex Road, Buffalo, N e w York, $29,788; Haskell Stovroff, 25 H a r d w o o d Place, Buffalo, N e w York. $68,085; Richard Stovroff, 2640 Divisadero Street, San Francisco, California 94123, $29,788; James Stovroff, 25 H a r d w o o d Place, Buffalo, N e w York, $59,574. T e r m : March 3, 1972 until December 31, 2022 unless sooner terminated. Limited Partners have contributed ao aggregate of $619,451 cash. Limited Partners are severally liable for additional contributions up to a maxAi mum of 400% of their proportionate shares of the capital contribution of all the Limited Partners and an amount equal to $2,000 for each $100,000 of capital contribution, for costs incurred by the Partnership in connection with the admission to the Partnership of the Limited Partners. N o fixed time has been agreed upon for return of contributions earlier than dissolution of the Partnership. Profits allocated 30'V to I.imited Partners in accordance with their respective proportionate shares and 70% to Associate Managing Partner. Limited Partners may assign interests only with consent of Managing Partner. Remaining General Partners may elect bankruptcy, etc. of another General Partner. LEGAL Taxable, IRS Says Employee contributions to retirement systems of the municipal, state and federal government are considered taxable income in the year in which they were withheld, the Internal Revenue Service reminded all civil servants last week. Civil servants should not reduce income on their 1972 income tax returns by deducting or excluding their contributions to retirement funds, the IRS warned. Returns showing this deduction in income will be processed under the "Unallowable Items Program," the IRS stated, and any refund otherwise allowable will be delayed. The city Department of Personnel reports t h a t 276 persons were appointed to typist and five to transcribing typist at a pool held March 22. The last eligible to receive appointment was number 435 on the list of exam 2175, group 2. INSIDE FIRE LINES Do Your TALENT W A N T E D Flexible Hours Top Pay If you have a mouth and call J E R E M I A H l O D A Y ! a brain, 695-7850 SELLAMERICA! "The Land Licensed Real People" Estate Brokers City of NEW YORK - INTERESTING OPPORTUNITIES For Men and — Women EXCELLENT BENEFITS: Vacation & Holiadys; Health Insur; Pension, etc. APPLY N O W Architect SN.OOO Asst. Air Polut Control Enjjr. 12,11)0 Asst. Architect 12,100 Asst. Civil Fngr. 12,100 Asst. Mech Enjir. 12,100 Civ Fn«r & C K ( H w y Trafc) H,000 llearint; Reporter 8,650 Jr. .\rchitect 10,500 Jr. Civil I nsr 10,500 Jr. Elect Engr 10,500 PsycholoKist 11,750 Public Health Nurse l(),i50 School Lunch M^r 7,500 Shorthand Reporter ' 7,500 Sr. Shorthand Reporter 8,5^5 Social W o r k e r ( M S W ) 10,600 SienoKrapher 5,'JOO Steno. (Grand J u r y ) 8,650 Iherapists (Occ & Phys) >>,850 I'vpist 5,200 Veterinarian 16,000 X Ray I'echniiiaii 8,2 50 Mill. nJ., vxp or skill reqd. --Civil Service Ms. Tests Required Conlon N.Y.C. Dept. of Personnel 4 9 Thomas St., NYC 1212) 5 6 6 8 7 0 2 or 5 6 6 0 3 B 9 An Equal Opportunity Employer M / F Neeed A C/3 W se < High School Equivaloney By M I C H A E L J. M A Y E Firt^en Won't Be Put To Pasture n M > Diploma^^ It's a familiar story, known to all: The hard-working, loyal and trusted employee spends his life on the job and is finally eased out and put to pasture — usually with a great deal of crocodile tears, a farewell party and the presentation of a gold watch, suitably engraved, naturally. Into retirement he goes amidst a lot of well wishes, comments t h a t he's earned the right to take it easy and t h a t the "golden years" are the best. Well, if he's being retired from private industry and he is lucky, he may get The IRS excluded this income by. And maybe he won't. For the sad fact is t h a t more t h a n from deduction in a ruling of 85 percent of the working men and women in the United April 26, 1972. States today have nothing more to look forward to a f t e r a Litigation on the IRS ruling lifetime of toil but their Social Security "Golden Years." is currently pending, however, Well, if there were "golden years" it was the years of the IRS "Pact Sheet" explained. the worker's productivity — and the gold did not flow Since this is the case, taxpayers his way. who do not agree with the IRS In t r u t h , it is the shame of private industry t h a t they position may make claim for refund of income taxes previously have used and abused their employees at will — and things paid on their contributions to might have been worse today if it had not been for militant pension sytems. Claims must be union action over the years t h a t gained a much hard-won filed on Form 843 on or before. measure of decent wages, working conditions, pensions and April 16, 1973, to claim a refund other benefits. of taxes paid for the year 1969, And now the State Legislature is busy trying to brainand claims for 1970 must be wash the public — with the tremendous assistance' of the filed on or before April 15, 1974. management representatives of private industry — into believing t h a t the cost of our pensions has brought t h e Police Test Board state to the brink of bankruptcy, t h a t the pension costs The New York City Civil Serare exorbitant. vice Commission has approved There are men like Ralph Gross, head of the Commerce designation of Benjamin H. and Industry Association, who are no friends of Firefighters Wolf as the fifth member of the or any working men, who are button-holing legislators and Test Validation Board for prosaying with a straight face t h a t the cost of pensions will motion to Lieutenant, Housing exceed the cost of the emergency services. Authority P.D., exam 1609, and promotion to lieutenant. Transit As Al Smith used to say, that's baloney — and any way Authority P.D., exam 1061. you slice it, it's still baloney! The fact t h a t Gross and others of his ilk choose to ignore or sweep under the carpet is t h a t pension costs have Business O p p o r t u n i t y MEN, BOYS & UNISEX C L O I H I N G . actually decreased in the last nine years, in large measure Nassau County near railroad station. because of better and shrewder investment of pension Current Inventory. Low rent, exclusive lease. M U S T SACRIFICE. Illness. Call funds under the aggressive direction of union leadership. weekday 1-6. 516-798-5298. NOTICE DYCKMAN COMMUNITY HEALTH C E N T E R . — T h e undersigned do hereby certify that they are conducting or transacting business as members of a limited partnership under the name or designation of DYCKMAN COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER located at 100-108 Dyckman Street, in the County of New York, State of N e w York, and do further certify that the full names of all the persons conducting or transacting such limited partnership including the full names of all the partners with the residence address of each such person are as follows: General Partner Morton Gottesman, 40 East S i t h Street, New York, N e w York, Limited Partner Angelo Ortega, 9 3 0 East 231st Street, Bronx, N e w York. T h e limited partnership shall carry on the business of constructing, maintaining and leasing buildings located at 100-108 Dyckman Street, N e w York, N e w York. T h e limited partnership began on the Ist day of November, 1972, and shall continue until the 1st day of November, 1973, and thereafter from year to year, until terminated. T h e limited partner has contributed to the capital of the partnership in cash the sum of $12,500.00. T h e contribution of each partner is to be returned to each partner out of the profits. Fifty ( 5 0 % ) percent each until the contribution has been returnetl. T h e net profits of the partnership shall be divided betwen the partners, after the contribution of each is returned, and the net losses shall be borne by them in the proportions set opposite their respective names: General Partner Morton Ciottesman, 75%. Limited Partner — Angelo Ortega, 25%. Additional General or I.imited partners may be admitted to the partnership on such terms as may be agreed on in writing between all ihe partners and such new partners. T h e death of any partner shall dissolve the partnership, but shall have no effect upon ihe continuance of the partnership business. The surviving partner has ihe opiion lo purchase the interests of (he deceased partner. Kach partner agrees to further coatribute during the lirst year of the partnership a sum not exceeding $37,500.00. Such sum lo be repaid on or before Nov. 1, I97'l. T h e above l^'riificate duly signed and ai kno»'ledgfd by <11 partners, is on lile in the New N'orU County Clerk's Office. fypkllloolUUH, Employee Pension s s*w for civil service for personnel satisfaction ?