Renews Call For Career Ladders

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Mental
^ ^'Americtt'$
Hygiene
— See Pages
Largest Newspaper for Pubtic Employees
Vol. X X X V , No. 15
Tuesday, July 9, 1 9 7 4
Pru!«»
15
McDonough informs
Mental Hy Delegates
Of October Goal
RECOVERY
CHART
I n jest, Civil Service Employees Assn. p r e s i d e n t T h e odore C. Wenzl said recently
t h a t " I t looks like CSEA is
falling apart with so many of
our key people being hospitalized."
Dr. Wenzl was referring to
himself, statewide secretary Dorothy MacTavish and director of
public relations Joseph Roulier.
The CSEA president is now recuperating at home, although
making regular trips for therapy,
which he is "not enjoying." Dr.
Wenzl had been injured in a
one-car accident May 1, while
traveling to attend a CSEA
function in Cattaraugus County.
He anticipates making a brief
appearance at the CSEA Board
of Directors this week in order
to extend his appreciation.
Ms. MacTavish is listed in
"fair" condition at Albany Medical Center, where she has been
undergoing a series of treatments.
Mr. Roulier is recoveruig at
his home, lollowing surgery recently.
& 14
O n l s
Renews Call For Career Ladders
LAKE PLACID — A renewed d e m a n d for resolution
of c a r e e r ladders was voiced
by Civil Service Employees
Assn. acting president Thomas
McDonough here last month.
Speaking before representatives of 75 Mental Hygiene facilities throughout the state gathered at the Whiteface Inn for
their annual Mental Hygiene
Workshop, Mr. McDonough recounted his recent meeting with
Governor Wilson.
He told the Governor, Mr.
McDonough said, that CSEA
considers it a matter of vital
importance to reach settlement
on the career ladders before the
CSEA
Convention in
early
October.
Career ladders for Mental Hygiene food service workers, as
well as for clerical and maintenance workers and tax examiners,
have been hangia-g fire since
April 1, the deadline set in existing contracts for settlement of
the career ladders.
Protest At Capital
Thousands of CSEA members
from throughout the state had
descended on Albany last March
to protest the lack of the career
ladders, but a private meeting
with Melvin Osterman, director
of the Office of Employee Rela(Continued on Page 16)
8,9
B u d g e t Refuses
Reallocation For
Bank Examiners
Pesci, Blom Denounce The Turndown Of Request
From Banking Dept. As Approved By Commission
(Special to The Leader)
G O O D HEALTH
ClvU service Employees Assn. acting
president Thomas H. McDonough. second from right, gets pleased
reaction from CSEA Mental Hygiene leaders at Workshop last month
at Whiteface Inn, Lake Placid, as he tells them of conversation
with Governor Wilson on career ladders. From left are CSEA collective bargaining specialist Robert Guild, Bronx State Hospital
chapter president William Anderson, Mr. McDonough and Willowbrook State Hospital chapter second vice-president Myrtle Cunningham. (Other photo coverage on pages 8, 9 and 14.)
G r e e n b u r g h Election D u e
D e s p i t e CSEA Protests
(Special to The Leader)
G R E E N B U R G H — T h e Public E m p l o y m e n t R e l a t i o n s
Board h a s s c h e d u l e d a r e p r e s e n t a t i o n a l election for July 12
in t h e T o w n of G r e e n b u r g h over t h e p r o t e s t of t h e Civil
Service Employees Assn. t h a t t h e c h a l l e n g e r s h a v e n o t produced sufficient evidence of a
showing of interest.
unit through the removal of
Ray Cassidy, president of the part-time permanent employees
Westchester chapter. CSEA, said from the bargaining unit.
that PERB had requested him
A CSEA spokesman said that
to sign the necessary forms for PERB in ordering the election is
the election which he refused to violating its own rules' as to
do on the grounds that the SEIU, what constitutes a valid chalthe challenging union, had failed lenge. Greenburgh employees ento come up with a valid 30 per- joy a contract, negotiated by
cent of employee's signatures CSEA. that is among the best
necessary for a challenge. Fur- in the county, the spokesman
ther, Mr. Cassidy said, the CSEA said. "We are not afraid of an
chapter had protested the frag- election, because we know the
mentation, of the Greenburgh
(Continued on Page 16)
ALBANY—The S t a t e Division of B u d g e t h a s been verbally blasted by two t o p Civil Service Employees Assn. o f f i cials for d e n y i n g a o n e - g r a d e s a l a r y r e a l l o c a t i o n for more
t h a n 300 s t a t e employees in f o u r b a n k e x a m i n e r job titles.
The Division of Budget last
month overruled the reallocation the salary reallocations request
which had earlier been approved by the Banking Department for
by the New York State Civil a one-grade increase for the
Service Commission and which more than 300 state employees
had been requested by the State holding job titles of bank examiners, senior bank examiners,
Banking Department.
Victor V. Pesci, Banking De- principal bank examiners and
partment
representative
to supervising bank examiners. The
CSEA's Board of Directors and State Civil Service Department's
chairman of CSEA's State Ex- director of classification and
ecutive Committee, said he was compensation originally turned
"deeply disappointed by the neg- down the request, but that deative decision of the Budget Di- cision was appealed to the Civil
vision." William Blom, director Service Commission and the re(Continued on Page 3)
of research for CSEA, charged
the Budget Division with duplication of work and wasting taxpayers' money as a result. "The
Budget Division should only be
concerned with fiscal implications — are funds available or
not? — and not be concerned
with details once requests are
forwarded with approval by the
Civil Service Commission or
Classification and Compensation," Mr. Blom said.
Denial Called 'Unjust'
Mr. Pesci, in a harsh denunciation of the Budget Division action, called the denial "unjust,"
and pointed out the fiscal effect
of the reallocations on state tax
dollars would have been nil. "The
Banking Department is a firstinstance agency that derives its
resources not from general taxation, but from institutions and
entities it regulates and supervises," Mr. Pesci stated.
CSEA had strongly supported
Some Historical Merit
To Troy's Views On
Bosses' Candidates
C
ITY C o u n c i l m a n M a t t h e w Troy, w h o is also
t h e D e m o c r a t i c l e a d e r in
Q u e e n s C o u n t y , is b l u n t ,
forthright and speaks straight
to the point. He recommended
recently the repeal of the law
providing for primary nominations in order to leave those de(Continued on Page 6)
CSEA Consents To Speedy Tliruway Vote
ALBANY — A l t h . o ( u g h
strongly d i s a g r e e i n g t h a t t h e
u n i t is open to c h a l l e n g e a t
t h i s time, t h e Civil Service
Employees Assn. has consented
to a representation election
among about 2,200 New York
State Thruway Authority employees "just as quickly as possible" in order to get CSEA negotiations on behalf of the Thruway employees back at the bargaining table in the shortest
possible time.
CSEA consented to a speedy
election last week at a hearing
called by the State Public Employment
Relations
Board
(PERB) regarding a petition
filed by the Service Employees
International Union (SEIU).
SEIU attorneys admitted at
the PERB hearing they were unprepared for the hearing and
that SEIU did not seek a quick
election. SEIU specifically said
it did not like the idea of a
mail ballot election among the
Thruway people, which would be
the quickest and easiest to manage due to the geographic locations involved.
INSIDE THE LEADER
state Jobs Calendars
See Page 4
Legislatiun Aft'ecling Public Employees . . . See Page 7
Seek Upgrading For Creedmoor Office Aides See Page 10
Latest Eligible Lists
See Page 15
CSEA collective bargaining
specialist John Naughter said
CSEA consented to a speedy
election "because we are extremely anxious to get back to
the bargaining table with Thruway management and wrap up
the next contract covering maintenance, toll and clerical employees." He said, "CSEA doesn't
believe the unit is legally open
to a challenge at this time, but
we are ready to take on SEIU
and defeat them at the ballot
box as the quickest way to get
back to the table."
PERB
scheduled
another
(Continued on Paire S)
Two CSEA Jobs
Now Available
ALBANY —The Civil Service Employees Assn. is accepting applications for coordinator of retiree recruitment and services and for piubUc relations assistant.
t
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T O ARMS — Officers of the Metropolitan Armories Employees
chapter of the Civil Service Employees Assn. raise hands to take
oath from John Locke, far right, chairman of the statewide Conference of Armory Employees. From left are recording secretary Bert
Cass; corresponding secretary Edward Murray; Daniel Jones, proxy
for executive secretary Roy Seabrook; president Alfred Knight;
sergeant-at-arms Joel Berman; treasurer Leon Nelson, and vicepresident Joseph McPhersoh.
(Leader photos by Joe DeMaria)
Bureau Of Labor Statistics
IVIarl(s 90 Year Anniversary
u
u
>
tc
u
cr.
The U.S. Department of
Labor's Assistant Regional
Director for the Bureau of
Labor
Statistics,
Herbert
Bienstock, who heads the
BLS activities in New York,
last week noted the 90th anniversary of the agency.
u
Pete Monahan, right, of the host 102nd Engineers Armory, welcomes
some of the guests to the chapter installation. From left are Louis
Colby, Executive Department (which includes Armories) representative to CSEA Board of Directors: George Bispham, CSEA New
York City Region 2 supervisor, and Rocco D'Onofrio, recently
appointed CSEA field representative for the region armories.
Psychiatric Switcti
Federal Employees Pay
ALBANY—Dr. Yoosuf A. Haveliwala, deputy director of
South Beach PsycMatric Center
since 1972, will become director
of Harlem Valley Psychiatric
Center effective July 4 at an
annual salary of $43,834. He will
succeed Dr. Anthony Primelo
who has asked to be reassigned
as deputy director of Creedmoor
Psychiatric Center.
MANHATTAN — Finance Administrator Ivan E. Irizarry has
noted the passage by the U. S.
Senate of a bill requiring the
Federal government to withhold
city wage taxes from federal
employees. It had already passed
the House.
ON AG BOARD
ALBANY —Dennis J. Lividas,
of Rochester, has been reappointed a member of the Board
of Visitors of the State Agricultural and Industrial School at
Industry for an unsalaried term
ending February, 1981.
C
^ ^ ^
S .
The measure goes to the White
House and is expected to be
signed by the President.
Research Analyst List
ALBANY—A research Analyst
eligible list, resulting from open
competitive exam 24040, was established June 20 by the state
Department of Civil Service. The
list contains eight names.
E . & l R .
The Bureau of Labor Statistics consumer price index is now
one of the most widely used
measures of retail price movements in the country. While
some of the data collected in
earlier periods of time were collected in a less sophisticated
manner, food price information
has been collected by the Bureau
to some degree since 1890.
Many changes have taken
place in the American way of
life during this period, Mr. Bienstock said, and these changes
are reflected In how the Bureau
collects Its statistics. For example, ninety years ago all persons 10 years of age and over
were included In the tallies of
"gainful workers," but now a
more modernized concept of the
civilian labor force includes only
persons 16 years of age and over,
reflecting changes in legislation
with regard to the employment
of young people.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics Is now perhaps best known
for Its work In measiu-lng consumer prices, although It was
originally created by an act of
congress to "collect Information
upon the subject of labor, its
relation to capital, the hours of
labor, the earnings of laboring
men and women, and the means
of promoting their material, social, intellectual, and moral prosperity."
Some of the prices reported
for earlier periods, such as 12.3
cents a pound for round steak,
and 10.7 cents a pound for pork
chops, may sound unbelievable
to today's consumer, but it
should be noted that payroll
workers in the nation's manufacturing industries were earning
something In the neighborhood
of 15 cents an hour, and might
have worked about 62 hours a
week for It.
Di Brienza \ st
In Lindenhurst
LINDENHURST— Vincent
Di Brienza has been reelected as president of the
Lindenhurst unit, Suffolk
Educational chapter. Civil Service Eimployees Assn. He is also
fourth vice-president of the
chapter.
Other officers elected were:
Vincent Spinella, first vice-president; Julie Banierl, second vicepresident;
Charles
Iverson,
treasurer; Prances Peterson, secretary; Charles Sullivan, executive representative; Walter Amos, alternate representative, and
Peter Allano, sergeant-at-arms.
A .
SPECIAL S U M M E R
TENNIS & GOLF V A C A T I O N
Lcmrn to be a Stenocype Reponet.
Work when you wish—for good pay.
licensed by N.Y. State Education
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CATALOG
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June 25 through Aug. 27
At the luxurious KINGS INN
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$169.
Taxes & Gratuities
Optional Meal Plan available upon
2S9 Broadway • Opposite Gty Hall
CLUB
price of
Holiday surcharge on July 2 & Aug. 27
Land Surveyor List
ALBANY — A land surveyor
trainee 1 eligible list, resulting
from open competitive exam
24035, was established June 13
by the state Department of Civil
Service. The list contains 151
names.
USE YOUR FINGERS
TO GET AHEAD!
FROM CIVIL SHRVICE F.DUCATION AND RECREATION
ASSOCIATION FOR YOU AND MEMBERS OF YOUR FAMILY
Departing every Tuesday -
The coordinator of retirement
reemitmeni and services, a neiw
position at Grade 18, with a
salary of $13,000, will direct and
promote membership recruitment
and services for retired members
ol the Association. The director,
who will work under the supervision of the CSEA executive director, will have responsibility
for establishing local retiree
chapters and in providing advice and direction for established
chapters. Candidates must have
a good knowledge of the state retirement system and of the federal Social Security system.
Minimum educational requirements are high school diploma
or equivalency certificate plus
five years of satisfactory business
experience involving contact with
public. Candidates with a college bachelor's degree need have
only three years ot business experience. Satisfactory combinations of the foregoing educational and experience requirements
are also acceptable.
The public relations assistant,
a Grade 14 position with a salary of $10,361, is open immediately for a person with a high
school diploma or equivalency
certificate plus three years of
appropriate business experience
including newswriting in the publication or advertlsin« field.
Graduation from a recognized
college with credits from a fouryear course in journalism or related subject is a satisfactory alternative, as would be ctmibinatlons of the educational and experience requiranents.
Complete job qualifications,
minimum qualifications required
and job application forms for
the positions listed are available
from Thomas Whitney, Personnel
Officer. Civil Service Employees
Assn.. 33 Elk Street, Aa>any, N.Y.
12207.
Capital District residency Is
specified for the coordinator of
retiree recruitment and services.
A New York State driver's Ucense and car is needed.
18.
request.
10.
r
CSE&RA. BOX 772, TIMES SQUARE S T A T I O N
NEW YORK. N.Y. 10036
Tel: (212) 868-2959
OR
Mr. Sam h:nmicfc. K)60 E. 28ih Sc.. Bn>okl>o, N.Y.