(t 6 W e e k s Course Approved by N . Y . State Education Dept. Write or Phone for Information Please w r i t e me free abou High School Equivalency class. the SO Address Boro LI City Exam Coming June 2 For ADMINISTRATIVE AIDE INTENSIVE COURSE COMPLETE PREPARATION $7900-up Required: 2 yrs. clerk experience, such as sr. clerk; high school or equivalency. Class MOB. & W e d . 6 : 3 0 - 8 : 3 0 beginning April 23. Write or phone for inlornmtion I Eastern School I 721 Broadway, N.Y.. I Please write me, ADMINISTRATIVE I AL 4-5029 10003 <nr 8 St) free, about t h e A I D E class. I Name I I Address ZIP ! Boro T Y P E W R I T E R MIMEOS ADDRESSERS, STENOTYPES STENOGRAPH for l a l * S Change the pension system now and turn back the clock and you have instant automatic discrimination. Put two men on the back step with different pensions and force them to face the same dangers? How do you tell a fire or other emergency to discriminate? ALL L A N G U A G E S TYPEWRITER C O . . Inc. There were no changes made in liie proposed key answers for exam 3503, promotion to police administrative aide, the Civil Service Commission announced. Those answers, whicli appeared in tlie Keb. 13 issue of Tlie Leader, stand as the final key answers. Low-Low Need And what kind of a union leader would go into the bargaining room and come out with less t h a n he went in with? That kind is not from my school — and I think there are a lot of other union leaders out there who feel the same way I do and have the guts to stand up and say so and fight the good .fight if they are forced into one. A D D E R S and rant. 1,000 • t h c r t . Prices 11» W . 23 St. ( W . o f « t h N.Y., N.Y. CHelsoa And what do you do with the workingman who retires? How does he live, where does he go, with a pension too small and a workingman's pride too big to put his hand out and beg for charity? Final Key Answers M Name Well, that's not the way it is going to be if I have anything' to say about it. BUY U.S. BONDS T3 •1 721 Broadway, NY 3 (at 8 St) What Gross and others want is a return to the good old days — let a firefighter or other emergency service employee put in 40 years of dedication on the job until he reaches the age of 60 or 65 and then tell him, sorry, buddy, you're through, youth must be served, enjoy your Golden Years, etc. And, if possible, give him a party and a gold watch. Appropriately, of course. Keep your watch, Mr. Legislator — / ivaiit to put some real "gold" in the retirement years for my firefighters. > Eastern School A L 4-5029 a Av.) 3-SOI* Diploma.' HIGH SCHOOL EQUIVALENCY DIPLOMA • 5 WEEK COURSE $75 | W e p r e p a r e you to past N.Y. Slate U.S. EQUIVALENCY DIPLOMA • exams. In class or H o m e Study, • Master Charge accepted. FREE I BOOKLET " I ." I I PL 7.0300 ROBERTS S C H O O L S 1 _ | g I I ' 517 West 57 th Street | New York. N . Y . J 0 0 1 9 ^ SCHOOL DIRECTORY M O N R O E INSTITUTE — IBM COURSES ( ' o m p u t e r ProKramminK Keypunch, iBM-.^60, Special P K h P A R A T l O N FOR t i V l l . SHRVKH I h S T S , Switchboard, .NCR HuokkeepinK m a i h i n e . ti S. HQL'lVAl.hN(.Y. Day & Eve Classes. l A S T I R I M O N T AVE & BOSTON RD.. B R O N X K1 2 5600 115 l i A S r h O K D H A M R O A D . B R O N X '>^.^(>700 ApproitU lor ytli umi horngM Htu^enit, A(cr»d. S.Y. Slat* Ptpl. ol Eduf^tian, This Week's City Eligible Lists Eligible ListsNYC Health & Hospitals Corp. ON M b <a, ft rs OQ <ii s H U Q '•S a u (d cn M > u EXAM NO. 2169 SUPERVISING HUMAN RIGHTS SPECIALIST This open competitive list of 43 elisibles was established March 28 following training and experience evaluation of 262 applicants; 219 failed. Salary is $11,900. No. 1 — 102.5% 1 John A Johnson, Lillian Morales, Helen T Shea, Elizabeth Sargeant, Thomas X Fama, Raymond J Lorentz, Elois R Crenchan, M a x M Schwartz, Clarence C Stokes, E Joyce Liechenstein, Zoltan Ruttner, Doris T Brooks, Frank Lichtensteiger, Adina E Johnson, Vander W Mack, John Tarrago, Lewis R Ehrenshaft, James P Ryan. Patrick H Strickland. Robert E Coates. No. 21 — 80.8% 21 Michael G Rechner, Ethel M Bouldin, John M Beckeroff, Martin Stahl. Luis A Fuentes. Robert J Shedlock. Norman R u binstein, John V Putten, Marilyn A Parnas, Shirley M Cuevas, Milta Torres, Patricia M Rodenhausen, Rosalind Reyes, Leonard S Linder, Laura I Fisher, James G Ince, Clarence Phillips, Stuart F Greenfield, Robert M Davis, A E Dambrose. No, 41 — 70.0% 41 Ahmed I Elsaady, Clarence R Cuthbertson, Dorothy T Plummer. EXAM NO. 1600 PROM. TO RELOCATION ASSISTANT These two promotional lists, containing 54 eligibles, were established March 28. Of the 93 applicants for the June 24, 1972, written test, 79 appeared to take it, 20 failed and 5 withdrew. Salary is $6,200. Model Cities Admin 1 Lydia Fanfan. Ida P Brockington, Fredeswind Ramirez, Thelma E Goring. Frances M Sumpter, Eleanor B Davis, Calvert C Marsh, Eunice W Home. Housing Development Admin No. 1 — 94.93% 1 Anthony S Louis, Mary Tate, John H Hunt, Clinton J Murphy, Peter Rubio, Jose L Rivera, Velia M Velez, Edward A Slatwinski, Shirley V Shippe, Johnny L Wilford, Robert E White, Novella Briggs, Victor Cosme, Eddie C Hunter, Margaret Haines, Barbara P Franklin, Edwin McGraw, Leonard F Colbert, Yolande S Kay, Deloris Lake. No. 21 — 82.975% 21 William M Burrus, Gloria Capers, Gabriel Gonzalez, Rufus E Canty, Mozelle Stewart, Beatrice Copeland, Justo L Reyes, Wilhelmeni Oliver, Awilda Cora, Virgie Jefferson, Vera Brooks, Louis Sosa, Leona Coleman, James A Cason, Maria L Roman, REAL ESTATE VALUES ST ALBANS $30,990 DO YOU W A N T QUALITY? 183 ST. EAST O F C O N C O U R S E TIEBOUT TOWERS 2332 Tiebout Ave. ROSEDALE $32,990 ROOM TO ROAM Farms, Country Homes New York State 5000 sq ft of garden grnds. Dot brkshingle ranch 1 bung, 6 rms, 3 br, fin bsmt, extras. QUEENS VILLG $37,990 2-FAMILY SET-UP Det brick. 6 Ige rms for owner (3 b r ) & separate 3-rm apt for income. Gar. All Modern. M A N Y O T H E R 1 & 2 FAM HOMES Spring Catalog of Hundreds of Real Estate & Business Bargains. All types sizes and prices. Dahl Realty, Cobleskill 7, N.Y. QUEENS VILLAGE $32,990 Queens Homes OL 8-7510 170-13 Hillside Ave., Jamaica Houses For Sale - Queens U.S. GOVERNMENT FORECLOSED H O M E S T h i s is your chance to get a great buy on a vacant redecorated home. Little cash needed and no closing fees. $19,000 to $30,000 Call agent 523-7400 ~ for SAVE A W A T T FLORIDA L I V I N G Live the good life at prices you can afford in Highland Village Mobile Home Community. Choose f r o m over 2 0 models w i t h prices s t a r t i n g at $ 7 , 9 5 0 Complete recreation program. Write: HIGHLAND VILLAGE, 2 7 5 N.E. 4 8 t h St. POMPANO BEACH, FLORIDA 33064 J O B S Federal, State, County, City. FLORIDA CIVIL SERVICE BULLETIN. Suscrlption $3 BUTTERLY & GREEN JA 6-6300 appt. 723-8400 Enjoy Your Golden Days in JOBS? = DETACHED Beautiful home in Queens' most desirable area. Large landscaped grounds, 6 ' 2 rooms, 1 Vi baths, putio, wall to wall carpeting, modern streamlined kitchen with wall oven. Washing machine . . . and many other extras. Oversized garage. Low d o w n payment can be arranged. 168-25 Hillside Ave 2i9 l2 Linden Blvd. Cambria Hts., L.I. FLORIDA New BIdg. 2V2 rooms. $195 31-j rms. $235 41/2 rms, $275 Renting o f f c a p t 3B or 2 A , 5 8 4 . 9 7 5 4 Check this corner brick home with 5 Ig rooms on one floor plus fin bsmt & gorgeous studio apt for income. Gar. year. Issues. P.O. l o t 844 L, N. Mlani. Fla. 33141. 8 Florida No. 41 — 72.575% 41 Ramona Negron, Eula D Gunn, Lourdes Aponte. Fellcidad Abreu, Francisco Febus, Gertrude Glenn. EXAM NO. 7612 PROM. TO PRINCIPAL CONSUMER AFFAIRS INSPECTOR This promotional list of 15 eligibles was established March 28. The technical-oral exam on Feb. 13, 1973, was taken by 20 applicants for this S11.300 title. One failed and four withdrew. 1 Christopher Bossis. Moe Greenspan, Harold I Sherman, John J Ognibene, Lloyd A Grey, Melvyn L Feld, Murray Steinberg, Benjamin Levinne, Philip N Frankfater, Paul Kohn, Sol Ramler, Paul J Labusga, ATartin Kleinman, Joseph L Feig, Sidney Rosenstein. EXAM NO. 2650 PROM. TO SR. VETERAN COUNSELOR This promotional list of six eligibles was established March 28; two of the eight applicants: failed the technical-oral exam held Feb. 20. Salary is $10,800. 1 Louis Vellia, Robert J Wilson, Abraham S Fox, Jacob Olstein, Clifton S Gardin Jr, Henry R Brown. EXAM NO. 2123 PRINCIPAL ACTUARY This list of three eligibles was established March 28 after training and experience evaluation of eight eligibles who filed in December, 1972. Salary is $14,000. 1 Irving Hirsch, Walter J Kelsey, Howard J Loenicker J r . PROM. TO SR. CHEMIST List Est. March 26, '73 1 Leroy A. Cornelius, Harlem Hospital; Dolores A. Kreib, Queens Hosp. Center; Joseph E. Simon, Metropolitan Hosp.; Sheshadri Narayanan, Metropolitan Hosp.; Rocco P. Ferzola, Bellevue Hospital; Manuel Vazquez, Lincoln Hospital; Maurice Slipstiene, Bellevue Hospital; Doris Palmer, City Hosp. at Elmhurst; Effie B. Steward, Fordham Hospital; Manuel Beltran. Coney Island Hosp.; Margaret S. Nelson, Sea View Hospital; Ning F. Fong, Lincoln Hospital; Lloyd F. Greenidge, Bellevue Hospital; Irving I. Schutz, Kings County Hosp.; Henry Miller, Kings County Hosp. PROM. TO SR. MICROBIOLOGIST (BACTERIOLOGY) List Est. March 26, '73 1 Stephen Chaitowitz, Metropolitan Hosp.; Harold Lenick, Queens Hospital Center; George J. Mikkelsen, City Hosp. a t Elmhurst; Evans L. Waithe, Bellevue Hospital; James A. DeStefano. Kings County Hosp.; Herbert B. Kay, Kings County EXAM NO. 2173 TELEVISION CAMERAMAN This open competitive list of six eligibles was established March 28. Of the 66 applicants, 60 failed the practical testing held Oct. 16, 1972. Salary is $8,250. 1 Anthony B Capitano, Ildefonso DeJesus, Edwin L Owens, Willier Teacher, Clifford W Herbert, Ira D Pflanzer. PROM. TO SR. MICROBIOLOGIST List Est. March 26. '73 1 Stephen Chaitowitz, Metropolitan Hosp.; Herbert B. Kay, Kings County Hosp.; Rosemarie Labollita, Bellevue Hospital. PROM. TO MECHANICAL ENGINEER Group 5 List Est. March 26, '73 1 Thomas J. Guccardo, C.O. Engineering. Holy Name Mass T h e Brooklyn-Queens Holy Name Society of the New York City Fire Department will hold their 51st Annual Communion Mess at 9 a.m. on Sunday, April 8, at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Basilica, 5th Ave. and 60th St., Brooklyn. Breakfast will follow at 10 a.m. in Notre Dame Hall adjoining the Basilica. For tickets contact Frank Travaglianti at 46-34 202nd St., Bayside, N.Y. Correction Sanmen The Leader regrets an ommission in the March 27 issue concerning the certification of sanitation men for appointment within the Environmental Protection Administration. The last number certified from the list resulting from open competitive exam 9110 was 3770. No. 4809 was certified from the special military list resulting from exam 1398. A Pint O f Prevention . . . Donate Blood Today Call UN 1 - 7 2 0 0 KNOW YOUR BLOOD PRESSURE TWICE A DAY! ANYWHERE! • INSTANT PRESSURE CHECK ANYWHERE ANY T^ME OF DAY OR NIGHT • SAVES ON MEDICAL BILLS • SAVES TIME, WORRY, TENSION EASY TO USE PROFESSIONAL BLOOD PRESSURE MACHINE VENICE, FLA. — INTERESTED.> SEE H. N . W I M M E R S , REALTOR Z I P CODE 33595 SAVE ON YOUR MOVE TO FLORIDA C o m p a r e our cosc per 4,000 lbs. (o St. Petersburg f r o m N e w Y o r k City, $472; Philadelphia, S448; Albany, 9 5 0 6 . For an estimate to any destination in Florida Write S O U T H E R N TRANSFER and S T O R A G E C O . , I N C . DEPT. C, BOX Antonio Ortiz, Emma M Nixon, Lida M Beckwith, Jeanette Jonas, Harold C Payne. Hosp; David M. Papayanopulos, Kings County Hosp.; Mary J . Stith, Harlem Hospital; Harold F. HaiTison, Jr, Kings County Hosp.; Harry Baran, Kings County Hosp. 10217 ST. PETERSBURG, FLORIDA, 3 3 7 3 3 BUY U.S. BONDS PAYS FOR ITSELF MANY TIMES OVER! C o m p a c t unit m zippered case travels w h e r e you d o ' N o m o r e w a i t i n g lor a p p o i n t m e n t s , w a s t e d hours m doctor s office . No more exorbitant medica*! b i l l s t o k e e p t a b s o n u n r u l y b l o o d p r e s s u r e ' M o w t a k e y o u r o w n p r e s s u r e m g h t or d a y . at h o m e o r a w a y a c c u r a t e l y , s c i e n t i f i c a l l y P r e c i sion m a d e Aneroid type s p h y g m o m a n o m e t e r with e o s y - r e a d y g a u g e is s i m p l e to u s e J u s t w r a p y e l c r o n o - s l i p s l e e v e a r o u n d arrr. a n d s q u e e z e bulb Lets you check w a r n i n g sign fluctuations o n the spot P A Y S F O R I T S E L F IN C O S T OF J U S T T W O D O C T O R V I S I T S ' C o m e s with c o m p a c t zippered case One-year warranty Blood Pressure Machine (Z73254) Only $15.95 If you d o n t have o n e Professional Stethoscope (Z4/256) a v a i l a b l e for only $4.95, MAIL HANDY COUPON H A N O V E R H O U S E . Oept 2 - 7 7 7 Hanover BIdg . Hanover. Penna 1 7 3 3 1 Kindly rush Blood Pressure M a c h m e s (Z73254) for only $15 95 p l u s 85« to cover postage and h a n d l i n g on l u l l nnoney back g u a r a n t e e i l I am not c o m p l e t e l y s a t i s f i e d • Please send __ -Stethoscope(s) (Z47258) tor j u s t $4 95 plus 50< to cover p p ft h a n d l i n g on same t u l l money back guarantee [~I SAVE! Order c o m p l e t e kit (Blood Pressure M a c h i n e and Stethoscope) for just $19 95 plus $ 1 0 0 p p ft h a n d l i n g You save $1 30 ^ 7 3 3 6 3 Penna & M d f e s i d e n i s a d d saias Enclosed is $ CNARCt IT! n DINERS CLUB • MASTER CHARGE • Acct Hanover BIdg , Hanover, Penna. 1 7 3 3 1 • AMERICAN EXPRESS ». Master Charge i n t e r b a n k » NAME. HANOVER HOUSE BANKAMERICARD My Card E i p i r e s .('I t AS». I'MIVTi ADDRESS CITV- STATE NMOvcr Neutc, l f T 2 ZIP , ' 100 New Firemen Following are the names of the 100 new probationary firemen appointed March 22 by the New York City Fire Department. The last appointment f r o m the 12,049-name eligible list established J a n . 