1I2IU Tel (212) 25.^-^488 ( t h a t 5 P.M.)
PLAN A H E A D
{Leader photo by Ted Kaplan)
Mental Hygiene Employees Assn. president
Irene HiUis, left, and IVtHEA secretary-treasurer Edna Percoco take
time out from Civil Service Employees Assn. Mental Hygiene Workshop last month at Whiteface Inn, Lake Placid, to go over plans
for MHEA quarterly statewide meeting at Trinkous Manor, Oriskany,
July 14-15. Both women also serve as officers of CSEA's clutpter
at Willowbrook SUte Hospital.
CIVIL SERVICE LEADIR
AMvrica's Lcodias W*«kly
For Public
IiaployMS
Published Each Tuesday
Publishing Officc:
I Warren St.. N.Y., N.Y. 10007
Business and Editorial Otfice:
II Warren St.. N.Y.. N.Y. 10007
Entered as Second Class mail and
Second Class pustage paid. October
3. 1939. at the Post Office. New
York, New York, under the Act of
March 3. 1879. Additional entry at
Newark. New Jersey 07102. Member of Audit Burvau of Circulation.
Subscription Price $7.00 Per Year
Itidividual Copies, l$c
Erie
Status
Syracuse Region 5 president Richard Cleary, left, reads the oath of office as he installs officers of the
Lewis County CSEA chapter. They are, from left, Fred Tabolt, president; Margaret Tabolt, secretary;
Janet Gibbs, vice-president, and Ronald Gordon, treasurer.
Tabolt Heads
Lewis Slate
LOWVILLE — T h e Lewis
C o u n t y c h a p t e r , Civil Service
E m p l o y e e s Assn., h e l d its
sixth annual banquet and
installation of officers recently
at the Pepper Mill Restaurant,
Lowville.
Installed were Fred Tabolt,
serving his second term as president; Janet Gibbs, vice-president; Ronald Gordon, serving
his second term as treasurer,
and Margaret Tabolt, secretary.
Syracuse Region 5 president
Richard E. Cleary was the guest
speaker and installing officer.
Roger Kane, CSEA area representative, also spoke to the gathering of approximately 280 persons. H. Robert Nortz, Lewis
County Republican chairman,
was master of ceremonies.
Among guests attending were
Sam Villanti, a county legislator; Urban Karcher, Lewis County treasurer, and Fred Loson,
member of the Lowville Municipal Board.
WYCKOFF RENAMED
ALBANY-^ames T. Wyckoff,
of Geneva, has been reappointed
to the Finger Lakes State Park
and Recreation Commission for
an unsalaried term ending Jan.
31. 1981.
Speedy Thruway Election
(Continued from Page 1)
hearing for July 16 in Albany to
discuss the issue of timeliness of
challenge. CSEA and the Thruway Authority are both expected
to present legal briefs challenging the timeliness of the challenge. Later that same day PERB
will hold a second meeting relative to the consent situation and
will probably establish election
timetables at that time also.
To Pursue Legal Issue
Mr. Naughter said CSEA will
pursue the legal issue of timeliness while pushing for a quick
election in order to minimize the
amount of time negotiations by
CSEA on behalf of the Thruway
people are stalled. "While CSEA
seeks a speedy representative
election, SEIU continues to try
stalling tactics by refusing to
consent to a mail ballot election,
and furthermore by questioning
the unit make-up at the initial
hearing," Mr. Naughter stated.
"This stalling effort by SEIU
is designed to prevent the resumption of negotiations on behalf of Thruway employees and
is very harmful to them as a
result. It became very evident at
the hearing last week that SEIU
doesn't understand the Thruway
Authority, the Thruway employees, or some of the very basics
of negotiating for State employ-
Information
tor the Calendar may be submitted
to THE LEADER.
It should include
the date, time,
address and city for the
function.
directly
place,
JULY
9—Statewide Budget Committee meeting: I p.m.. CSEA Headquarters, 33 Elk St.. Albany.
I I—Buffalo State Hospital chapter meeting: 7 p.m.. McCormick's,
6 Hillwood Dr.. Cheektowaga.
11—Thruway Authority Syracuse Division chapter installation: 7:30
p.m.. Marco Polo Inn, Carrier Circle (off Exit 35), Syracuse.
12—Department of Transportation, Albany, joint clamsteam: Lanthiers
Grove. Lathan-i.
14-15—Mental Hygiene Employees Assn. meeting: Trinkous Manor,
Oriskany.
18—Albany Education chapter dinner ^ n d Night at the Races; 6:30
p.m., Saratoga Raceway.
22—Binghamton Area Retirees chapter meeting: 3 p.m., Garden Village, West, 50 Front St.. Binghamton.
25—Thruway unit I meeting: 7 p.m., CSEA headquarters. 33 Elk St.,
Albany.
27—Rensselaer County chapter meeting: 7:30 p.m., Troy Elks Club.
28—Orange County unit steak bake: 2 p.m.. Orange County Park,
day camp area. Montgomery.
AUGUST
10—SUNY at Buffalo chapter annual picnic: Oppenheimer Park.
23—Motor Vehicles clamsteam: Lanthiers Grove, Latham.
30—Department of Criminal Justice Services chapter night at the
races: Saratoga Raceway.
SEPTEMBER
13—Department of Criminal Justice Services chapter
Krause's Halfmoon Beach. Crescent,
clamsteam:
ees. It was plain that SEIU is
just jerking the Thruway employees around. I'm hoping for
an election by later this month
so we can get rid of SEIU and
then CSEA can get back to the
important business of negotiating a new contract for the
Thruway people," Mr. Naughter
said.
Schuylerville
Contract O K
SCHUYLERVILLE — E m ployees of t h e Schuylerville
C e n t r a l School D i s t r i c t r e p r e s e n t e d by t h e Civil Service
Employees Assn. have ratified a
new two-year contract with the
school district calling for an 11
percent salary increase in the
first year and a cost-of-living
wage increase in the second
year of the agreement.
And, according to CSEA field
representative Aaron Wagner,
who helped negotiate the contract, school district employees
represented by CSEA also obtained an improved vacation
schedule, one additional paid
holiday, and eligibility for the
75G 25-year retirement program.
The new contract became effective July 1 and will continue
in effect until June 30, 1976.
Members of the Schuyler Central District CSEA unit of the
Saratoga County
Educational
chapter who comprised the negotiating team included unit
president Robert Lang, Russ
McDougal, Mildred Drew, Harriet Boex and Walt Hayes.
Probation
Deplored
B U F F A L O — T h e s t a t e w i d e Civil Service E m p l o y e e s Assn.
c o m m i t t e e o n p r o b a t i o n c a s t i g a t e d Erie C o u n t y E x e c u t i v e
E d w a r d V. R e g a n a n d c o m p l i m e n t e d t h e c o u n t y ' s p r o b a t i o n M
o f f i c e r s on t h e i r d e d i c a t i o n t o d u t y d e s p i t e a d v e r s e w o r k i n g M
r
conditions as part of their report
c/>
following recent hearings In low state levels as another factor M
causing the poor morale in the <
Cheektowaga.
Charging that the county ex- department, the report comecutive is "insensitive to the mends the CSEA probation \mit nn
problems of probation officers for sponsoring its own fund- r
and lacks knowledge of their raising drives and the preven- n
>
functions," the committee said tion and rehabilitation activities
o
so
funded.
the situation is "fraught with
n
Boys To Camp
58
danger to the safety of the comAmong these efforts of the
munity which is led to place its
H
trust in a probation department CSEA Probation Unit are listed e
woefully overloaded with case memberships for youth in Boy's (t
u>
loads and suffering from low Clubs, YMCA and YWCA, schol- a
Kelleher's
morale because of a four-year arships to Msgr.
delay in upgrading and reclassi- Working Boys' Home and sum- '
mer camps.
fication.
"It's amazing that Mr. Regan,
Last week 10 youthful probawhose county hall is the dte tioners led by probation officer
of the Attica trials, should be so Tom Riley departed for a twounaware of the effects of Attica week summer camp at Utica Colon probation, when the reporting lege, sponsored by the Fellowin the Buffalo newspapers has ship of Christian Athletes, and
been so extensive concerning their stay financed by the Erie
those fateful days and their af- County Probation unit of CSEA.
termath," continues the report
In testimony during the day
of the committee, chaired by and a half of hearings and comJames K. Brady, an Erie County mittee meetings, which led to
probation officer.
the stinging report, it was noted
that an Erie County Personnel
Attica Change
"Attica produced a change in Department study of six selected
the community, emphasizing re- counties—Erie, Niagara, Monroe,
habilitation and integration into Onondaga, Suffolk, and Nassau
the community of violators, who —should be updated.
The updating would show an
formerly would have been autoaverage salary increase of $2,000
matically incarcerated.
"This has increased the inves- in four of them (Monroe, Niagatigative work loads of probation ra, Nassau and Suffolk), with
officers, reducing the time avail- Onondaga in the process, and
able for counseling and rehabili- only Erie complacent, it was
brought out.
tation.
Other testimony: The new,
"Caseloads of over 90 criminal
offenders, per officer, as are tough Narcotics laws are signififound in Erie County, are unreal- cantly increasing and extending
istic and dangerous to the com- probation loads, with lifetime
probation possible.
munity.
• Other Penal Law revisions
"A parent devoting only 15
minutes per month per child produce similar probation probwould be severely criticized, but lems.
Big Differential
a probation officer is expected to
produce the miracle of keeping
• Probation costs are $600 per
the criminal safe for the com- violator vs. up to $20,000 for
munity in the same time.
prison costs.
"Yet, the community is led to
• County not adhering to state
believe that the system works guidelines, which should be manand more and more violators are dated because of 50 percent
released on probation. If it does state funding of probation.
work at all it is because of the
• Too much paperwork.
high degree of dedication despite
• Unless probation services rethe demoralizing conditions in ceive proper attention, violators
Erie County," the report said.
should either be sent to prison
Citing salaries some $2,000 be- or receive unconditional discharges.
• Probation officers should
have enough time to investigate
before reporting a violator safe
at any time in the two-decades- to be free on probation, or have
old attempt. I»esci said the Asso- his freedom denied by a prison
ciation of New York State Bank term.
Examiners first started work on
• Probation is treated as a
a reallocation appeal about 1954.
garbage pail, probation officers,
Mr. Blom said the denial
garbage men.
"seems to indicate that the BudThe hearings and meetings
get Division does not have contook place at the Sheraton Irmfidence in the judgment of the
Buffalo East. Cheektowaga. to
Banking
Department,
which
coincide with the County Divimade the request, or respect the
sion Workshop. Nels Carlson was
decision of the Civil Service ComCSEA staff coordinator.
mission, which concluded the reThe report and recommendaallocation was responsible and
justified." He said the rejection tions were discussed by the comis especially disturbing because mittee with New York State
the Budget Division duplicated Probation Director Walter Dunbar on July 10 in Albany.
the investigatory proceedings of
Refuse Bank Examiners' Reallocation
(Continued from Page 1)
allocations were allowed. That
decision came late last year, but
was overruled last month when
the Division of the Budget denied fiscal approval on the
grounds the reallocations were
"unwarranted."
Extensive Briefs
"That's ridiculous," claims Mr.
Pesci. "We feel the case for a
modest upgrading for bank examiners was completely proved
on its merits," he said, pointing
out that the briefs submitted by
the superintendent of the State
Banking Department were probably among the most extensive
ever presented in support of a
request for reallocations.
Mr. Pesci said he is bitter over
the latest setback and pledged
that CSEA will continue its support of the long fight to win the
upgrades. He noted that the reallocation effort is now 20 years
old and that he feels the request
is even more valid today than
the Civil Service Commission in
a matter not involving actual tax
dollars.
"It has been CSEA's longstanding contention that the
Budget Division's concern should
be fiscal in nature, only, and
in this particular instance this
Ls certainly true," Mr. Blom concluded.
Retirees To Meet
BINGHAMTON — The Binghamton Area Retirees chapter.
Civil Service Employees Assn.,
will have a regular meeting July
22 at the Garden Village, West,
50 Front St. Retirees from
Broome, Chenango, Otsego and
Delaware Counties are invited.
-t
t-
es
•o
«
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On May 21st, t h i s column
c o n t a i n e d t h e following
a b o u t t h e gasoline explosion
in Q u e e n s : "At a n y r a t e ,
t h e r e will be investigation
u p o n investigation a n d , as
o n e o l d - t i m e r p u t it, somebody virill probably h a n g for
it because t h e f i r s t t h i n g of
i n t e r e s t to investigators in
s u c h a case is to f i n d a
" g o a t " to t a k e t h e blame.
Once f o u n d . . . ZONK a n d
he's h a d it."
On Sunday June 30. a story
under Vinnie Lee's and Bob
Carroll's byline appeared in the
Daily News in which as the headline warned: "Three in Trouble
Over Pirehouse Blaze." It goes
on to report that improper supervision was blamed for the
blast, according to the investigation report. What the report
evidently doesn't say is the fact
that at "Annual Inspection"
shortly before thp bLast. the
flock of reports were shown to
the inspecting deputy and everybody who was anybody seemed
to have been notified.
Nothing official has come up
as of this writing and the U.F.O.,
upon reading of it. checked with
Vinnie Lee who as of now elects
to say nothing further. However, U.P.O. President Dave McCormack has pointed out that
the whole Installation is illegal
which may cause some people to
pull in their horns but as predicted here, not one but several
"goats" have bean found. The
fact that one of the "goats" selected happens to be Lt. Walter
Mlschke who was terribly burned
In the explosion and Is still In
Jacobl Bum Center, adds a decidedly bitter taste to the soup.
How lousy can
• you
• *get?
Much comment about last
week's story on the tribulations
of Pireman Dan Sullivan. The
cartoon was the eye catcher.
The artist is a devoted friend of
the firefighter. Mr. George
Meade Sr. who, incidentally, Is
the father of WOR weatherman
up In the helicopter, George
Meade Jr. George Sr., now retired from federal service, Is
tremendously talented and has
produced much work gratis for
the Chief's Association of which
he Is a member. Again, thanks
to you George. It was a stunner!
*
*
•
Congratulations to Lt. Prank
Cull for the fine job In producing the Vol. No. 1 of the "News
Letter." It was a fine job. nicely
low key with some tricky questions handled with kid gloves.
Best of luck for future editions.
Prank!
»
•
•
Supervising Dispatcher Dan
Buckly called to say thanks for
the plug re: his handling of
traffic in the Bronx C.O. during
the collapse at Jennings St. He
wished to share the credit with
Dispatchers Dermis O'Connel and
Don Broderlck who handled the
status board and the radio respectively. A tip of the helmet to
the rest of the crew too!
Some time tigo. Ladder Co. 36
and friends responded first due
to Manhattan Box 1797. The
fire on the 4th floor of 48 Post
Ave. was showing from four windows upon arrival and the troops
had their work cut out for them.
There was a report of a child
trapped up there. When the
truck got to the fire floor, the
fire came out to meet them and
a search was made luider protection of the extinguisher. When
that was empty, they had to
back out and close the door. The
thing was really cooking.
Meanwhile, not having found
anything. Pireman Charles Raven went to the floor above the
fire, forced the door and flopped
down on his belly to try a search.
It was so hot you couldn't live
but he gulped some air and went
In. He was dying without a mask
but there hadn't been time for
State Promotional
Job Calendar
Applications Accepted To July 22
Written Exams August 3
Associate Meteorologist
G-22
35-576
Applications Accepted To August 5
Written Exams September 14G - 2 3
Associate C o m p u t e r Programmers
A s s o c i a t e C o m p u t e r P r o g r a m m e r (Scientific)
A s s o c i a t e C o m p u t e r Systems A n a l y s t
Senior C o m p u t e r P r o g r a m m e r
Senior C o m p u t e r P r o g r a m m e r (Scientific)
Asst Dir o f H o u s i n g a n d BIdg C o d e s Bureau
Senior Building C o n s u l t a n t
S-23
S.23
G-18
S-18
S-29
0-22
35-529
35-530
35-531
35-532
35-533
35-575
35-564
A d d i t i o n a l i n f o r m a t i o n on r e q u i r e d q u a l i f y i n g e x p e r i e n c e a n d
exam subject can be o b t a i n e d by requesting a job announcement
f r o m t h e s t a t e D e p t . o f C i v i l S e r v i c e or y o u r s t a t e a g e n c y personnel
office.
R e g i o n a l offices o f t h e D e p t . o f C i v i l S e r v i c e a r e l o c a t e d a t t h e
W o r l d T r a d e C e n t e r , T o w e r 2. 5 5 t h floor, M a n h a t t a n . 1 0 0 4 7 , 4 8 8 4 2 4 8 ; S t a t e O f f i c e C a m p u s . A l b a n y . N . Y.. 1 2 2 2 6 ; a n d Suite 7 5 0 .
I W . G e n e s e e St. Buffalo. 1 4 2 0 2 .
A p p l i c a n t s m a y o b t a i n a n n o u n c e m e n t s e i t h e r in person or by
sending a s t a m p e d , self-addressed e n v e l o p e w i t h t h e i r r e q u e s t . Be
sure t o s p e c i f y t h e e x a m t i t l e a n d n u m b e r .
that and he finally made the far
bedroom, felt an Infant In a
crib, grabbed her and figured
to dive out the window onto a
fire escape but alas, all the windows were nailed shut. Now
Charlie had to retrace his stei>s
through the rooms he couldn't
see. and the long hallway which
had almost killed him. With the
baby under his coat, he tried one
final dash for the hallway and
made It. Below, they had just
started water and he and his
little fire victim huddled In a
corner of the landing as the
heat and steam rose to meet
them. Plnally he made It down
the stairs and both went to the
hospital but were o.k.
I wonder If anybody will take
the time when she Is grown up
to tell her that she owes her life
to a very brave firefighter? Congratulations Charlie.
*
•
EflM'ly R e t i r e m e n t
For H a i a r d o u s Duty
The Senate has
recently
passed a bill allowing the government's 41.000 law enforcement. prison and fire fighter
personnel to retire after 20 years
of service with pensions worth
10 percent more than they get
now. Retirement allowances under the bill, which was passed by
the House last year, would be
computed at 2V2 percent a year
Instead of the present 2 percent,
for the first 20 years of service.
If the bill's updated Senate
version is cleared by the House
and then signed by the President. which is expected. It would
go Into effect
immediately.
Workers in the hazardous duty
category will begin paying 7V2
percent of salary on December
31 to finance the benefit. Other
federal employees will continue
to contribute at the 7 percent
rate.
A Pint Of Prevention
Donate
. . .
Blood
Today
Call UN 1-7200
•
On June 23rd at 9:20 a.m. as
82 Engine was taking up from
Box 2734. the Dispatcher gave
them another job . . . 989 Pox
St., fire on the second floor . . .
numerous phone calls . . . they
took a look toward Pox Street
and sent the 10-75 4 blocks from
the fire! She was showing real
good. Upon arrival, they foimd
themselves alone with everybody
screaming about a family trapped In the fire apartment. The
truck was taking up from the
other box and would be late. All
alone. Captain Manson got the
stretch going with three men.
One man helping the MPO hook
up, and one man for the truck
work which was about to be
done. The one man was Pireman
Patrick O'Neill.
The fire started In a couch
and the mother tried to put It
out. It spread all over the place
and soon, three rooms were a
roaring torch. Suddenly screams
were heard from the floor above
and Captain told Pat to try and
get them down. Actually the
woman had left her apartment
and went up to tell her neighbor
to flee. She left the door to her
apartment open and opened the
door above as well. This was now
a pretty kettle of fish. The fire
apartment was clear of victims
but the Captain d l d n t know It
and damned near got killed trying to make sure! On the floor
above the fire, Paddy O'Nell was
having a tough time.
Crawling along the floor, he
got to the living room and found
the trapped mother with her
four kids huddled In a corner.
He grabbed two of the kids but
the mother, panic stricken and
hysterical, refused to move so,
he had to drag her down the
hallway with her clutching the
other two kids for dear life. He
made It to the landing and
groped his way down with his
charges. On the verge of collapse
and blind with conjunctavitis, he
wa^ rushed to the hospital and
was granted a week sick leave.
Here then was a perfect case
of desperate need for the man.
the sixth man, the man who
wasn't there . . . 82 Is a rapid
water company. Some tragic day.
somebody is going to get killed
and there are going to be a few
imhappy people when the death
is directly attributed to the man
who should have been there but,
wasn't! . . . All In the name of
economy!
Sanitation M a n Exam
MANHATTAN — A total of
3.200 sanitation man candidates
were called to the comprehensive physical medical part of
exam 3090 from July 9 through
12. by the city Department of
Personnel.
Open Competitive
State Job Calendar
Applications Accepted To August 12
A s s o c i a t e Research A n a l y s t
District S u p e r v Public H e a l t h N u r s e
H i s t o r i c Site M a n a g e r I t
Principal N u c l e a r Power A n a l y s t
$21.545
$17,429
$13,404
$26,516
27-437
27-441
27-399
27-436
Written Exam September 14
Business C o n s u l t a n t
Computer Programmer
Funeral D i r e c t i n g I n v e s t i g a t o r
Public H e a l t h I n v e s t i g a t o r
$13,404
$10,714
$ 9.546
$ 8.523
24-048
24-079
24-081
24-076
Appiicatlons Accepted Continuously
Associate A c t u a r y (Casualty)
Principal A c t u a r y ( C a s u l a t y
Supervising A c t u a r y ( C a s u a l t y )
Senior A c t u a r y (Life)
A s s o c i a t e A c t u a r y (Life)
Principal A c t u a r y (Life)
Supervising A c t u a r y (Life)
Attorney
Assistant A t t o r n e y
Attorney Trainee
Assistant C l i n i c a l Physician
C l i n i c a l Physician 1
C l i n i c a l Physician II
Construction Safety Inspector
Correction Officer (Male)
Factory Inspector
H e a l t h Service Nurse
Hosptial Administration Intern
Industrial F o r e m a n
Junior Insurance Examiner
Junior E n g i n e e r
M e n t a l H y g i e n e Assist. T h e r a p y A i d e
Occupational Therapist
Physical T h e r a p i s t
Speech & H e a r i n g Therapist
Psychologist 1
Psycvhologist II
A s s o c i a t e Psychologist
Public L i b r a r i a n s
Radio Technologist
R a d i o T e c h n o l o g i s t (T.B. Service)
Rehabilitation Counselor
Rehabilitaiton Counselor Trainee
Asst. S a n i t a r y E n g i n e e r
Senior S a n i t a r y E n g i n e e r
Senior O c c u p a t i o n a l T h e r a p i s t
Senior Physical T h e r a p i s t
Sr. S p e e c h a n d H e a r i n g
Senior
Recreation
Tax Examiner
Tax
Examiner
Therapist
Therapist
Trainee
418.369
$22,694
$26,516
$14,142
$18,369
$22,694
$26,516
$14,142
$11.806
$11,164
$22,395
$24,869
$27,640
$10,914
$10,155
$10,318
$10,155
$ 9,005
$ 9,535
$10,155
$10,745
$ 6,164
$11,337
$11,337
$11,337
$15,684
$17,429
$17,429
$10,155 & Up
($7,632-$9,004)
($8,079-$8.797
$14,142
$11,983
$14,142
$17,429
$11,277
$11.277
20-416
20-417
20-418
20-519
20-520
20-521
20-522
20-113
20-113
20-113
20-143
20-414
20-415
20-125
20-541
20-126
20-333
20-555
20-558
29-271
20-166
20-394
20-176
20-177
20-178
20-102
20-103
20-104
20-339
20-334
20-334
20-155
20-155
20-122
20-123
20-550
20-551
$11,277
20-552
$11,277
20-553
$10,155
20-540
$ 9,590
20-540
Teacher
II
$ 9.590
20-581
Teacher
III
$10,745
20-582
Teacher
IV
$12,010
20-583
A d d i t i o n a l information on required qualifying experience and
a p p l i c a t i o n f o r m s m a y b e o b t a i n e d b y m a i l or in person a t t h e following o f f i c e s o f t h e S t a t e D e p a r t m e n t o f C i v i l S e i v i c e : S t a t e O f f i c e
Building C a m p u s . A l b a n y . N e w Y o r k 1 2 2 2 6 ; or T w o W o r l d T r a d e
C e n t e r . N e w Y o r k . N e w Y o r k 1 0 0 4 7 ; or Suite 7 5 0 , I W e s t G e n e s e e
S t r e e t . Buffalo. N e w Y o r k 1 4 2 0 2 .
S p e c i f y t h e e x a m i n a t i o n b y its n u m b e r a n d t i t l e . M a i l your
application form when completed to the State D e p a r t m e n t of Civil
Service. S t a t e O f f i c e Building C a m p u s , A l b a n y , N e w Y o r k 1 2 2 2 6 .
Medal Awards For 1973
The annual award of medals
for the year 1973 for deeds of
conspicuous bravery is made to
the following members of the
service.
The Departmental Medal of
Honor (Posthumous) is given to:
Police Officer Stephen Gilroy of the Emergency Service
Squad number 8.
Police Officer Irving Wright of
the 2(Hh Precinct.
Police Officer Robert Laurenson of the 20th Precinct.
Police Officer Ralph Stanchl
of the 32nd Precinct.
And Police Officer Oeorge
Mead of the 42nd Precinct.
The Police Combat Cross is
awarded to:
Police Officer Prank Carpentler of the 79th Precinct; Police
Officer Jose Adorno of the 81st
Precinct; Police Officer Richard
Chiappa of the 32nd Precinct;
Police Officer Fernando L. Velazquez of the 113th Precinct; Detective James Rushin of the 5th
Detective
District;
Detective
John Mendicino of the 30tl) Precinct; Detective Cleave Bethea of
the 73 Precinct; Detective Philip
Hogan of the Brooklyn Detective
Area, Robbery Squad; Detective
Maurice
Prescott,
Detective
Bureau, Major Case Squad; Lieutenant Patrick Hyndman, Field
Services Bureau; Police Officer
Harvey Oatkin, 75th Precinct;
Police Officer Robert Broderick,
75th Precinct; Police Officer
John Dennis, 75th Precinct;
Police Officer Allan Hofmann,
75th Precinct; Sergeant Joseph
A. Lombardo, 42nd Precinct; Detective James Cary, 42nd Precinct; Detective Joseph P. Goonan, 43rd Precinct; Police Officer
Frederick C, Schultz, 43rd Precinct; Police Officer Arthur Ramos, 25th Precinct; Police Officer Russell Kaercher, 20th
Precinct.
More winners of the Police
Combat Cross are: Police Officer Arthur MollnelU, 75th Precinct; Police Officer Salvatore
Mlclotta, 75th Precinct, and
Police Officer Phillip Parrell,
Detective Bureau, Auto Squad.
Detective Melvln Betty of the
Queens Detective Area. Homicide
Squad; Sergeant Robert O'Neill,
Detective Bureau, District Attorney's Office, Queens County;
Detective William Hoy, Detective Bureau, Major Case Squad;
Detective Cleotls Wright, Bronx
Detective Area, Homicide Squad;
Detective Rudolph F r a n c i s ,
Bronx Detective Area, Homicide
Squad; Detective John Brown,
Detective Bureau. Bronx Detective Area, Robbery Squad; Detective Bobby Harldwlck, Bronx
Detective Area, Homicide Squad;
Detective Ronald Kwocka, Detective Bureau, Queens Detective
Area; Detective William G. Mc-
®Volliswaa«n of Amtrico, 1974.
\bur very o w n
LxsveBug.
A t a s p e d a l , l o w $2499 ,
a sweelhecHt
ofadeoL
Devltt, Detective Bureau. Queens
Detective Area; and Police Officer Concetto R. Tomasello of
the Tactical Patrol Unit.
The Martin J. Sheridan medal
is given to: Police Officer Brian
Tuohy, Emergency Service Squad
number 8.
The Third Alarm medal Is
given to: Police Officer Gilbert
Grape, Emergency Service Section.
The Brooklyn Citizens Medal
for Valor Is given to: Police Officer Charles Zobel, Emergency
Service Squad number 7.
The Daniel B. Freeman Medal
for Valor is given to: Police
Officer Alfred Strub, Emergency
Service Squad number 7.
The William McLain Freeman
Medal For Valor Is given to:
Detective Carmine Morra, 32nd
Precinct.
The Dr. Ernest Fahnestock
Medal For Valor Is given to:
Police Officer Robert Scanlon,
114th Precinct.
The Detective's Endowment
Association Medal For Valor Is
given to: Police Officer Ralph
Isemla, 32nd Precinct.
The Police Department Holy
Name Society Medal For Valor
is given to: Police Officer Richard A. Gamble. 69th Precinct.
The Patrolman's Benevolent
Association Medal For Valor Is
given to: Police Officer Calvin
Johnson, 25th Precinct.