18, 1973, was of eligible number 644. Michael J Aceto, John J Aragona, John R Arnold, Lawrence E Barnett, Richard A Barto, Daniel Beckworth, Roger J Beehler, Robert B Blakeslee, Michael J Bolnik, Robert E Bradley. Dennis M Burke, Thom a s J Burton, Thomas P Byrnes, Orville L Callahan, Peter G Caale, William M Cetto, Frank A Conguista, Thomas J Corning, Lawrence E Connors, William R Crawford, Orest Daszo, Vince J DeAngelis, Raymond D'Angelo, Thomas M DeLessio, Philip J DelPrete. Gregory Dooley, Theodore Drohosky, Gregory F Farrington, Owen E Parley Jr, David M Fenton, Frank Ferrara, John J Gamboni, Joseph Grzelak, Gregary J Hansen, James L Heal Jr, Robert A Holzmaier, Patrick Hyland, Ross M Kasminoff, Charles L Kasper, Stephen J Kochick, Robert M Kozlowski, Robert H Ladimir, Robert G Lauda, Thomas J Laughlin,, Bela Makula Jr, Jon Malkin, Michael T Mammone, William A Maynard Jr, Edward J McGrath, James J McGuinness. Gerard F McMahon, John W McNulty, Thomas W McNulty, John A Monastersky, Edward V Matusiak, Michael F Mulvihill, George R Murphy, Thomas D Murphy, Michael P Murphy, Michael Muxie, Jr, Edward F Noonan, Charles A Noran Jr, Gary R Nusser, Joseph D O'Connell, John C O'Neill, Ismael J Perez, J a n E Pistek, Kenneth G Pogan, Jack E Pollard, Eugene Pugliese Jr, Joseph M Quintavalle, Walter O Rabe, Richard S Rekowski, Timothy Rogers. Robert A Rosenberg. Matthew L Ryan. Joseph A Scinto, Lucien A Segot, Craig H Shelley. Thomas V Shields, Thomas A Sirignano, Richard W Smith, James M Spencer, Bertram J Stahlberg, Allyn L Steinhardt, John A Strandberg, Frank B Tooker, Richard W Townsend, William E Tulipane, Kenneth C Urban. Raymond J Valcich. Patrick J Ward, W a r - Bar 'Double Pay' To Union Chiefs For Some Activities Mayor Lindsay last week issued an executive order placing explicit curbs on the payment of city salaries to union officials when they are also paid by their unions. The order specifies twelve types of "labor management joint activities" in which union delegates, or officials, may take part without loss of their city salaries. It also establishes twelve union activities for which employees will be granted unpaid leave time. City salaries will be suspended while attending conventions, recruiting members, collecting dues, preparing imion publicity material, conducting press conferences and performing union administrative or office work, among others. Activities t h a t may be performed without loss of city pay are engaging in grievance procedures, negotiating with the city, and appearing before city officials and agencies and federal wage regulatory agencies. The order also requires union officials to submit affidavits to their agency heads t h a t they are not receiving double pay Illegally. The Office of Labor Relations •was designated by the Mayor to oversee enforcement of the double pay guidelines. The Mayor's order on double pay follows a grand jury report Issued three months ago which found t h a t the city paid $1.4 million in 1971 to 127 union officials who worked full time on their union activities. A spokesman for Robert McKlernan, "head of the Patrolmen's Benevolent Assn., said Structure Grp. A The city Dept. of Personnel has summoned 1,621 candidates for structure malntalner trainee, grp. A, to take open competitive written exam No. 2258 at 9 a.m. on April 7 at Franklin K. Lane H.S., Jamaica Ave. & Dexter Ct., Brooklyn. ren C Ward, Alan D Walsh, Jack •Westrenen, Richard C Werner Jr. Patrick J Wallace. Edward J Wazeter, Patrick Welsh, John W Young. t h a t the order "does not a f f e c t " McKlernan, who receives up to $10,000 from the PBA for expenses incurred in union duties. These expenses include trips to Albany for lobbying purposes, entertaining legislators and the press, and other travel expenses, according to the spokesman. "This money does not go into his pocket," the spokesman said. A spokesman for Michael Maye, president of the Uniformed Firefighters Assn., said that UFA lawyers were studying the detailed new order and t h a t Maye would have no comment a t this time. Michael J. Maye, president of the Uniformed Firefighters Association, is stepping up his drive to get approval of the proposed Federal Fire Research, Safety and Training Center and have it located in New York City. Maye met last week In Washington, D.C. with Rep. James J. Delaney, one of the co-sponsors of the legislation. The Queens Democrat, chairman of the city's delegation In the Capitol, pledged to enlist the aid of his fellow New Yorkers In Congress to back the legislation. Under a bill Introduced by Rep. J o h n W. Davis (D-Ga.), the fire-fighting academy would do extensive research on fires and fire-fighting techniques and would provide training for fire fighters. Maye said that New York was the logical place for such a n "FBI of Fire Fighting" because the New York City Fire Department has fought every kind of fire except a "silo fire." Delaney said he was confident most of the New York congressional delegation would support the project, which Is expected to come up for consideration In late summer. "We've got to get the bill passed, and then do everything we can to get It In New York City," he said. LITTLE WONDER USES HOUSE WIRING SYSTEM AS GIANT TV ANTENNA Tunes-in every channel in your area sharp and clear! Replaces unsightly "rabbit ears" and other indoor antennas. Attaches to TV antenna terminals in seconds. Plugs into any electric outlet. Uses no electricity. • SAVE M E MORE! Rush 2 for $ 2 . 4 0 plus 80« postaga and handling. PRICES Ace»iiiit«iif A u d i t o r «.00 A d m i n i s t r a t i v * Assistant O f f i e « r 4.00 Assessor Approisor ( R e a l Estato) 5.00 AttendoNt 3.00 Attorney 5.00 A u t o Machinist 4.00 A u t o Hochonie 5.00 lofinninq Oftico Worker 5.00 l e v e r a g e C o n t r o l Invest 4.00 Booiilieeper Account C l e r k 5.00 • r i d g e and Tunnel O f f i c e r 5.00 Bus Maintainor — G r o u p B 5.00 Bus O p e r a t o r 5.00 Buyer Purchasing A g e n t 4.00 C a p t a i n Fire Dept t.OO C a p t a i n P.D 4.00 C i t y Planner 5.00 Civil Engineer B.OO Civil Service Arith. and Vocabulary 3.00 Civil Service Handbook 1.00 Clerk N.Y. C i t y 4.00 C o m p l e t e Guide t o C.S. Jobs 1.50 C o m p u t e r Programmer 5.00 Const. Supv. and Inspec 5.00 Correction Officer 5.00 Court Officer 5.00 Court Officer 5.00 Dietition 5.00 Electrician 5.00 Electrical Engineer 5.00 Engineering A i d e 4.00 Federal Service Ent. Exam 5.00 Fingerprint Technician 4.00 Fireman F.D 5.00 Fireman in ail S t a t e O.P 4.00 Foreman 5.00 General Entrance Series 4.00 General Test Proct. f o r 92 U.S. Jobs 5.00 H.S. Diploma Tests 5.00 High School Entrance and Scholarship Test 3.00 H.S. Entrance Examinations 4.00 Homestudy Course f o r C.S 5.00 H o w to get a fob Overseas 1.45 Hospital A t t e n d a n t 4.00 Housing Assistant 5.00 Investigator-Inspector 5.00 J a n i t o r Custodian 5.00 Laboratory Aide 5.00 Lt. Fire Dept 5.00 Lt. Police Dept 4.00 Librarian 4.00 Machinists Helper 5.00 Maintenance M a n 5.00 Maintainor Helper A and C 4.00 Maintainor H e l p e r Group B ....4.00 Maintainor H e l p e r G r o u p D 5.00 Management and Administration Quiizer 5.00 Mechanical Engineer 4.00 M o t o r Vehicle License Examiner 5.00 N o t a r y Public 4.00 Nurse ( P r a c t i c a l and Public H e a l t h ) 5.00 Parking Enforcement Agent 4.00 Prob. and Parole O f f i c e r 4.00 Patrolman (Police Dept. T r a i n e e ) S.OO Personnel Assistant 4.00 Pharmacists License Test 4.00 Playground Director — Recreation Leader 4.00 Policewoman 5.00 Postmaster 5.00 Post O f f i c e Clerk C a r r i e r 4.00 Post O f f i c e M o t o r Vehicle O p e r a t o r 4.00 Preliminary Practice f o r the H.S. Equivalency Diploma Test . . 4 . 0 0 Principal Clerk-Steno 5.00 Probation and Parole O f f i c e r 4.00 Professional C a r e e r Tests N.Y.S 5.00 Professional Trainee Admin. Aide 5.00 Railroad Clerk 4.00 Real Estate M a n a g e r 4.00 Sanitation Man 4.00 School S e c r e t a r y 4.00 Sergeant P.D 5.00 Senior Clerical Series 5.00 Social Cose W o r k e r 5.00 S t u H A t t e n d a n t and Sr. A t t e n d a n t 4.00 Stationary Eng. and Fireman 5.00 Storekeeper Stockman 4.00 Supervision Course 5.00 Transit Patrolman 5.00 Contains Previous Questions and Answers and Other Suitable Study M a t e r i a l for Coming Exams —i 30-Day Money Back Guarantee! — WINDSOR HOUSE, Inc. Dept. 257 3947 AUSTIN BLVD.. ISLAND PARK, N.Y. 11558 r u s h . . . (quantity) Antennas (or $ 1 . 