The Police Anchor Club Medal
For Valor Is given to: Police
Officer Dennis Dowd, 17th Precinct.
The Honor Legion Medal Is
given to: Police Officer Donald
McNeil, Equipment Section.
The Sergeant's Benevolent Association Medal For Valor Is
given to: Detective Raymond C.
Drago, 102nd Precinct.
The Isaac Bell Medal For Valor Is given to: Police Offlcei
(Continued on Paire 13)
r
N o w y o u c a n o w n your very o w n
Love B u g , f r o m V o l k s w a g e n .
T h e Love B u g c o m e s in t w o r o m a n t i c
colors. Red hot red. A n d luscious lime g r e e n .
It h a s l o v e l y r a c i n g t y p e w h e e l s .
A n d cute b l a c k trim.
But a t only $ 2 4 9 9 * , we can't a f f o r d
to b e t o o generous.
S o if y o u w a n t o n e , y o u ' d b e t t e r h u r r y .
A l o v e like this w o n ' t last f o r d V e r
Limited Edition
Only 2 1 ) 0 Love Bugs available in the Tri-S(ate area.
*Love Bug East Coast P.O.E., suggested retail price, local taxes and any other dealer charges, if any, additional.
See your participating authoriied Volkswagen dealer and get
your entry blank to win Herbie, the Love Bug, star of
" H e r b i e Rides Again," now a t Radio C i t y Music Hall.
Visit your local authorized Volkswagen dealer and find out why
there are over 4 million Volkswagens on the American road today.
I
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Actuaiy. Senior
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Attoroey Trainee
C 1958 Chief Custodian
I C 167 Correction Officer (Male)
C 350 Health Service Norse
Industrial Foreman
I CC 1956
413 Junior Engineer
Occupational TherapiK
I CC 558
585 Physical Therapfac
C 627 Psychologist
A Hearing
I C 754 Speech
Therapist
C
989
Public
Librarian
I C 672 Rehabilitatioo Counselor
Counselor
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Trainee
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And Hundreds of Other*
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LEADER PUBLICATIONS, I N C .
Publishing O f f i c e : 11 W a r r e n S t r e e t . New Yorli, N.Y. 10007
Business & Editorial O f f i c e : 11 W a r r e n S t r e e t , New York, N.Y. 10007
212-BEekman 3-6010
Bronx O f f i c e : 406 149tli S t r e e t , Bronx. N.Y. 10455
J e r r y Finkelstein.
Paul Kyer. Associate
es
-O
(0
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3
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tMrgest
W e e k l y tor
Public
Member Audit Bureau of Circulations
Published every Tuesday by
Publisher
Publisher
Marvin Baxley,
Editor
Kiell Kjellberg, City
Editor
J a c k Grubel, >1$soc}ate
Editor
N. H. M a ^ r , Business
Manager
Advertisinf; Rporesentatives:
ALBANY — J o s e p h T. Bellew — 3Ci3 So. Manning Blvd., IV 2-5474
KINGSTON, N.Y. — C h a r l e s A n d r e w . — 239 Wall St., FEderal 8-8350
15e p e r copy. Subscription Price: $3.80 t o members of t h e Civil
Service Employees Association. $7.00 t o non-members.
TUESDAY, JULY 9 , 1 9 7 4
No Budge
CD
>
•G
b a n k nites a t t h e n e i g h b o r h o o d t h e a t e r s
REMEMBER
w h e n whole f a m i l i e s would line u p to see movies t h e y
w o u l d n ' t even flick t h e television set on for t o d a y ?
For t h e i n f o r m a t i o n of t h e u n d e r - 3 0 set, b a n k n i t e s were
like local lotteries, with t h e a d m i s s i o n t i c k e t providing a n
o p p o r t u n i t y for a c a s h w i n d f a l l of a h u n d r e d dollars or so,
a n d a c h a n c e a t f l e e t i n g f a m e by h a v i n g your n a m e posted
in t h e t h e a t e r lobby. B a n k nites, as well as m a n y of those
n e i g h b o r h o o d c i n e m a s , are merely e n t r i e s in t h e a r c h i v e s of
n o s t a l g i a now.
I n a n o t h e r f o o t n o t e f r o m t h e p a s t , o n e of t h e issues of
t h e f i r s t C a p t a i n Marvel comic book issued for t e n c e n t s
in 1940, b r o u g h t some $3,000 a t a r e c e n t a u c t i o n in New York
City.
I n k e e p i n g with t h e c u r r e n t n o s t a l g i a craze, t h e B u d g e t
D e p a r t m e n t h a s a g a i n r e f u s e d to h o n o r t h e request by t h e
B a n k i n g D e p a r t m e n t t h a t four b a n k e x a m i n e r job titles be
r e a l l o c a t e d to b e t t e r r e p r e s e n t t h e work loads now i n h e r e n t
in t h e positions.
Even t h o u g h t h e B a n k i n g r e c o m m e n d a t i o n was m a d e
w i t h t h e a p p r o v a l of t h e Civil Service Commission, B u d g e t
still r e m a i n s a d a m a n t in r e f u s i n g t h e r e a l l o c a t i o n for t h e
a p p r o x i m a t e l y 300 positions. I t ' s a d i s p u t e e x t e n d i n g back
to t h e early 1950's.
We c a n only a s s u m e t h a t B u d g e t ' s response is d u e in
some p a r t to a f o n d n e s s for n o s t a l g i a — d o i n g t h e i r bit, so to
speak, to keep t h i n g s t h e way t h e y were.
The Dividers
s MOST every schoolchild in t h i s c o u n t r y learns a t a n
early age: " U n i t e d we s t a n d , divided we fall," f r o m
J o h n Dickenson's "Liberty Song."
Similarly, a p a t r i o t in t h e early d a y s of t h e U n i t e d
S t a t e s ' e f f o r t s to achieve i n d e p e n d e n c e , declared:*"We m u s t
all h a n g t o g e t h e r , or surely we s h a l l all h a n g s e p a r a t e l y . "
Out in Sullivan County, t h e Civil Service Employees
Assn. is t r y i n g to get t h a t message across to public employees
it h a s long r e p r e s e n t e d in t h a t h e a r t l a n d of t h e Catskill
resorts.
I n Sullivan, t h e Service Employees I n t e r n a t i o n a l Union,
f r e s h f r o m d e f e a t s in c o u n t y w i d e r e p r e s e n t a t i o n elections in
two n e i g h b o r i n g counties. O r a n g e a n d Ulster ( n o t to m e n tion two r e c e n t d e f e a t s in s t a t e w i d e B a r g a i n i n g Units, I n s t i t u t i o n a l a n d P r o f e s s i o n a l - S c i e n t i f i c - T e c h n i c a l ) , is now toying w i t h t h e idea of b r e a k i n g Sullivan C o u n t y down into
local u n i t s .
At a r e c e n t P E R B h e a r i n g , SEIU r e q u e s t e d a n election
for one slice of Sullivan, with t h e A m e r i c a n F e d e r a t i o n of
S t a t e , County a n d Municipal Employees g e t t i n g f i r s t grabs
a t a n o t h e r slice.
As a n e x t step, m a y b e they c a n come u p with a n arr a n g e m e n t whereby two people with size 14 D shoes could
be considered as h a v i n g a bond of m u t u a l i n t e r e s t for representation.
It s e e m s to us one m a t t e r for a c h a p t e r - w i d e u n i o n to
try to b r i n g in t h e s p l i n t e r u n i t s , b u t a n entirely d i f f e r e n t
s i t u a t i o n w h e n a n outside o r g a n i z a t i o n tries to split a n o t h e r
union apart.
We h o p e P E R B will t u r n d o w n — a s t h e y h a v e in similar
s i t u a t i o n s in t h e p a s t — t h e request to f r a g m e n t t h e Sullivan
County public employees. To us, t h e u n i o n f r a g m e n t a t i o n c a n
only result in a s i t u a t i o n where t a x p a y e r s ' m o n e y will be
s q u a n d e r e d in repetitive a n d prolonged d u p l i c a t i o n in f u t u r e
negotiations.
A
(Continued from Page 1)
cisions for the party leaders. In
his characteristic way. Troy did
not use the term "party leaders"
but "party bosses."
What provoked Troy's comment was the fact that the Republicans had come up with a
geographically and ethnically
balanced ticket, while the Democrats were worried that the Democratic ticket would be unbalanced after the primary votes
are counted in September.
Historical Perspective
History says a great deal for
Troy's position. Selection of candidates for Governor by the Republican bosses produced such
great governors as Charles Whitman, Thomas E. Dewey and
Nelson A. Rockefeller. The Democratic bosses produced such
great governors as Alfred E.
Smith, Franklin D. Roosevelt,
Herbert H. Lehman and Averell
Harriman.
Even when their candidates for
Governor were defeated, the political bosses produced great
candidates. Republican contenders who were defeated include
Commissioner
Robert
Moses,
Dewey (who lost his first race
to Lehman), and United States
Senator Irving M. Ives. Democratic candidates who suffered
defeat include such distinguished
New York Citizens as Robert
Morgenthau (the present Democratic candidates for Manhattan
District Attorney).
Harriman
(who lost his re-election campaign
to Rockefeller),
and
Queens Supreme Court Justice
Frank O'Connor.
From the Democratic party
pomt of view, their first candidate for Governor who was selected by the primary process
wa;s Arthur Goldberg, a person
of rare distinction who had pi-eviously served as Secretary of
Labor in the Administration of
President John F. Kennedy, and
subsequently served as a United
States Supreme Court Justice
and as the American Ambassador
to the United Nations. In spite of
his tremendous credentials, Goldberg scored a narrow primary
victory over Howard Samuels
and was soundly defeated in the
election by Governor Rockefeller.
First Primary Fight
Goldberg was the first nominee for Governor who passed the
crucible of a primary fight under
the new State Law. From an
ethnic and geographical point of
view, the Democratic ticket four
years ago consisted of four Jews
and one black, all of whom resided in New York City or its
immediate suburbs. How much
of the defeat of that ticket can
be ascribed to its imbalance is
a matter of controversy among
political scientists.
The imbalance theory is offset
at least in part by the fact that
Governor Rockefeller Ls probably
the finest political campaigner
in the country, and in part by
the fact that Goldberg proved to
be a dud as a campaigner.
While
history substantially
supports Councilman Troy's approach, the question is whether
the clock can be turned back.
The recent trend has been towards community participation,
towards quotas of one kind or
another in employment and in
campaigm for public office, towards meeting the demands of
the women's liberation movement
in support of women candidates
for public office.
Civil Service
Law & You
By R I C H A R D GAB A
Mr. Gaba is a member of the firm of White, Walsh and Gaba,
P.C., and chairman of the Nassau County Bar Association Labor
Law Committee.
Right To
Appeal
A r e c e n t decision of t h e N a s s a u C o u n t y S u p r e m e Court,
Special T e r m , P a r t I, w r i t t e n by J u s t i c e B e r t r a m H a r n e t t ,
h e l d t h a t a n Article 78 p r o c e e d i n g a t t a c k i n g a school board's
f i n d i n g t h a t a t e a c h e r who was a b s e n t d u r i n g a s t r i k e failed
to overcome t h e p r e s u m p t i o n t h a t h e r a b s e n c e was d u e to
t h e strike, m u s t be r e f e r r e d to t h e Appellate Division purs u a n t to Section 7804(g) of t h e Civil P r a c t i c e Law a n d
Rules.
*
*
*
THE CASE ASSUMED g r e a t i m p o r t a n c e b e c a u s e of t h e
relatively sparce a u t h o r i t y o n t h i s q u e s t i o n a n d t h e p o t e n tially large b u r d e n of cases. I n t h i s p a r t i c u l a r proceeding,
t h e r e were 39 cases in t h e F a r m i n g d a l e School District disp u t e , all of w h i c h p o t e n t i a l l y would be r e f e r r e d to t h e Appellate Division or r e t a i n e d in Special T e r m .
Ordinarily, Special T e r m of t h e S u p r e m e C o u r t a d j u d i c a t e s Article 78 p r o c e e d i n g s w h e r e t h e issue r a i s e d is one
of a r b i t r a r i n e s s , a b u s e of discretion, or illegality. However,
t h e s t a t u t e requires t h a t w h e r e a n issue specified in question 4 of Section 7803 is raised, t h e m a t t e r m u s t be t r a n s ferred to t h e Appellate Division.
CPLR 7803(4) e n u m e r a t e s one of t h e f o u r q u e s t i o n s
w h i c h m a y be raised in a n Article 78 proceeding, " w h e t h e r
a d e t e r m i n a t i o n m a d e as a result of a h e a r i n g held, a n d a t
w h i c h evidence was t a k e n , p u r s u a n t to direction by law
is, on t h e e n t i r e record, s u p p o r t e d by s u b s t a n t i a l evidence."
Even if t h e r e a r e o t h e r p o i n t s raised in t h e Article 78 petition, once t h e question of s u b s t a n t i a l evidence is r a i s e d
p u r s u a n t to CPLR 7803(4), t h e e n t i r e m a t t e r m u s t be t r a n s ferred to t h e Appellate Division.
T h e Taylor Law requires a h e a r i n g in t h e e v e n t t h e r e
is a d i s p u t e of f a c t as to s t a t u t o r y violation by individual
public employees. T h e T a y l o r Law provides for review of
t h e d e t e r m i n a t i o n a f t e r h e a r i n g by way of a n Article 78
p r o c e e d i n g b u t m a k e s no r e f e r e n c e to t h e q u e s t i o n of t r a n s fer to t h e Appellate Division.
»
•
»
THEREFORE, THE g e n e r a l principles of t r a n s f e r a b i l i t y
u n d e r Article 78 CPLR m u s t prevail. T h e issue is n o t w h e t h e r
t h e h e a r i n g is m a n d a t o r y or d i s c r e t i o n a r y . T h e r e m u s t
plainly be some legal r e q u i r e m e n t of a h e a r i n g w i t h evidence
t a k e n a n d a p r o d u c t i o n of a n e n t i r e record.
T h e Taylor Law does n o t specify t h e type of h e a r i n g
t h a t m u s t be held where a public employee c o n t e s t s a p a y roll d e d u c t i o n as a r e s u l t of his alleged p a r t i c i p a t i o n in a
strike. T h e s t a t u t e merely s t a t e s t h a t t h e public employer,
a f t e r m a k i n g a d e t e r m i n a t i o n t h a t a m a t e r i a l q u e s t i o n of
f a c t is p r e s e n t e d by t h e employee's a f f i d a v i t w h i c h c o n t e s t s
t h e payroll d e d u c t i o n " s h a l l a p p o i n t a h e a r i n g o f f i c e r to
d e t e r m i n e w h e t h e r in f a c t t h e employee did violate t h e
s t a t u t e a f t e r a h e a r i n g a t w h i c h s u c h employee s h a l l bear
t h e b u r d e n of proof . . ."