2 5 each plus 60« each postage and handling. N e w York Residents Add Sales T a i ! GET T H E ARCO STUDY BOOK lOOKS Step Up Drive For Fire Center n TO HELP YOU PASS 80c f o r 24 hours special delivery f o r each book. LEADER B O O K S T O R E I I W a r r e n St.. N e w York. N . Y . Please send me 10007 copie« of books checked above. I enclose check or money order for $ Name I Name (print), I Address BR/A/GS IN CHANNELS SHARP AND CLEAR! I i Address City. I oiaw City Zip ^ State Be sure to include 7 % Sales Tax Orangetown Publit Works Unit Ratifies Contract For m Wage Hike, Benefits w ORANGETOWN — The D e p a r t m e n t of P u b l i c W o r k s ployees Assn. h a s ratified a T o w n of O r a n g e t o w n a f t e r < 9 fS u 8 U Keeping informed and in forms were these delegates to the Mental Hygiene Employees Assn. meeting last week at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York. MHEA members usually carry a dual membership in the Civil Service Employees Assn., which holds the bargaining rights for their unit. However, MHEA holds numerous separate meetings to discuss problems and to exchange ideas that are of special interest to employees of the State Department of Mental Hygiene. Seated above, from left, are MHEA treasurer Edna Percoco, of Willowbrook; Dorothy King, of Creedmoor, and Ed Gagnon, of Gouverneur; standing immediately behind them are, from left, MHEA vice-president Richard Snyder, of Wassaic; George Fassel, of West Seneca, and MHEA president Irene Hillis, of Willowbrook. Among the issues discussed at the meeting was the delay in implementation of a career ladder for LPN's. Salvatore Butero, of State Psychiatric Institute Hospital, gives report to delegates as Rebella Eufemio, of NYS Rehabilitation Center at West Haverstraw, listens attentively. Dominick Ambra, of Pilgrim State Hospital, discusses problems being faced by employees of industrial shops at his institution and at other locations throughout state. John Mauro, CSEA unit president, said, "I would like to praise our Public Works negoitating team and CSEA fieldmen Flip Amodio and Tom Brann, and give a special word of thanks to Tom Luposello, (CSEA field supervisor), for coming in and finalizing the agreement." The major points of the agreement concern: • Salaries — A 50 percent increase has been given for 1973, retroactive to Jan. 1. and a 6 percent for 1974. • Longevity Raises — A 25year increment h a s been added to the past increments a t 10, 15 and 20 years. These increments will be payable after the first of June on individual employee's anniversary dates. Those employees who were due a n increment on J a n . 1 under the old payment plan will receive those increments. • Dental Plan — The CSEA unit will accept the Town's plan if the Town can sign up the 75 percent of the police force and the office employees necessary to implement the plan. If the Town cannot produce this number of interested employees, CSEA members will be allowed to go into a plan that is mutually agreeable to CSEA and the Town. • Vacations — If an employee is unable to use his total vacation time during the year because of work assignments, he may carry the extra days over to the following year or receive cash payment in lieu of time off. If an employee has over 20 days vacation time during a year and does not use the extra days due to work assignments, he may caiTy over time up to 25 days or receive cash payment. • Snow Removal — Two men shall be assigned to trucks without two-way radios if overtime is required after an eight-hour Credif Meat Boycott With Forcing Federal Ceilings Information for the Calendar may be submitted CO THE LEADER. It should include the date, time, address and city for the function. directly place, April 6—-Southern C o n f e r e n c e o f f i c e r s nneeting: 7 p.m., H o l i d a y Inn, Newburgh. 7 — T o w n o f H e m p s t e a d unit annual d i n n e r - d a n c e : 8 p.m., H o l i d a y M a n o r , 345 Hicksville Rd., B e t h p a g e , L I . 7 — O f f i c e of G e n e r a l Services c h a p t e r installation: 6 : 3 0 p.m., State Campus cafeteria, A l b a n y . 1 1 — W e s t e r n N e w York A r m o r i e s c h a p t e r m e e t i n g : 2 p.m., Polish Falcons C l u b , Dunkirk. 1 2 — N e w York C i t y c h a p t e r e x e c u t i v e b o a r d : 5:15 p.m., Gasner's Restaurant, 76 Duane St., M a n h a t t a n . 1 8 — B u f f a l o c h a p t e r m e e t i n g : 6 p.m., H o t e l Statler H i l t o n . Buffalo. 1 9 — S o u t h e r n C o n f e r e n c e m e e t i n g : 7 p.m., C h a r t e r O a k R o o m , H o l i d a y Inn, Route I 7 K , N e w b u r g h . 14—Syracuse A r e a Retirees c h a p t e r : 2 p.m., Riordan's Restaurant, M a r k e t St., A u b u r n . 2 7 - 2 8 — C e n t r a l C o n f e r e n c e m e e t i n g : T r e a d w a y Inn, O w e g o . May 1 - 4 — N e w York S t a t e T r a n s p o r t a t i o n Engineers C o n v e n t i o n : C o n c o r d H o t e l , Kiamesha Lake. 4 - 5 — W e s t e r n C o n f e r e n c e m e e t i n g : ( f u r t h e r d e t a i l s t o b e announced.) 2 8 - 3 0 — N e w York C i t y c h a p t e r w o r k s h o p : C o n c o r d H o t e l , Kiamesha Lake, ( F r o m Leader C o r r e s p o n d e n t ) MINEOLA—The m e a t boycott proposed in Nassau by I r v i n g F l a u m e n b a u m , p r e s i d e n t of t h e 2 0 , 0 0 0 - m e m b e r N a s s a u c h a p t e r of t h e Civil S e r v i c e E m p l o y e e s Assn., s p r e a d l i k e ivy o n t h e s p r i n g v i n e . The vigorous response here, as by the CSEA chapters. throughout the nation, was credFlaumenbaum and Suffolk ited with forcing the federal chapter president E. Ben Porter government's action on clamphad provided almost 100,000 ing a ceiling on key meat prices. handbills plus expertise in or"But we want prices lo go ganization and demonstration to back down where people can women's boycott groups throughafford these meats," Flaumenbaum said a t Leader presstime. out both counties. "If they stay where they are, then wage earners have got to have bigger raises this year." The ceiling imposed by President Nixon cast some doubts at Leader presstime oh the effectiveness of the boycott movement, which had been fully backed in Nassau and Suffolk Pass y o u r c o p y of Tk« L«ad«r 'VirtH Their action was quickly followed by Nassau County Executive Ralph G. Caso's investigation of rising prices, a petition campaign by North Hempstead Town supervisor Michael Tully, Jr., a call by the Suffolk Republican legislative delegation to Governor Rockefeller to officially proclaim a boycott, a series of rallies by community boycott groups and the appearances of many officials in sup^^ ^ ^ women. m e m b e r s of t h e O r a n g e t o w n u n i t of t h e Civil S e r v i c e E m contract agreement with the protracted negotiations. shift. • Grievance Procedure — If no agreement can be reached between the Town and CSEA on an impartial arbitrator, they can submit to the American Arbitration Association for an arbitrator. • CSEA Meetings — The unit can use the highway garage for CSEA meetings. • Special Holidays — The Town will include employees of the Department of Public Works in all special holidays except when snow or other unusual situations require them to work. If Public Works employees work on special holidays, they must be granted other time off or payment in lieu of time. • Duty Roster — A duty roster will be established and posted according to seniority. The foreman will handle emergencies when possible; when it is not possible, employees will be assigned in order of seniority. The Town will be permitted to skip over duty roster employees considered incapable of handling emergency, with CSELA to have the right to use grievance procedure if it feels the Town's judgment is in en'or. Urges Stand O n Pensions MINEOLA — T h e Nassau c h a p t e r , Civil S e r v i c e E m p l o y e e s Assn., a s k e d area legislators to t a k e a s t a n d on pension legislation in telegrams sent recently by chapter president Irving Flaumenbaum. At the same time, Flaumenbaum urged members to reinforce the telegrams with letters and telegrams expressing their views. The chapter wired the legislators that it is vigorously opposed to the pending Senate bill 3435 and Assembly bill 4159 t h a t would impose a sharply reduced uniform pension and prohibit bargaining for pension benefits. "Please advise of your stand so I can convey your thoughts to my membership," the telegram concluded. Addresses for the legislators may be secured at the chapter office by those wishing to contact them. Warns Buffalo (Continued from Page 3) Assn.; N.Y.C. Transit Police; Sanitation Officers Assn.; Correction Captains Assn.; Local 1180, C.W.A.; Detectives Endowment Assn.; Council 82; P.B.A. of the N.Y.S. Police, Inc.; Subway Surface Supervisors; Local 891, Board of Education Custodian & Custodian Engineers; Association of Methods Analysts; Associated Community College Faculties; Transit Supervisors Organization; S.E.I.U. Local 621; Local 30 Operating Engineers, a n d Doctors Association of the City of New York. WHERE TO APPLY FOR PUBLIC JOBS VEW YORK CITY—Persons seeking Jobs wltji the City should file at the Department of Personnel, 49 Thomas St., New York 10013, open weekdays between 9 a.in. and 5 p.m. Special hours for Thursdays are S:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Those requesting applications by mail must include a stamped, self-addressed envelope, to be received by the Department at least five days before the deadline. Announcements are available only during the filing period. By subway, applicants can reach the filing office via the IND (Chambers S t . ) ; B M T (City Hall); Lexington I R T (Brooklyn Bridge). For advance information on titles, call 566-8700. Several City agencies do their own recruiting and hiring. They include: Board of Education (teachers only), 66 Court St., Brooklyn 11201, phone: 5968060; NYC Transit Authority, 370 Jay St.. Brooklyn 11201 phone: 852-5000. The Board of Higher Education advises teaching staff applicants to contact the individual schools; non-faculty jobs are filled through the Personnel Department directly. STATE—Regional offices of the Department of Civil Service are located a t : 1350 Ave. of Americas. New York 10019; (phone: 765-9790 or 765-9791); State Office Campus, Albany. 12226; Suite 750, 1 W. Genessee St.. Buffalo 14202. Applicant* may obtain announcements either in person or by sending a stamped, self-addressed envelope with their request. Various State Employment Service offices can provide applications in person, but not by mail. Judicial Conference jobs are filled at 270 Broadway, New York, 10007, phone: 488-4141. Port Authority jobseekers should contact their offices at ill Eighth Ave., New York, phone: 620-7000. FEDERAL—T^e U.S. Civil Service Commission, New York Region, runs a Job Information Center at 26 Federal Plaza, New York 10007. Its hours are 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., weekdays only. Telephone 264-0422. Federal e n t r a n t s living up.state (north of Dutchess County) should contact the Syracuse Area Office, 301 Erie Blvd. West, Syracuse 13202. Toll-free calls may be made to (800) 522-7407. Federal titles have no deadline unless otherwise indicated. I.EOAJ. NOIICE RAV-LKI-: ASSCX;iATi:S. 152 NX'. 4> Sc., N^'C. Siibscancc t)f CATiilUaic of LimitcJ Partnership (ileil in New York. County Clerk's O t c on February 5. 197.^. Business.' O w n c and operate real property. Cieneral Partners: Kuymond Heettner, A'JS V.. 151 St.. Bronx, N.Y.. I.eona Meettner. li. 151 St.. Bronx, N.Y. Limited Partner. Agreed Value of (."ontribution (Keal Property) and Share of Profits; Raymond Meettner and Leona Heetttner. $18,200. each, 2f>", eai.h; Anne W e i n r i b , Cireenbriar A212 ("entury Villatie. W . Palm Beath. Fla., William Wilson, y i - 5 7 Hroud Ave.. Surfside. Fla.. $5,000. each. 8'V each; Bella Schatrbers. 7? S. Park Ave.. Rockville Centre, N.Y. Beverly Karnell, 15 U> H. Colter. Phoenix. Ar.. Samuel Wilson, 6101 (!alle Aurora, Tucson, Ar.. Benjamin Wilson, 21411 VX'hitemore St.. Oak Park, Mi.. Irene Kellner. <50 Lenox Rd.. Brooklyn. N.Y.. Marcia Sckalor, 10 Nancy Place F., Massapequa, N.Y., $2,800. each, each; Barry Heettner, NO E. 17 St.. N Y C . Sheila Grossman. II Willow Terrace. Verona. N.J.. Mildred Heettner. <21 Fast 2 i St., N Y C . $1,866.67 each. 2 2 , 3 each. Partnership to terminate on December <1. IV82. N o additional conrtibutions agreed to be made. N o time is agreed upon for return of contributions. Limited partners shall not substitute assignee in hit place without consent of general partners. N o additional limited partners tu be admitted. N o priority among limited purlnert. T h e remaining partners may continue the business on death, retirement or insanity of a |{eneral partner. N o right IS given limited partner tu demand property other than cash in return for his contribution. Police Adminl Aide List EXAM NO. 2251 POLICE ADMINISTRATIVE AIDE This open competitive list of 2,026 eligibles was established March 21. Of the 5,854 applicants, 3,369 appeared to take the January 20, 1973, written exam; 1,628 candidates failed and 15 withdrew. Starting^ salary Is $7,900. (Continued From lAst Week) No. 121 — 97.5% 121 (3erald J Malzacher Jr, Gary G r u f f e n n a n , J o h n A Dimeola, Harry Reich, Joseph Gleason. Carl A Weems, Albert Bellodi, Michael Miele, Morton H Schoenberg, William 8 Jefferson, Larry H Greenwald, Otto Froese. Martin Prince, Stephen Boyajian, Philip E Chesanluk, Margaret A Griffin. Ann Young, Madeline E Levine, Richard Watson, Joyce T Cox. No. 141 — 96.3% 141 Vivian D Hazell, Grover C Stitt, Katherine Holley, Louis Levine, Bonnie G Veltrl, Constance Imbesi, Rosalyn Cohen. Eileen R Fitzsimmons, Richard J Taigue, Paul Handlara, Robert D Patelsky, John Tarrago. G r a n ! F Harders, Nellie E Claire, Ellen T Lonergan, Margaret M Carley, Lucille Schwartz, Roland O Butterfleld, J o a n n L Marshall, Marcy W Jackson. No. 161 — 96.3% 161 Harley Halpern. Joyce Glotzer, Anne Ogulnick, Lynda S Bell, William F Carrington. William F Durr. John J McKeon, Emil Brou, William Galvin. Lester A Harris. Edward F Roe. Vincent J Lentine, Max L Malinak. Fi-ancis X Ward. Oscar L Pusey. Frank Pizza. Mario T Tumbarello. Anna Amatuzio. ALBANY Joseph Guttman, Bruce D Keeler. No. 181 — 95.0% 181 Mary Rakowski, Ronnie G Tabickman, Barbara A Weeks, Cirita J DeGennaro, Beverley T Williams, Willam A Lohmeyer, Eileen T Lyons, Harriet Bennan, Malcolm Heimann, Robert V Lisi, Madelynn B Nett, James L Pugliese. Thomas J Layburn. Denise A Marbury, Mary C Santimays. Steven J Sabow, Thomas Martino, Maria E Paolillo, Patricia J Melise, Nola E Lindo. No. 201 — 95.0% 201 Raymond D Lira, Antoinette Witherspoon, Charles E Dawson. Barbara E Schlereth, Jack J Blume, Fred C Martin, Betty Schulman, Tina S Mohrmai:n. Frances McCarthy, Thomas A Zarr, Harry E Johnson Jr. Denise A Poniarico, Jean P O'Grady, Leeanna M Dentinger, Erik H Goldbeck, William M Hunter, Mary C Cronin. Eli Geller, P a t ricia A Dempsey, Marguerite Tobin. No. 221 — 95.0% 221 Marion B Juliussen, Elizabeth Smith, Lauren M Wise, J