T h e r e a r e no prescribed procedures e i t h e r in t h e s t a t u t e
or in P E R B r e g u l a t i o n s . However, t h e h e a r i n g s a r e a necessary p r e c e d e n t to p u n i s h m e n t a n d necessarily p a r t a k e of
a quasi judicial n a t u r e . T h e c o u r t h e l d t h a t t h e h e a r i n g
in t h i s -case was quasi j u d i c i a l in n a t u r e , t h a t it was h e l d
p u r s u a n t to direction of law, t h a t t h e basic t r i a l p r o t e c t i o n s
were observed, a n d t h e r e was full o p p o r t u n i t y t o p r e s e n t
evidence a n d to c r o s s - e x a m i n e witnesses.
T h e record a n d t h e decision are s u f f i c e n t l y c o m p l e t e so
t h a t t h e p e t i t i o n e r (employee) could properly r a i s e t h e
question t h a t t h e decision was n o t s u p p o r t e d by s u b s t a n t i a l
evidence. Accordingly, t h e c o u r t held t h a t t h e Issue fell
w i t h i n CPLR 7803(4) a n d t h e r e f o r e required t r a n s f e r of t h e
e n t i r e proceeding to t h e Appellate Division u n d e r CPLR
7804(g). Application of Kaplan v. Kinsler, 353 NYS 2d 643.
Balanced Ticket
No doubt Councilman Troy envies the abilities of the Republicans to come up with a geographical and ethnically balanced ticket, because of the unified leadership exerted by Gov.
Malcolm
Wilson,
Assembly
Speaker Perry B. Duryea, Jr.,
and Senate Majority Leader
Warren M. Anderson.
To the extent that a balanced
ticket may be of significance to
the voters, the Republicans have
as of this moment an obvious
edge over the Democrats. The
significance of that edge will be
determined after the September
primary shows how balanced or
imbalanced the Democratic ticket will be.
Only time will tell whether the
primary system for selecting candidates for Gfovernor is superior
to the party "bosses" system advocated by Councilman Troy.
The standard by which the primary system will have to be
measured is a high one.
(OontlniMd on Pace U )
CSEA Reports On Public Employee Bills
ALBANY—The Civil Service Employees Assn. statewide legislative and political action
committee has issued a summary of the fate of various bills in the recent legislature which
had affected public employees pro or con. The report was mailed to all chapter presidents.
Members of the committee are John Clark, chairman, and John S. Adamskl, Ruth
Braverman, Frank Imholz, Delbert Langstaff, Ralph Natale,
Victor Pesci, Vincent Rubano,
John Vallee and Angelo Vallone.
Their report follows.
BILLS SIGNED BY THE
GOVERNOR:
A 11645 - S 10413 — Omnibus
Retirement Bill
This bill extends all temporary
benefits to June 30, 1975. It continues negotiability of retirement
benefits at a local government
level in order to provide for an
opting up to 7&(i). This bill also
revises the requirements for eligibility of survivors to a death
benefit if an employee had been
on the payroll within one year
prior to death.
It also revises the death benefit to require 90 days of continuous service during the 15
month period prior to death. In
addition, It provides for membership In the Retirement System for those employed prior to
July 1, 1973 who did not join.
A 12338-A - S 10675-A — Supplemental Pension Bill
This bill provided for a supplementation program for pensioners and beneficiaries payable
June 1, 1974 and continuing
through May 31, 1975. Pensioners who retired prior to 1969
shall receive, in addition to the
supplementation program that
had been in the retirement law
an additional percentage ranging
from 4 percent to 11 percent
based on their actual year of
retirement. In addition, employees who retired prior to January
1, 1958 shall have their pension
increased by 60 percent.
A 12476-A-S 10833-A — Im-
passes
This bill changes the impasse
procedure under the Taylor Law.
The amendment provides that
employees of a school district
will not be mandated to have a
legislative hearing after the report of the factfinder has been
submitted to both parties. It
provides that the Public Employment Relations Board may intercede by bringing both parties
together to discuss the factfinder's recommendation which
at the same time PERB may request the legislative body to
have a representative committee present at this meeting.
The rationale behind this is to
prohibit a school board member
from sitting on the negotiating
team during an impasse, argue
the employer's side of the case
during the factfinding hearing,
receive the report of the factfinder and then use his powers
as a legislator and implement
any benefit that he feels advisable.
A 8680-A-S 7455-A — Pay
Raise for 1974
This was a budget bill that
Implemented the pay raise and
other provisions of the second
year of the state contract.
S 1709-A — Pensioners' Increased Earnings Bill
This bill was passed and
signed by the Governor. It increased the amount of money
that a retiree may earn up to
$2400, if the retiree was re-employed in public service. This
was to conform with the social
security limitation.
A 12193 - S 10483 — Heart Bill
This bill extends to August 31,
1975 the provision that any condition of the heart resulting In
disability or death shall be presumptive evidence that it was
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BILLS VETOED BY THE
GOVERNOR:
Q
<
A 12375 S l^TSS — FamUy
Services Bill
r
This bill provided for the C/5
creation of the Division of Fam- n
PS
ily Service under the Executive <
Branch of state government. It n
also provided for the transfer of m
various fvmctions from the Divi- r
sion of Youth, the Office of Lo- M
>
cal Government and the Depart- O
n
ment of Social Services.
Very basically, this bill would NJX
provide for a functional realign- H
ment of the state's social ser- e
(t
vices' programs and transfer 0)
a.
S9
them to the new Division of V!
Family Service. This would be
done on both state and local
level.
We vehemently opposed this
bill in both houses, although it
was passed in the Senate over
our objection and received the
necessary amount of votes (76)
In the Assembly for passage, we
have written to the Governor
opposing this legislation and
have requested some of our local
groups to do the same.
S 10295 — Pension Exclusion
From State Tax
This amends the state tax law
to subtract from federal gross
income for Income tax purposes.
Pensions to employees of any
other state and reciprocal agreements with other states would
exclude New York State pensions
from their state tax.
BILLS NOT PASSED:
S 6613 — Senior Management Service Bill
This bill would have created a
senior management service. It
would have been against the
basic tenets of the merit system.
It would have created dissension
among the working force since
there would have been various
rules for promotion outside of
normal civil service regulations.
Further, it would have placed a
great many of our members in
a management/confidential position. This bill was defeated.
A 12319 — Omnibus Taylor
Law BiU
This bill was an omnibus bill
which dealt with many subjects.
Of main concern to us was the
provision that would have allowed employees of the New
York State Waterfront Commission to be covered under the
Taylor Law. However, also contained in this bill was a new
section of the Taylor Law which
defined the term supervisor.
This was to be "a non-managerial or confidential employee
who has the authority to assign,
transfer, recall or discipline employees or responsibility to direct
them, or to adjust their grievances, or effectively to recommend such action, as long as it
Is not a merely clerical nature,
but requires the use of independent Judgment." The change
further provided that supervisors
could not be in a bargaining unit
with other employees and an employee organization was prohibited I'rom representing both
groups in a bargaining unit.
Through our lobbying efforts
we managed to defeat this bill
even though it would have allowed our members In the
Waterfront Commission to be
covered under the Taylor Law.
A 11044 - S 5301 — Agtney
Shop Bill
This bill died in Committee in
(CooUnMd on Pace U )
Tearfully exclaiming that she never expected the award, Ms. Dufft',
first white woman on the right, is surrounded by well-wishers after
she had returned to the audience.
Longf-time fighters for the rights of Mental Hygiene employees, Betty Duffy, left, and Ann Bessette were
honored by special presentations made to them at the Mental Hygiene Workshop last month. Here they
look over the plaques that were presented to them by CSEA acting president Thomas H. MlcDonough.
Both women are veteran members of CSEA Board of Directors, with Ms. Duffy, president of Pilgrim
Psychiatric Center chapter, representing Long Island Region 1, and Ms. Bessette, president of Harlem
Valley chapter, representing Southern Region 3.
One of the rewards Ms. Bessette received, in addition to the engraved
plaqve, was a congratulatory kiss from acting president McDonough.
Applauding in backgi-ound are CSEA vice-president William McGowan, Shirley Rice and associate counsel John Rice, who served
as master of ceremonies for the Saturday evening banquet.
Bessette, Duffy Honored
For Meritorious Service
Diligently taking notes at one of the seminars to report back to
members of their chapter, are these three delegates from Willowbrook Psychiatric Center, from left, Helen Gennaro, Alice DeMasi
and Mary McLaughlin.
Heading delegation from Willowbrook, chapter first vice-president
Felton King speaks out durhig one
of the education sessions.
Sunday morning Presidents Meeting was attended by, from left
foreground, Nicholas Puzziferri, Southern Region 3 Mental Hygiene
representative to CSEA Board of Directors; Ric Recchia, Hudson
River chapter first vice-president, and Ed Gagnon, Gouvemeur
chapter president. Rockland Psychiatric chapter first vice-president
Eva Katz is identifiable in background.
Wives of prominent CSEA officials renew acquaintances at Whiteface Inn. From left are Arlene Gallagher, Marian Diamond, Jeanne
McGowun and Pauline McDonough. Their husbands' CSEA positions
are, in order: treasurer, director of education, vice-president and
acting president.
Chartes Peritore, left. Western Region 6 Mental Hygiene representative and Craig State School chapter president, exchanges views
with John Clark, Southern Region 3 first vice-president and Letchworth Village chapter president.
Field representative Adele West, left, rives some firvthand advice to officers ot one of CSEA's newest
chapters. South Beach Psychiatric Center on SUten Island. Encaged in workin,s out a problem with
her are, from left, chapter president Thomas Bucaro, rehabilitation delegate George Boncoraglio and
first vice-president Joseph D'Amore.
Elect McGowan
Chairman Again
One of the most active chapters at the Workshop was Pilgrim State,
as indicated in this photo of, from left, Harry Raskin, Henry Bittner and Ben Kosiorowski, shown here in an intense debate.
William McGowan, center. Western Region 6 representative from West Seneca to CSEA Board of
Directors, was re-elected chairman of the Mental Hygiene Council at Sunday morning meetingr of chapter presidents. Gregory Szurnicki, Long Island Region 1 representative from Kings Park, was «lected
vice-chairman, and Betty Duffy, Region 1 representative from Pilgrim, was re-elected secretary.
Hundreds Attend Mental Hygiene Workshop
Sheridan chapter president Richard Artis, right, and his wife, discuss
their reaction to the Mental Hygiene Workshop with John Kostulas,
of the same chapter at Manhattan State School.
James Gripper, left, recently installed president of Kings County
State School chapter, and his wife, Vivian, take opportunity io meet
with CSEA acting president Thomas H. McDonough.
Two members of CSEA Board of Directors, Joseph Keppler, left, Long Island Region 1 from Central Islip, and
James Moure, Syracuse Region 5 from Utica, exchange
views.
Delegates from chapters throughout state crowd meeting hall to hear presentations of "Handling Disciplinary Grievances" by Ronald Donovan and "Disciplinary Issues" by Irving Markowitz. Professor
Donovan is with Cornell University and Dr. Markowitz is an arbitrator.
Representing their chapters at Presidents Meeting were,
from left, Richard Snyder, Wassaic; Audrey Snyder,
Hutchings; Dorothy King, Creedmoor, and Peter Sheremeta. Central Office.
CSEA executive director Joseph Lochner takes time from
his schedule to inform the delegates at general biuincss
tfession Friday evening on membership recruitment.
ihuOm pbom br Tad M m )
Grade
5 Stenos'
Plight
Point At
Hospital
QUEENS—In their continuing fight for upgrading and
financial recognition, secretaries and clericals at Creedmoor
State Hosptial have released the copy of a petition explaining the need for upgrading of Grade 5 stenographers.
ON
"a
CB
to
V
S
H
Qd
u
Q
u
u
u
>
cd
u
cn
T h e petition Is being pushed by
members of the administrative
unit, Creedmoor chapter. Civil
Service Employees Assn.. accord'n« to Shirley Krelsberg of the
*nlt.
The petition to the Department of Civil Service states. In
part:
"In view of the fact t h a t Grade
3 and Grade 4 employees are
being given the opportunity of
upgrading by taking an officeBROOKLYN STATE C O N T R A C T
Sol Gordon, seated at right, president of the Brooklyn aide examination. Grade 5 level,
State Hospital chapter. Civil Service Employees Assn., signs his name to the new employees contract. classifying them in the same
S-eated next to him is Dr. Morton B. Wallach, hospital director. Standing, from left, are: Edward Weeks, category of stenographers Grade
personnel director; Roy Trottman, chapter second vice-president; Gertrude Holly, food service; Mary
5 level, it would seem t h a t the
O'Leary, therapy aide; William J. Cunningham, official delegate; Mary Patterson, nurse,, and Neil Dun- present Grade 5 level of stenogcan, grounds.
raphers should be given an up_
ENCOURAGE BUSINESS
grading on the basis of the years
of experience on the job and the
New York State's Job Incenmany skills t h a t are required and
tive program encourages busidemanded of secretaries in the
ness and industry, through tax
incentives, to locate, expand or Department of Mental Hygiene.
A n l i q u e s Shops §
improve facilities in eligible urban
"It is for this reason t h a t the
and rural areas in the state. undersigned ask t h a t more conThese include the 15 largest cities
sideration be given and t h a t imin the state, 25 rural counties, mediate upgrading be Instituted
Open 10:30 6,
Sun. 1 6
and all Indian reservations. For
Closed Fndayi
as has been recommended by
information, write to the Job I n department heads and the direccentive Bureau, New York State
tor of this hospital. It would
g
SPEEIALEXHIET
d^jly l § - 2 G t h g
Department of Commerce, 99 seem reasonable t h a t secretaries
Washington Ave., Albany, N.Y. who have been performing on a
12210.
d
S h e S e e p S t e i n ^ of Y e ^ t c p d a y
^
Grade 5 level for a period of 2
or 3 years be given a Grade 7
Admission
IT'S ALL AT 962 T H I R D AVE.