a n e E Ferris, Estelle S Rothman. Peggy A Hovey. Steven A Morisi, Helen Tedaldi. Jaime Israel, Melvln E Harris, George Valentine, Daniel Soler, Charles Landau. Gregory S Hensley. Louis Smith, Elle E Graham. Sidney Kempler. Jack B Green Jr. Gloria N Meadow. Stephen D Miele. No, 241 — 93.8% 241 Shirley D Jones. James Allen. Paula Berlinerman Isaac B Friedman. Shirley D Jennings. Freddy Millan. Barbara P Frankel. Carl M Fiorillo. Doris Dodson. Delia A McCarthy. Cynthia E Vail. Franchot T Smith. Nicholas G Ventura. Marion E Balcombe. Evelyn A Widstrand. No. 261 — 93.8% 261 Joan E Clark. Patrick A Hendrie, Joyce Patti, Amerigo P Serri, Joan A Mason, James J Smith. Raymond T Brophy. Vivian Monsanto. Michaele G Savini. Catherine Roberts. Anthony P Scotto. Catherine Argibay. Phyllis Reden, Robert A Premus, Brenda D Chandler, Helen G Hopkins, David J Almon, Laura G Davis. Jeremiah P Collins 3rd, Joan M Markowitz. No. 281 — 93.8% 281 Lois K Harrell, Linda M Mardone, Emil Wagschal, John J Williams, Dorian J Schwartz, Harvey Firtell, Joseph Landar, Wilbur L Chapman, Robert F Salem, Walter M Wilczar, Herbert J Goldstein. Robert J Ince, John Salmon, Anthony P Minichello, Joseph J Moran, John J Murphy, Neil T Brosnam, Raymond D Burhette, Nicholas M Marasa, Joseph P Hennessy. No. 301 Pi GRAND OPENING REALTOR — 25 Call ( 9 1 4 ) 24 HOUR 225-3016 SERVICE " W H E R E Y O U R TRAILS END" LISTINGS W A N T E D BUYERS W A I T I N G S P E C I A L I Z I N G : Residential Homes, Commercial, Industrial, Rentals, Land Development, Appraisal, Mortgage Loans. Management. JACK L E M M m in A .MAfil lN f^ANSOl U)!! Pr<KiiJctv>M HOTEL "SAVE THE TIGER" Wellington co-starring .JACK G I L F O R D DRIVE-IN Q A R A Q E AIR CONDITIONINQ • TV MEET YOUR CSEA FRIENDS Ambassador 27 ELK ST. — ALBANY L U N C H E S • DINNERS • PARTIES RUSSELL STOVER,, CANDIES ALL REXALL PRODUCTS HUDSON VITAMIN LINE HALLMARK CARDS ALL NEW GIFT DEPARTMENT LOHERY TICKETS PRESCRIPTIONS NATURALLY COLONIE SERVICE PHARMACY. INC. \ OEWITT CLINTON S t a t * aiid Ea«l« St«.. A l k a n y A KNOTT H O T I L A FAVORITE FOR OVER 30 YEARS W I T H STATE TRAVELERS SPECIAL RATES FOR N.Y.S. EMPLOYEES THOMAS H. G O R M A N . Gen ACADEMY AWARD SHOWCASE WINNER OF 8 ACADEMY AWARDS BEniiiESS advor- J O S E P H T. l E L L E W 303 SO. M A N N I N G I L V D . A L I A N Y «. N . Y . Phone IV 2-5474 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER CIVIL SERIVE BOOKS and all t « s H PLAZA BOOK SHOP 380 Broadway Albany. N.Y. Mail & Phone Orders Filled *TMNS-LUX WEST lit^ • UAEAST /ESSEX UAMEICV it^Mt^lOKil » /OLVimA OEZZl Furnished, Unfurnished, Phene K E 4 - 1 ^ 9 4 best foreign film u t i ^^ the Garden of the Finzi-Coirtinisrt^z 1 ARCO MAYFLOWER-ROYAL COURT A P A R T M E N T S Mgr ^ EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT ALBANY BRANCH OFFICE AVAILABLE C a l l A l b a n y H E 4-4111 apaivvmik m ik-p hi RATES STAYS FOR I N F O R M A T I O N ragarding t i s e m e n t . Please w r i t e or c a l l ; 1275 CENTRAL AVE. (near Valle's) Albany. N.Y. 459-1187 LOEWS CINE I 3r(1 AVE AT 86lh Sf-1?' 1332 1 3 e STATE S T R E E T OPPOSITE STATE CAPITOi S«* your fritndly travtl ag»nt. SPECIAL WEEKLY FOR EXTENDED i.^oion I For your a d d e d c o n v e n i e n c e , f e a t u r e t i m e s a r e s t a g g e r e d | No parking problcm* at Albany'i largati hotel . . . wirh Albany's only driva-in garag«. You'H lik« th« com* fort and convonionco, tool Family raUt. Cocktail loungo. and (Albany).^ Reams. to > 1 years Gateway Building, P.O. Box 9, Towners Road, Lake Carmel. N.Y. f^ARAMOUlNTT PICIURKS CORPORATION and I II JvlWAYS. INC present 11 > Maurice F. OXonnell 93.8% Knight, Review 00 r 13 for Civil Service Finnloypp'- FOR RESERVATIONS — C A L L 230 WESTERN A V E N U E ALBANY 489.4423 Opposite S t a t e Campuses BANQUET FACILITIES Super C o m p u t e r THE FIRST IMPORTANT FILM OF 1973 AND POSSIBLY OF THE SEVENTIES!" A FINE HOTEL IN A NETWORK TRADITION 'Ji M W W The city Dept. of Personnel has found four of the 34 applicants for promotion to supervising computer operator not eligible for exam 2663. which will be held April 14. Those applicants filed during Jan.. 1973. 301 Allen Gross. Morris Miller. Burton K r a f t . Joel Deutchman. Robert Alderman. Muriel A Hochberg, Edward B Chambers, Patricia M Dimeola, Dendridge Pearson, Rita E McKeon, Etta M Jai-visdarrell, Nehama Balos. Richard J Bachrach. Barbara P Saltzman, David A Klein, Bessie R Collins, Louise K Pellegrino, Felix Granielo, Marie M Stein, Richard J Katz. -Arthur Saturday Q < (To be eonttnned) S P E C I A L RATES Whsf SINGLE $ STATE RATE No. 321 — 92.5% 321 Ralph G Greenwood, Barbara Y Powell, Stephen McDonald, eParl M Booth, Albert E Grabberty, Maryann S Petekiewicz, Janice G Sherman, Conway E Moss Jr, Marguerite H a j duk, Sonia H a n a n a . Margie I Saberg. Geraldine Nazer. Roderick D Andersson, Stephen Dremuk, Patricia A Sealey, Rosemarie Friscia, Margaret E Collins, Bettye H Seabrook. William P- Morrissey J r . Justina E Ciani. Gloria K Karovic, Michael T Newsome, Sheila M Fitzsommons, Madeline Marsala. li&MUlONl • UA ASTORU MM-ISUUM KNSON ClNtuflr % iHllCHIi UAPEQIM MOM M A & i AVCgu* UA CIOSSIAY MIKtouAO % •EMTMUMW UAPWilMUiW NAIMI •Ouli IM O'i'lt C Al O 1IHtRAl % OA MiiflOLE /MAKI-'Kio.iui. *UA«4IIMf NiN AE t<M 0«itA UA ilDGEWOOO CINIUH,i •^SLEMCtVf (MAtONAL Gt*«l««l % Uiil OAKS fSEAVIEW MAM STiiu^tM6 • NKMMOAO V KAllONAi OlftlC«Al $ *UAUMRTniX i lRftil «IIIAIITA8M t A0*i*G SLm *CIIIEMA t l QQQ)MCfOO «ll.l*li( >. -NtCUW S J Ht ^ COMMAM I.L UA SMTHTMWI iSMTMAIVTM 'KlIMn f tiio sn,tCTC0 tMtAttts vO CO Gu < ei e2 R E S T R U C T U R I N G PRESENTS M cr AWARDS: The Civil Service Leader was presented with an engraved plaque by the CSEA restructuring committee for its continuinc: efforts in publicizing and explaining the changes in CSEA's structure that have come about during two years of research and meetings by the committee, the delegates and rank-and-file members. The award is accepted for The Leader by its editor, Paul Kyer, holding the plaque, as congratulations are offered by committee chairman A. Victor Costa. Gathered Seeks Officer around are committee members, from left, front, Howard Cropsey, Salvatore Mogavero and Nicholas Puzziferri; back, George Koch, Ernest Wagner, Ronald Friedman, John Adamski and Charles Ecker. Committee members S. Samuel Borelly and Jack Weisz were unavailable for the picture. In turn, Costa himself was presented with a plaque by the other members of the restructuring committee for his efforts in guiding restructuring through to a successful conclusion. The presentation is made to Costa by committee co-chair- Nominations Capital District Sets Wlieels In IVIotion To Become Region IV ALBANY — Nominations for Capital District Conference officers are to be submitted to the nominations committee by April 13, according to committee chairman Ann Kearney. Capital District Conference, will be known as Civil Service Employees Assn. Region 4 (Albany Region) after the re- structured CSEA becomes official on Oct. 1, 1973. All county and state chapters within the region are automatically members of the region. The geographic area of the region encompasses the following counties: Clinton, Essex, Hamilton, Warren, Washington, Saratoga, Schenectady, Montgomery, Albany, Schoharie, Greene, Columbia and Rensselaer. Members of the nominating conunlttee and their telephones (all within area code 518) are: Ms. Kearney, 457-3871; Eleanor Chamberlain, 474-3878; Santa Orslno, 547-3817; Boris Kramarchyk, 457-2135, . and Karen Herbst, 283-2000. The person elected president of the region will also serve as a vice-president of the statewide CX3EA organization. In addition •to the regional president, other regional officers will be (a minimum of) three vice-presidents, a treasurer and a secretary, as mandated under restructuring. Capital District Conference, which normally elects its officers in the spring of odd-number years, will extend the terms of Its Incumbent officers until the fall elections, in line with the CSEA constitution and by-laws, which have been heavily amended during the various restructuring phases. New officers will serve abbreviated one-year, ninemonth terms. All other conferences (soon to be known as regions) will be undergoing the same processes for determining their officers. Nominating committees are to be appointed at least 130 days before the annual meeting of the Association, and nominations of at least two people per office are to be submitted to the statewide secretary at least 85 days before such annual meeting. For this year only. The Leader unofficially has determined tJiese dates to be May 10 for nominat- ing committee to be named, and June 24 for nominations to be submitted to the secretary (June24 is a Sunday, however, and an interpretation on the day before and or the day after may be required). The above are deadline dates, and may vary, as in the case of the April 13 date announced for Capital District nominations, according to the meeting schedules of the individual conferences. Election Procedures The same regulations hold true for the four statewide officers — president, executive vice-president, secretary and treasurer — and for the various departmental representatives to the State Executive Committee. Representatives to the County Executive Committee will continue to be elected as per ttie Individual schedules of their chapters. The two executive committees together comprise the CSEA Board of Directors. Elections for the four statewide offices, the various represen- tatives to the State Executive Committee and the regional offices (at least six officers for each of the six regions) will be by popular vote. Under the outgoing system for conference officers, however, elections had been held among delegates from member chapters. Under restructuring, though, all chapters within a region are automatically members, and CSEA members within the region are entitled to vote for the regional officers . . . but only those within their region. On the other hand, all CSEA members in the state are eligible to vote for the four statewide officers, and all members of state departments are eligible to vote for the departmental representatives irregardless of region. Capital District Conference Is the first to put nominating procedures in motion. Ironically, restructuring committee chairman A. Victor Costa Is a former president of this conference. Stillwater Schools OK Pact (Special To The Leader) STILLWATER — The Stillwater Central School District Unit of the Civil Service Employees Assn. has reached a twoyear contract agreement with the school district calling for a 10 percent wage Increase spread over the two-year term of the agreement. The contract also includes provisions for an Increase in health Insurance benefits, and Increase in n:\aximum sick leave accumulation to 220 days, and a minimum of two hours call-in time for employees called to work beyond their regular schedule. The CSEA school district unit Is now part of the union's Saratoga County Educational Em- ployees chapter, acicording to Aaron Wagner, CSEA field representative, who helped negotiate the school district unit contract. The new agreement was signed by CSEA unit president Roth Hathaway and S. Jay Van Vranken, president of the Stillwater Board of Education. NYG Ghapler Meets A regular meeting of the executive board of the New York City chapter of the Civil Service Employees Assn. will be held April 12, at 5:15 p.m., in Gasner's Restaurant, 76 Duane St., Manhattan, acording to chapter pres. Ident Solomon Bendet. man Ronald Friedman. The life of the committee was extended for two more years by delegates at CSEA's spring meeting last week in order to follow through on implementation of the changes brought about through massive changes in the CSEA constitution, bylaws and general organization. Also at the meeting, more changes were agreed to after debates on Phase III, Part 2, on field services, and Phase IV, on finances. Details of these last two reports will be printed in a future issue of The Leader. Buffalo SUNY Elects Dudek (From Leader Correspondent) BUFFALO — Edward G. Dudek has been re-elected to a two-year term as president of the State University of New York at Buffalo chapter of the Civil Service Elmployees Assn. Also re-elected in voting among the more than 2,000 chapter members were: Robert C. Smith first vicepresident; Etorothy T. Haney, second vice-president; Roger F. Prleday, third vice-president, June W. Boyle, treasurer. Elected to first terms were: William T. Stoberl, fourth vicepresident; Dorothy H. Lewis, recording secretary, and Barbara J. Kauffman, corresponding secretary. Elected to one-year terms on the board of directors were Adrian L. Bleler, administration, and Edgar T. Villa, technical. Two-year terms went to Virginia K. Moronski, administration; Mary C. McCarthy, clerical, William Cottrell, maintenance, and Ralph A. Bauerman, technical. Retiree Bills Need Pushing (Continued from Page 1) vides that this benefit be paid through May 1974. It is hoped that additional legislation will be adopted making the supplemental allowance permanent. It is expected that the Legislature will toe in recess from April 13-25. Your legislators will be home during this period. Contact them and urge the passage of this Important bill. We would also like you to write your legislative representatives at the State Capital. In addition to contacting your own legislators, write Assembly Speaker Perry Duryea and Senate Majority Leader Warren Anderson. Also write the Governor. We would like you to lend a hand In securing the passage of other legislation by similar direct contact. Senator Langley has Introduced a bill to amend the Civil Service Law with respect to survivors' benefits for present retirees. This is Senate Bill No. 1655. Another bill worthy of support is Senate Bill No. 5933 introduced by Senator Ackerson and Assembly Bill No. 7223 introduced by Assemblyman Tills. This provides for a recalculation of the retirement allowance for those whose retirement allowance is less than $4,000 at zero option. Since we last wrote you, our retired membership rolls have grown to over 10,000 and we are continuing to grow rapIdly. There are now six area chapters that have been chartered by our Board of Directors. These are established In the following areas: Capital District, Binghamton, Ithaca, Rochester, Suffolk and Syracuse. We expect to have another large chapter very .soon in the metropolitan area. Insurance Plans There are two relatively new low-cost insurances that are available to retirees. One is the Hospitalization Cash Indemnity Plan that has over 4,000 retired enrollees. There Is also a mass merchandised Auto Insurance Plan available to retirees. If you wish detailed information about either of these plans, they may be obtained through headquarters. Our dues are still a low $4.80 per year. If you wish a full subscription to The Leader, you can obtain this at a special rate of $4.70. Tliere is also a special subscription rate of $1.50 for 12 Issues. You can start receiving Tlie Leader by sending your money to Retirement Subscription, The Civil Service Leader, 11 Warren St., New York, N.Y. 10007. We appreciate your continuing support of CSEA. If you know of any state or political subdivision retiree who is not a member, urge him to join. Remember, there is strength in numbers.