ON CRIME BOARD
and those wlio have been perT
fiflfl
ibst 57(h jnd 58in Su )
forming and demonstrating satALBANY—The Governor has
isfactory and superior skills for
reappointed
Stanley L. Van
more than 3 years be automatiRensselaer, of Saratoga, and P.
cally promoted to a Grade 9
Vincent Land!, aS Massapeqiia as
level to offset the years of Inchairman and member, respecjustices and denial of their h u tively, of the Crime Victims
man rights and dignity. This
Compensation Board. Chairman
might also apply to the secreVan Rensselaer will serve until
taries who have been working on
Feb. 28, 1981, a t an annual salGrade 9 level for a period of
ary of $37,618. Member Land!
years. . . .
will .>erve -until Feb. 28, 1977
"This appeal is a matter of
at a salary of $33,451.
h u m a n rights, especially since
monieo have been allocated for
UNUSUAL WEEKENDS & VACATIONS
mental hygiene. A percentage of
at the
this allocation should go to steNEW AGE-HEALTH FARM (1 hr. NYC)
nographers, as monies have been
a growth center of
allocated to other mental hyIANDONLY L O N G E S T
THE ON
A q u a r i a n Age.
giene-hospital
employees.
All
Meet people &
RUNNING SHOW ON BROADWAY
Communicate
in
mental hygiene employees are
an atmosphere of
beauty & joy. Lg.
p a r t of a team, and should not
pool, 13 acres adbe discriminated against due to
jacent to mountains, yoga, medititles. Job responsibilities and
tation,
reducing,
duties of the secretaries have
fasting
health
foods,
massages,
changed drastically since the orastrology, l i g h t
iginal job classifications were Issensitivity groups,
workshops.
sued and this should be taken
R0YALE THEATRE 45TII S'lKKKT \V of BROADWAY
Reas. - Broch. Bx 584, Suffern,
Into consideration for upgrad(SEE A8C ADS FOR DETAILS)
NY 10901 or 914 357-7308
ing. . . .
"Another factor to be considered Is the present economic situation. We again ask t h a t immediate priority action be taken.
H I G H E S T RATING N Y DAILY NEWS
"One must remember t h a t no
one agency can really effectively
eo
^^ewiSrk
^.Antiques
f]der One Roo:
Therels a reason for that!
AMERICA'S
AWARD WINNING
MUSICAL!*
* * * *
^WINNER OF
24 LOCAL AND
NATIONAL AWARDS
FOR MUSIC, LYRICS, DIRECTION
PERFORMANCES AND BEST
BROADWAY CAST ALBUM
ptO(ktClK>n ol 4
XoiMiPolandfl
Jacteofeon^e^iBiaif^
itcHNeoR* Fiwvisar;
R]..fs,
J iPWAMUUNIPWSlNWIION ' '
Third Parties
Are Appointed
ALBAIIY—The State Public Employment Relations
Board announced the appointment of mediators and
fact-finders to various school districts and local governments for
disputes involving the Civil Service Employees Assn.
Mediators named by PEKB are:
John Wolskl, of Buffalo, to the
dispute between the East Aurora
Union Free School District. Erie
County, and the East Aurora
unit of CSEA; Dr. Felican Foltman of Ithaca, to the dispute
between the Arkiport unit of
CSEA and the Arkport Board of
Education Central School District
in Steuben County; and Stanley
R. Oppenheim, of Coblesklll, to
the dispute between the Canajoharie Central Schools (Montgomery County) and the CSEA
Canajoharie unit.
Appointed fact-finders are:
Alice Cook, of Ithaca, to the dispute between CSEA and the
Spencer-Van
Etten
Central
School District, in Tioga County;
Joseph B. McManus, of Rochester, to the dispute between the
City of Corning and Police Union,
CSEA unit, and Wilbur E. Kidder, of Troy, to the dispute between the New Hartford School
District (Onieda County) and
CSEA, New Hartford Central
unit.
P r o p e r t y Asst. List
ALBANY — A surplus real
property assistant eligible list,
resulting from open competitive
exam 24057, was established
June 19 by the state Department
of Civil Service. The list contains eight names.
BINGO BALL
ALBANY—Ira M. Ball, of New
Hartford, has been reappointed
chairman of the Bingo Control
Commission at an annual salary
of $33,389. while Leo A. Plnckney, of Auburn, has been renamed a member at a salary of
$89 per day.
EMANUEL L.WOLF Pr««.u
Jlim B R O W N
P R B D WIXaUAMSOSt
J I M k K f i U Y
DoNT BoTrieR
ME.
ICaNTcOPE.
iwT^
-xitsrssr
EXTIAPEIF. EVERY SAT at 10 P M
j Th» Inuimtioo*ttouadtnckAvftil»bl« oo Curtom Racorda uvii Ain^ji
Color by DcLux** An AUiad ArtuU BalM
ON THe weST SIO€
loewsStatet'OrottctT
47 St.. W. It r « a v * 757 7 1 1 4
' [ N O ONE WILL BE ADMITTED AFTER FEATURE B E G I N ^
perform or be accredited without
the teamwork of the secretarial
staff. Since we the undersigned
have given loyal and dependable
service, we ask t h a t you empathize with us by granting our
request of an upgrading."
r/(3
THeneiiiiUB'''^'
U
t 'I* *•* CO S W30
lO IS.IM
— SO. 3:40, S 30.7 20,1'. - J15.11
IJLI.I
C M THe fAST
SlOf
LOEWS CINE
Ird /^VCNUE AT «6m ST 427 1332
U. 1:45.3 30, i IS. 7.1:45.10:20
This Week's New York City Eligible Lists
EXAM 3113
HEARING ADMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES COOR.
This list of 621 eliglbles, established July 2, resulted from
Oct. 27, 1973 written testing,
for which 1,419 candidates filed,
1,417 were called, and 379 appeared. Salary is $11,000.
No. 1—102.50%
1 James M O'Hara, Matthias
G Gleason, Francis J Welby,
Morris Skolnick, Jessie N Baringer, Joan Friedman, Thomas
F Barton, Michael E Phillips,
Robert W Reardon, Allan P Guttentag, Ernestine Daniels, Spencer M Schein, Denna Feder, Alfred J Brown, Martin G Pox,
Walter Stern, Felix J Romita,
Deena RSinger . Steven J Greenblatt, Gerrianne Syphax.
No. 21—96.30%
21 Madeline E Brophy, Bernard Gurry, Samuel Leitner, Saul
Karsch, Joseph E Lewis, Francis T Bruno, Bernard D Thurmond, Sidney Kuslansky, Susan D
Frost, nene L Mudge, Ann L
Aylman, Lillian Shube, Patrick
B Miano, Leonard A Kellner,
Gerard P Kelly Jr, Paul J Bosco,
Henry W Roloff, Elizabeth McCann, Steven Weinstein.
No. 41—93.80%
41 John J Stevens, Barry M
Sweeney, Rebecca N Montague,
Lucy D aBsker, John J Campobasso Jr, John R Thomas, John
MuUaly, David R Warrington,
Sheilah H Goodman, Richard K
Bennett. Christophe Kilcommons,
Christine Misurelli, James B
Cadenhead, Robert S Krasilnick,
James Jones, Sara R Cytron,
Gideon Davis. Norma P Sciara,
Joan M Stifle, John M Nolan.
No. 61—92.50%
61 Leonard Katz, Mark R
Mescon. Murray Shactman. Nicholas A Wyman, Nathan Doctors, Suellen Naham, Marie T
Vanburen, Ilene Kopald. Kenneth A Plotkin. Ethel G Baron,
Raymond Carroll. William F
Henning Jr, Bruce J Minkoff.
Max Abow, Sam Hollander, Bernard F Schwarz. Michael T
Browne. Howard Mollin. William
Berger. John F Earvin.
No. 81—92.50%
81 Herman D Meyers, David
C Zuckei-man, Michael J Burnett. Janet E Barry, Peter H Oppenheimer. Judith Liebei-man.
Stephen H Peldman. Linda S
Rosenblum, David Kistenberg,
Ernest Lee, Stephen Hochberg,
Ernestine Benizeau, Harold J
Broyde, Clark H Vogel, Henry N
Abram, Abe Cjroldenberg, Beatrice
Schmere, Frederick Zauderer, Alberta L Sisenwine, Joel Einhorn.
No. 101—91.30%
101 Jeffrey N Bonne. Evelyn
Poluxt. Sarah Rosenfeld, Joanna
Kendrick. Robert F Bellusclo,
Caix)le S Gilbert. Robert J Susser, Jackie Herbst. Jeffrey M
Panlsh. Henry J Simpson, Eileen
G Quint, Stanley A Shifrin,
Karyn L Seidman. Hughie K
Yee, Anthony A Sferlazza, Howard eWinberg, Walter Castle.
> Kurt Plascher, Samuel R Shiffman, Fred Maier.
No. 121 — 91.30%
121 Joel H Brown, Isaac Raskas, Victor J Sackatile, Alexander Erdman. William M McNally. Emmett E Wattigny, William F Macklem, Samuel S
Rosen. Jack P Kramer, Marylee
Davis, Walter Kowsh Jr. LawKnee A Douglas. Richard S Cui tis. Jack Loobnian, Samuel W
I Young, Mildred Fein, Peter J
' Remch, Barbara L Maier,'Thomas Weisfeld, Maureen B Qreenneld.
No. 141—90%
141 Warren Hochbaum. David
Seeve. Jay L Palmer. Fredric S
Baer. Violet R Johnson. David
B Schapiro. Linda P Dalo, Frank
J Greenberg. Josephine McPartlani. Deborah A Downing, Naomi Hutter, Gary Penzell, Martin
C Aronchick, Mark S Travitsky,
Thomas J Pumell, Ellen Paul,
Gary A Farber, Ina Schwartz,
Jane L Schlesinger, David Lim.
No. 161—90%
161 Sheldon D Sherman, Paul
D Edwards, Carmen Andres,
Joseph J Caravello, Robert Mangano. Leo J Guldln. Abraham J
Stein. Michael Kaplan. Paul G
Kalaga^sy. Gail S Blum, Lawrence I Lieberman, Alexander
Christofides, Robert M Johnston
Jr- Harvey D Rappaport, Lawrence A Weeks, John F Brophy,
Robert P Harris. Joseph J Sciallis. Maureen M Welsh. Anthony
Castagna.
No. 181—88.80%
181 Arthur Marcu, Joyce Miller. Shirley Goldberg. Alex Androszewski, Anthony Miola. Morris I Yarmish, Robert D Kalish,
Gary J Kurzer, Vivian Abramowitz. Wanda J Jones. Kevin P
Maloney, Ronnie F Bell. Joshua
G Koral. Timothy J Monahan,
Richard E Carmen, Dendridge
Pearson. Edward J Ryan. Arthur
R Haimo, Ester Taub, Philip M
Bachrach.
No. 201—88.80%
201 Andrew R Cossen. Thomas
Urgo, Wendy W Williams. Ste•ven T Higgins. Sidney N Fishman. Philip J Barile. Patrick
Smyth. Robin S Lederman. Ruth
Jampel. Stephen H Schwartz,
Ellen C Scheier. Michael Bart,
Claude A Eddo. Hal Rolnitzky,
Thomas Klein, Richard J Marin.
Karen G Brodsky, John L Simcox, Marjorie G Den. Valerie
S Cohen.
No. 221—87.50%
221 Michael Greenstein, Santina M Bailey, Victor N Peshkin,
Robert Mascali, Barbara A Hartman, Dennis N Hodne, Helene
N Heimberg. Nola E Lindo,
Catherine Scaffidi, David S
Handwerker.
Yvette
Cohen.
Jacquelyn Starkey, Philip W
Bacon. Miljan P Ilich, Martha A
Shatley, Arthur N Cheliotes,
Mark E Sorkin, Marvin Dozier,
Richard Lucke, Pasquale Desibio.
No. 241 — 87.50%
241 William Cohen, Stuart
Under, Kenneth M Wiseman,
Elfrieda C Jordan. Cheryl N
Zimmerman, Sandra B Nozick,
Renee A Rosa, Arnold Hurwitz,
Burt Williamson, Roger I Power.
Laurie E Krukin. Rochelle Zwibel. Catherine Murtagh, John J
Callari, 'Joseph A Raiti, Monica
W Pinto, Laura Mandelbaum,
Herbert L Sachs, Karen S Elson.
No. 261—86.30%
261 Nicholas G Ventura. Phyllis H Rubin, Bruce V Hoffinger,
Norman S Tamarin, Henry B
Slaughter. Robert P James.
Grace Croll, William D Porter,
Helen S Lipschutz, Carol A Pertain, Kwatei K Jonesquartey,
Adeline E Bunche, Margo W
Ware, Lawrence T Carr. Andrew
Gide, Nathan Karten, Ira L Cutler, Gerard P Reiss, Luke S
Powers, Geraldine Travins.
No. 2S1-•16.30%
281 Daniel W McCusker, Ann
P Ryan, Charles E Wltzell Jr,
Joyce I Brickman. Harry A
Hamill, Matthew J Kolodzle Jr.
Barry Weinman, Vicki R Raphael, Richard E Resnlck, Michael R Cusack, Richard B Kimmel. Neal S Katz, Frances Nadler. Steven Greenstein, Franco
Cavalll, Lillth Qruen, Mark
Fertlg, Daniel P Rooney. Mic-
hael Warchola, Fannie Rablnowitz.
No. 301—85%
301 Jacqueline Gray, Allan M
Goldberg, Joseph J Stenson,
Frederick Lovero, Joseph A Romeo, Frank M Treu, Evelyn
Felix, Kenneth F Chodorov,
Ethan H Pavlo, Michelle A Llpschitz, Myrna F Arthurton, Paul
S Matarazzo. Eugene T Sedleski.
Michel G Williams. William D
Purcsll. Thomas J
Daggett.
Sheila M Rubin. Wayne H Reagan, Lynn R Byk, Vander Knocket.
No. 321—85%
321 Constance Adams, Wesley
T Hendricks, Joseph F Locker,
Rita S Solomon, Marilyn Engel,
Bruce D Bongiorno, Jean D
Fleckman, Marsha Pollack, Stanley M Cave 3rd. Stephen R
Berkley, Israel E Licht, Ellen B
Koch, Karen H Pygin, Marcela
Penaranda, F Regina E Sharper,
Eric A Bornstein, Evelyn E Brewster, Robert L Christian, Glenn
M Kamelhar, Mary E Hill.
Thomas C Binminghaan, Paule
Guillaume, Barry M Rothman,
Larry Gartner, Donna N Rubinsky, Paul S Gewlrt2man.
No. 421—81.30%
4121 Marie Reyes. Ellen C Wolf.
Rebecca Pomerantz, Renee A
Boyce. Veronica A Choplln, Steven W Ireland, John Ford, Jonah Rockoff, Prank A Porto, Lucy
Imiperiale, Natalie Boyd, Leonard
Wllensky. Ronald A Urcloll,
Brenda L Boyd, Carl J Glorlando, Gary L Senack, Barry Chester, Sandra Masleach, Gregory G
Vllchitskl, Gayle K Unger.
No. 441—80.00%
441 Martin L Altman, Gail R
Kutin, Gwendolyn Jones, John J
Hopf, Jay M Goretsky, David J
Uberman, Roger L Chu, Jeanne
F Matarazzo. Bruce Matarese.
Margaret Trlscihettl. Rose M - G
Lee, James A Kurylas, Shirley I
Clark, Joann D MoKoy, Sharon
R White, James E Lewis, Rattle
P Morris, Carl E Russell, Claudelle Grate. Anthony M Bommarlto.
level.
No. 1 —
1 Michael P Walsh, Alexander
Mautner, Moe M Braverman.
(Continued from Page 6)
Of gubernatorial candidates
selected by the bosses during the
past half century, one of them
(Roosevelt) was four times elected President. Another (Dewey)
twice received his party's nomination for President. A third
(Smith) was nominated for President. Two others (Harrlman
and Rockefeller) were serious
contenders for their party's nomination for President.
While they didn't make it, no
one ever o.uestioned their qualifications for that office. And
who knows, but that Rockefeller
may yet make it in 1976.
No. 461—78.80%
No. 341—83.80%
461 Patricia A Turbee, Alan J
341 Michael H Rubin, Roberta
S Davidson. Richard A Schultz, Ehrlich, Bella Zinovoy, Robert
(Continued from Page 7)
Diane E Smith, Karen R San- J Rubenstein, Dolores Meggett,
ders, Joseph J Christiana, Ed- John A Felix, John B Daquila, both houses. We were told that
ward C Hennessy, Karen L Lip- Robert Garmlse, Ruth G Locl- the bill would not i>ass this year
schutz, John B Farrelly, Carmen cero, Dennis Izzo, Gertrude C since the Governor refused to
Z Maldonado, Regina Wolnikow, Collymore, Rae M Exelbert, Kar- support it.
Howard B Spinner, Michael P en Toney, John M Levar, Judith
A 5194-S 5140 — Right to
Grodofsky, Marlene G Hoch- W Chposky, Phyllis A Pope, Edna
Strike Bill
R
John
,Chrlstine
Chesnlk,
Jefstadt, Anthony F Inzerillo, HilThis
bill provided public emary S Kerman, Frank Paolicelli frey Corpiel, Awad F Elrouby.
ployees with the right to strike.
Jr, Reynold Katzanek, Jacob E
No. 481—78.80%
It died in Committee in both
Flowers, Manuel Linares.
481 Rose Rubenstein, Harold houses.
Peana, Julia Bellofotto, Edward
No. 361—-83.80%
A 4470 - S 3510-A — Employer
361 George B Stauch, David S Tom, Alfreda H Rosario, J a Penalties Under the Taylor
cob
Miaqulis,
Ollle
R
Johnson,
M Kaplan. Eugene J Schiebel.
Law Bill
Beatrice Hauptman. Gil G Yee. Farouk Sallk, Dorothy E Mason,
This bill sponsored by Senator
Thomas Lew, Constance Hicks, Howard Gewlrtz, Walte.- Pa&tu- Langley was passed in the SenYolanda P Rodgers, John N Mc- szczyn, Lynn Drlttel, Robin B ate and died in the GovernmentGoldrick, Neil B Curtis, Daniel Cohen, Joyce A Rosenberg, Clau- al Employees Committee. SupL Schulman, William A Wash- dette Valentine, Helen S Zuck- port could not be generated in
ington, Francis X Muller, John erman, Charles J Adamec, Ste- the Assembly in order to get the
E Stein. Anita M Masherah. phen Fogel. Harold J Voletsky. necessary votes for its passage.
Bonnie S Warton, Harvey T Barry Solomon.
A 11070 - S 9507 — Waterfront
Gordon, Margaret A Harders,
No. 501—77.50%
Commission Employees Bill
Michael Tretola, Robert A Gal501 Bruce Heigh. Phyllis L
This bill was passed in the
uppo.
Whitman, Raye B Abraham. Ho- Senate. The Assembly bill was
ward H Husney. Josephine Juar- left in Governmental Employees
No. 381—82.50%
381 Juliana F Sanchez. Anne be. George M Washington. Bon- Committee when Assembly Bill
Gutkind, James M Glasser, Jo- nie L Cooper. Clara L Dunn. John No. 12319, the Omnibus Taylor
F Acquavella, Linda Levitt, Eu- Law Bill, was reported out of
seph J Dwyer, Les Sohachter, Laudelino Huertas, Delrdre gene Wolfe, Maurice Laufer, Committee. The Assembly would
Owens, Victor Morel, Thomas J Sheldon Gratz, Sarah D Wright. not pass our version of the
McGann, Iraving I Kuperszmld, Salvatore Augresani, Marilyn J Waterfront Commission bill. As
Alice L Glassgold, Betsy L Hart, Farkas, Hilda D Gittens, Mat- a result, the Senate version that
Julie Kunofsky, Marc K Maider, thew B Karpey, Kay F Lee, Mar- was passed did not have a comLawrence Adler, Lawrence Katz, garet A Ryan.
panion and the Taylor Law was
Jay L Crystal, Robert J Irrera,
not changed to provide Taylor
(To be continued next week)
Hilda Brody, Penny Schlessinger.
Law protection for these employees.
No. 401—82.50%
EXAM 4012
A l b a n y Bills
401 Samuel Dove. Julian J
Goldberg, Abraham D Aizerunan.
Maritza E Myers. Patricia C
Weary. Craig Stock. Olson Redhead. John H Ward. Bamett I
Wolfe. Mitchell I Price. Maureen Ehrlich, Ralph Layer, John
A Corry, William E Brelman,
AS ST DIR TECHNICAL
SERVICES
This list of 3 eligibles, established July 2, resulted from May
31, 1974 technical oral testing,
for which 26 candidates filed,
four were called, and four appeared. Salary is managerial
A S S O C I A T I O N ' S ASSOCIATE
Bridge Repairman
A L B A N Y - ^ Bridge Repairman Three eligible list, resulting
from open competitive Elxam
239i88, was est«ubllshed by the
State Dept. of Civil Service. The
list contains 41 names.
Members of the New York State Assn. of TnmsporUtion
Engineers and leaders of the Civil Service Assn. meet to discuss matters of mutual concern, lieft to right
are: Edward J. Kearney, A.TJE. financial secretary; Timothy Mclnemey, C8EA DOT representative;
Thomas McDonough, CSEA acting president; Robert LounraviUe, president of ATE. and Jason F. Bowman, ATE.
r
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o
w
n
po
H
e
«
v>
Q.
vC
SO
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Gors-Meter Testers
est
ALBANY — A gas inspector
eligible list, resulting from open
competitive exam 24032, was established June 20 by t h e state
Department of Civil Service. T h e
list contains 16 names.
REAL ESTATE VALUES
ON
ov
Poss y o u r c o p y o f
The Leader
on t o a non-member.
VETERANS
If you have served in The Military & have an honorable discharge you are entitled to buy a
home without any Cash Down
payment. We handle the bener
areas of Queens. Call now For
More Information.
V
9
H
a
u
c#7
>
u
ST. THOMAS,
lOMAS VIRGIN ISLANDS
New Efficiency Apartment, near shopping, virw of harbor, $140 per week,
double occupancy. Write: A. Ford,
P.O. Box 5, St. Thomas, Virgin
Mands 00801.
297-4221
<
Uu
u
>
A p t . For Rent
AIRWAY
fiC'
u
Homes For Sale
Albany State Campus
Houses For Sale - Queens
Area
LARGE WOODED LOTS — in Guilderland 15 min from Campus. Beautiful
Homes. All styles. 5% Down Payment
Availble. CHRISTINE GARDENS INC.
518-355-8942.
I
LAURELTON
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CALIFORNIA RANCH
All rooms on one floor. Huge living room, full-sized diningroom,
all bedrooms master size. 40x100
landscaped grounds. Refrigerator,
xorms, screens, blinds, all-Amcrican,
fully equipped
kitchen,
automatic heat and many more
L-xtias. Low down payment for all
qualified buyers.
I
LAURELTON
$29,990
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$41,990
7 ROOM RANCH
Down to earth sacrifice! Custom
built by owner. All brick ranch.
All rooms on one floor. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, din.
ing room, finished basement, auto
heat, patio porch, wood burning
fireplace. 8,000 sq ft landscaped
grounds. Taxes only S575 yearly.
You can live here cheaper than
in an apartment. Low down paymenr for everyone. GIs come in
wjth your discharge papers and
walk out with a beautiful ranch
house. We are open 7 days a
week.
Vets need only $500 total cash.
Owner pays closing fees.
I
QUEENS
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1
House For Sole - Queens
VETERANS
This well built 714 rm dutch colonial
is clean as a pin. Features 3 large
bdrms. modern kitchen, formal dining
rm, oversize living rm & private den
or reading rm, located in a top area
of St. Albans on a quiet street with
large garden grounds & garage.
B . T . O . REALTY
723-8400
229-12 Linden Blvd.
Cambria Hts, Queens
=
MANHATTAN — The Parking
Violations Bureau's M a n h a t t a n
Hearing Office a t 475 Park
Avenue South Is open a half
hour earlier In the morning to
accommodate New Yorkers on
their way t o work. Transportation Administrator Michael J .
Lazar announced last week.
Beginning July 1, t h e M a n h a t tan office, which is a t 32nd
Street and Park Avenue South,
is open for business a t 8:30 a.m.
instead of 9 a.m. T h e closing
time is 4:30 p.m.
W a n n a be a good guy?
G i v e a pint of blood.
Call U N 1-7200
The G r e a t e r N e w York
Blood P r o g r a m
Choice
SUMMER Catalog of Hundreds of Real
Estate & Business bargains. All types,
sizes & prices. DAHL
REALTY,
Cobleskill 7, N . V.
House For Sale - Bklyn
CYPRESS HILLS — $35,500. 6 family.
S8,500 income. $12,000 cash gets new
15 yr mortgage. Nets $3,800. 914
636-3 U l .
Business O p p o r t u n i t i e s
BORROW ANY AMOUNT. Enjoy A-1
Credit. N o investigations. S t a m p ^ envelope required. S. Vernon, Qearwater
Beach, Florida 33515.
Avail
NIASARYK
TOWERS
Columbia & Rivington Sis.
South of Houston Street
Ideal location
close
to all
transportation
PVB Director Elbert C. Hinkson said t h e extra half hour will
make it more convenient for
work-bound persons to file pleas
a n d pay fines. Hearings will also
start a t 8:30 a.m.
Farms - N.Y. State
Apartments
21-Story co-op featuring
• Year-Round Olympic-Size
Swimming Pool
• Private 24-hour Security
Force
• Regulation Gymnasium
1 BEDROOM A P A R T M E N T
Monthly Maint.
Includes Gas
and Electric
Cash required $2626
CAMBRIA HTS
$34,900
OWNER RELOCATING
2 BEDROOMS W / B A L C O N Y
SII lOl Tf
Monthly Maint.
Includes Gas
I w l
and Electric
Cash required $3751
3 BEDROOMS. I V 2 BATHS
210
j O I A
iFarms - N Y S t a t e
No. 2705 — EXCELLENT retirement
home, in the small residential community of Port Jervis, N.Y. Completely
renovated inside & out. Lot 50 x 100.
Taxes about $200. Price 525,000.
Send for free brochure. Goldman
Agencv, Brokers, 5'/i Ball St, Pt Jervis,
N.Y. 914-856-5228.
Monthly Maint.
Includes Gas
and Electric
Cash required $4502
Selling Agent on Premises
61 Columbia St.
Phone: 982-2212
Sulzberger-Rolfe Inc.
MiiiiiiiiiniiiHniiinnmniiinnniniiniiinminiiiimmnmimmit^
COIJKMET'S
Must sell this all brk Colonial (newly
decorated) 6 Ige rms, fin basmt, gar.
$3000 less than similar homes.
CAMBRIA HTS
$35,500
CORNER BRICK/SHINGLE
Gorgeous almost new Colonial, (
extra-lge rms, 2 bths, fin basmt. Gar.
Many extras. Call for appt.
CAMBRIA HTS
$35,990
7V2% M T G E TAKE-OVER
Modern 6 rm brk/shngle home with
fin bsmt. Can be yours for only S272
mo inci prins, interest, taxes, ins &
escrow. Call for info. No credit
chcck.
Queens H o m e Sales, Inc.
170-13 Hilbide Avenue
Jamaica, N.Y.
BUTTERLY
& GREEN
1
I
168-25 Hillside A v e .
J A 6-6300
i
I
^itiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii^
Farms, C o u n t r y Homes
N e w York State
SPRING Catalog of Hundreds of Real
Estate * Business Bargains. All type*,
size* ft prices. Dahl R n l t y , CobUskill 7, N.Y.
ms^stSL'ssissssr'^
SAVE ON
YOUR MOVE
TO FLORIDA
Compare our cost per 4,000 lbs to
St. Petersburg from New York Cit>-.
$550.00; Philadelphia, $522.00; Hartford,
Conn., 4,000 lb*., $578.00. For an estimate to any destination in Florida.
Write
SOUTHERN TRANSFER
and STORAGE C O . . INC.
OL 8-7510
Houses W a n t e d
$ $ C A S H $ $
Top prices paid for houses in any
Queeru area in any condition.
FREE
B*s$ iervic9.
APPRAISALS
No Rtd
Tttpe.
B.T.O. REALTY
723-8077
229-12 Unden Blvd
Cambria Hts, Queens
Florida
Highland Meadows
Offers you th« good w«y of lif*
in « 5 SUr Park with a S Yaar
Laat* with homat pricad from
$7,995.00.
HIGHLANDS MOIILE HOMi
SALES. 4MY N. Dili* Hwy..
PoMpoRo Mack. Ha. 33064.
VENICE, FLA. — INTERISTED.'
SEE H. N. WIMMERS, REALTOR
ZIP CODE J3595
Tel ( 8 1 3 ) 822-4241
DEPT. C, BOX 10217
n . PETUSBURI, FLORIDA. 33733
FLORIDA JOBS
Fidtrai, State, Ctunty, City.
FLORIDA CIVIL SERVICE BULLHIN.
$5 ytarly. 8 issuis.
Florida Properties
P.O. l e i 410f4« L,
Mlaaii. Plo. 33141
DEVELOPED hooMaiiM ia Port St.
Lui-ie, Port OiarUxie. P o n MaUbar
and other communiiiM. Bin Mvinjp,
•My ceroM. Braiier, 516 872-3)32
Plot F o r Solo . Florida
BLDti FUn'. Golfer'* fanuUir. S3.000
()16) n. 4-447tt. MfWf ) VM.
A n o t h e r Pension
GLIDE
Conciliation Service,
Inc.
(Tr-M-registered)
Family
•
fcilfcilMIl
^^^
Counseling
125-10 Queens BWd.
Kew Gardens, N . Y. 11415
TeL (212) 224.«090
AVOID PENALTY
FOR NOT FILING
NEW YORK CrTY
RETURNS
All Yeors
Income Tox $5 each
year
R. & G. BRENNER Will Complete
Your City Returns For Just 95
Each Year
Directions:
1. Send Prior Years W-2 Forms
Both Husband & Wife. List Number
and Names of Dependents.
2. If You Itemized in the Past,
Send Copies of Returns.
3. Enclose $5 for Each Year Plus
Telephone Number.
MaU Tot
R.&G. BRENNER
I N C O M E T A X CENTERS
479 Hempstead Turnpike
Elmont, N . Y . 1 1 0 0 3
Any Questions Call:
PERSIAN - ITALIAN
T E H E R A N ^^
Roise?
The two million plus retirees
from federal and military service may get another annuity
increase December 1 if the costof-living
continues
spiraling.
When the Consumer Price Index
(CPI) rises 3 percent or more
over the level of t h e last i n crease for three consecutive
months, a new pension increase
is ordered. There was a 5.5 percent raise effective J a n u a r y 1
and another 6.4 percent effective July 1.
147
Houses For Sale - Queens
VILLAGE
(HOLLIS AREA)
CAUFORNIA
ARCHITECTURE
A dream house in every sense of
the word! 7 rooms, 4 bedrooms,
main floor powder room, huge
living room, family sized dining
room, eat in kitchen plus den.
Glass doors lead to patio. 40x100
grounds, garage, automatic heat,
refrigerator, washing machine and
many other extras. Log burning
fireplace. Low down for Vets or
other
qualified
buyers.
Near
schools, shopping centers and only
a few minutes to subway.
Pay Parking Fines
Gas Inspection List
ALBANY — A ga£ & meter
tester eligible list, resulting from
open competitive exam 24033,
was established June 20 by t h e
state Department of Civil Service. The list contains 11 names.
(212) 347-3S55
or
(212) «82-7986
^
d'oeuvres. Howard Hillman, a top authority in New Guide
Bool( Inside N.Y. Famed for Seafood — Steaks — Persian and Italian specialties.
Curtain time dinner. After theatre cocktails. Parties of 400. — Luncheon —
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Mechanical Engineer
M o t o r Vehicle License Examiner
6.00
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N o t a r y Public
Nurse ( P r a c t i c a l
4.00
5.00
and Public H e a l t h )
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4.00
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5.00
Prob. and P a r o l e O f f i c e r
6.00
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5.00
P h a r m a c i s t s License Test
4.00
Playground Director — R e c r e a t i o n L e a d e r
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 Motor Vehicle O p e r a t o r
4.00
Postal Promotional Supervisor-Foreman
6.00
Preliminary P r a c t i c e f o r t h e H.S. Equivalency Diploma Test . .4.00
Principal Clerk-Steno
5.00
P r o b a t i o n and P a r o l e O f f i c e r
6.00
Professional C a r e e r Tests N.Y.S
5.00
P r o f e s s i o n a l T r a i n e e Admin. Aide
5.00
Railroad Clerk
4.00
S a n i t a t i o n Man
School S e c r e t a r y
S e r g e o n t P.D
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Social C o s e W o r k e r
Staff A t t e n d a n t and Sr. A H e n d a n t
S t a t i o n a r y Eng. and Fireman
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4.00
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Contains Previous Questions and Answers and
Other Suitable Study M a t e r i a l for Coming Exams
LEADER B O O K
STORE
11 W a r r e n St.. N e w Y o r k , N . Y .
10007
Pl4
I «
»r S
Name
Address
City
Stete
l e swr* t o iRclHde 7 % Seles T e i
(Continued from P w e 5)
Martin Hoean. Si>ecial Services
Division. O.C.C.B.
The
CJoliimbia
Association
Association Medal For Valor is
giv6n to: Police Officer Phillip
K. Marion, 28th Precinct.
The Guardian's
Association
Medal For Valor is given to: Detective Rudolph Sidberry, 44th
Precinct.
The N.Y.C. Police Post Number
460 American Legion Medal For
Valor is given to: DeteoUve Mel
Waxman,
Detective
Bureau,
Manhattan
Detective
Area,
Homicide Squad.
The Pulaski Association Medal
is given to: D?tectlve John McGrath, Public Morals Division,
O.C.C.B.
Th3 Hispanic bocicty Medal is
given to: Police Officer Edward
Williams, ist Precinct.
The Steuben As'iociation Medal is given to: Detective William
Fleming, Public Morals Division,
O.C.C.B.
The Shomrim Society Medal is
given to: Police Officer Alphonse
DeLaVega, 79th Precinct.
The Captain's Endowment Association Medal is given to:
Lieutenant Prank Darconte, 19th
Precinct.
The John Golden Medal For
Valor is given to: Police Officer
Ronald J. Buffamante, Midtown
Precinct North.
The Patrick J. O'Connor Emerald Society Medal For Valor
is given to: Detective Frederick
Ledogar, Detective Bureau. DA
Office, New York County.
The Leroy Baldwin Medal For
Valor is given to: Police Officer
Ernest Jacobowitz, 25th Precinct.
The Charles H. Sabin Medal
For Valor is given to: Police
Officer Earl Robinson, 32nd
Precinct.
The Police Square Club Medal
For Valor is given to: Detective
Nicholas F. Ortiz. City Wide
Anti-Crime Section.
The St. George Association
Medal For Valor is given to:
Police Officer Robert Mogavero.
City Wide Anti-Crime SecUon.
The Lieutenant's Benevolent
Association Medal For Valor is
given to: Police Officer Leon
Walker. 25th Precinct.
The Michael J. Etelehanty
Medal For Valor is given to:
Police Officer J o h n Fitzgerald.
LEGAL N O T I C E
PALM BEACH F L O W E R L A N D PARTNERS. 280 Park Ave., N Y C . Substance
• of Certificate of Limited Partnership filed
in N e w York County Clerk's Office on
J u n e 20. 1974. Businesa: Horticultural
mail order fulfillment and flower farming.
General
Partner:
Palm
Beach
Flowerland, Inc., 3314 Henderson Blvd.,
T a m p a , Fla. Limited Partners a n d Total
Cash
Contributions:
Cunningham
&
Vaughan Farms, 403 N . Morgan St.,
T a m p a . Fla., $300,000.: Larry Csonka,
1940 W . 56 Sc., Plantation, Fla., $30.000.; Reuben Cutoff. 36 N . T u r k ^ Hill
Rd., Westport, Conn., $30,000.; F.A.L.
Hollowa)', 4 3 Greenbriar Dr., Summit,
N J . $30,000.; Bruce G . McCauley, 55
Sawmill Lane, Greenwich, Conn., $30.000.; Qualey & Marston Farms, 4 7 0 0 N .
H a b a n a Ave., T a m p a , Fla., $60,000.;
William VC'agner, 1001 Bayshore Blvd.,
T a m p a , Fla., $90,000.; David Reicbberg.
228 Overlook Rd., N e w Rochelle, N Y ,
S.<0,000. T e r m : J u n e 20. 1974 until
termin4ted as provided in agreement.
Each Umiied partner thall receive a
share of the profits as provided in agreement. If ally return of capital u m a d e
to any partners prior to termination and
there remains unpaid liabilities, the partners shall be obligated to repay, in the
same p r o p o n i o n as such p a y m c n n were
made, to the extent necetuary to discharge
all liabilitiek of the partnership. N o assignee of a limited partner shall be substituted iw a limited p a n n e r without consent of general p a n n e r . N o prioricy
among limited partners as to contributions or as to compenMtioa by way of
income. U p o n withdrawal, retiremeat o r
bankruptcy of the general partner, the
pannecship shall terminate unless 9 0 %
in interest of t h e limited partners shall
have appointed a substitute general partner. N o limited p a n n e r shall demand
property other than cash in r e t u r n for
his contribution unlets agreed to in
writing by all p a n a e t s .
94th Precinct.
The Walter J. Scott Medal For
Valor is given to: Police Officer
Emanuel Pipitone, Communication Division.
The International Police Association Medal is given to:
Captain
Jeremiah
O'Connor,
69th Precinct.
And the Retired Detectives
Association Medal is given to:
Police Officer Roger J. Hayes
Jr.. Midtown• Precinct
•
• South.
to Detectives Philip P. D'Angelo,
68 Pet.: Robert Marshall, D.B.,
Bklyn. Det. Area; John Kennedy, D.B., Bklyn. Det. Area;
Sergeant John Quigley of the
23rd Precinct;
And Police Officers Matthew
Wedlock, 68 Pet.; Salvatore Cucuzza, 68 Pet., anl John Baker,
E.S.S. No. 6.
Forestry Technicians
ALBANY — A forestry technician eligible list, resulting from
open competitive exam 24031,
was established June 13 by the
state Department of Civil Service. T h e list contains 288
names.
Departmental Recognition is
awarded to the following members of the service for meritorious conduct p e r f o r m ^ In the
line of duty.
Exceptional merit is awarded
96 Page Book. Europe &
Everywhere,Anywhere
Somewhere.
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C s r i b b M n e n d
hmmvI
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ONE
WEEK
Athens 389
Italy 377
Puerto Rico 2 2 9 Palma D e Mallorca 304
Costa Del Sol 2 2 9
H a w a u 377
D U n e r w o r l d 149
Barbados 2 2 9
Acapulco 279 Mexico 279 Miami 2 2 9
Las Vegas 199
Caribbean Cruise 485
Colombia 404
Canary Island 284
French Riviera 2 9 9
Freeport 179
TWO
WEEKS
South America 778 Central America 313
Mexico 339
O r i e n t 869
H o n g K o n g ( 1 1 dj-s) 6 1 9 London 299
Italy 649
I b c ^ 468
Lisbon U-Drive 4 1 8
London, Amsterdam, BrustcU, Paris 573
Portugal, Spain, Morocco 627
European Vacations Plus Cruises 559
THREE
WEEKS
South America 1133
Russia 1216
Africa 1454
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European T o u r 1076
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^ Saturday afternoon feature included seven mini-workshops such as this one. Conducting: these were Robert Doherty,
^ Ronald Donovan and Antone Aboud of Cornell University; Dana Eish'en of LeMoyne Collegre; James Markowitz of
^ Ithaca College; John Sands of Albany Law School, and Irving Markowitz, arbitrator.
c
MH Delegates Meet At Luke Placid
Fred Kotz, left, new
Hospital chapter, and
a moment with CSEA
himself a former St.
Arbitrator Irving Markowitz, left, and CSEA director
of education Edward Diamond discuss agenda for the
Workshop. Dr. Diamond had planned the educational
programs which included discussion of discipline by
Dr. Markowitz.
Crawford McPhatter, of Pilgrim State Hospital chapter,
makes his opinion clear as
he speaks at business session.
Sara DaRe, president of
Buffalo S t a t e
Hospital
chapter, was active participant in various educational
seminars.
president of St. Lawrence State
chapter delegate Mary Bush share
field representative Donald Brouse,
Lawrence chapter president.
CS£A treasurer Jack Gallagher, left, was among statewide officials on hand to keep pulse on Mental Hygiene
activities. Here he is speaking with former Willowbrook
chapter president Thomas Delaney.
RIGHT: Willard State
clmpter president Doromy Moses, seated, headed delegation of newly
elected chapter officers.
Seated left is first vicepresident Joie McDonald
and right is third vicepresident Hugh MicDonald. Standing from left
are secretary Doris Pratz;
delegate Beverly McDonald, and Gary Dougherty.
CSEA acting president Thomas H. McDonough, standing, greets table of delegates
from Bronx State Hospital chapter, from left, delegates Catherine Smith. Adele Anderson (wife of chapter president). Dorothy Sargeant and Stanley Craft and president
William Anderson.
LEFT: A big man at
Brooklyn State Hospitol
is William Cunningham,
chapter delegate and New
York City Region 2 third
vice-president. Here he is
surrounded by o t h e r
members
of
Brooklyn
delegation, starting clockwise from lower left,
Mary Patterson, Joanne
Mcintosh. Sally Jones,
Mary O'Leary and Geiirude HoUey.
Here is another of the mini-workshop sesiiions at which delegates were able to get
together in smaller groups in order to explore those subjects that they were most interested in pursuing to gain knowledge most applicable to situations in their home
chapters.
WHEUE TO APPLY
FOR PUBLIC JOBS
NEW YORK CITY —Persons
seeking jobs with the City
should file at the Department of
Personnel, 49 Thomas St.. New
York 10013, open weekdays between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Special
hours for Thursdays are 8:30
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 St.); BMT (City
Hall); Lexington IRT (Brooklyn
Bridge). For advance information on titles, call 566-8700.
Latest State A n d County Eligible Lists
EXAM 35349
SR RSRCS & REIMBURS AGENT
Tett Held Dec. 8, 1973
List Est April 3. 1974
1 McNamara T R Pleasant Val
89.9
2 Dreyer Donald W Poughkeepsie..89.9
3 Coplon Lynn D Thiells
89.9
4 Kramer E NYC
89.8
5 Cathout M J Slingerlands
88.8
6 Welch F H Buffalo
87.8
7 O'Connor Anne G Snyder
86.8
8 O'Connor Diane V Oriskany
86.1
9 Shiniansky Reba Brooklyn
86.1
10 Seligson Harold Staten Is
85.8
11 Glover Reginald Newark
84.8
12 Wittimer Barbara Binghamcon ....84.2
13 Zeppetello A M Syracuse
83.8
14 Ostrowski J J Eggertsvitle
83.8
15 Badalino M E Buffalo
83.8
16 Jennings Sharon Tonawanda
83.5
17 Cieslar Joyce B Depew
83-0
18 Stevenson W F Mechanicvil
82.9
18A Schustal Miriam Queens Vill ....82.9
19 Madans Carol F New City
81.9
20 Dclaney James P Bronx
81.3
21 Bielak Donald R Rochester
81.2
22
23 Milas Barbara Bohemia
80.9
24 Litt Linda M Wantagh
80.8
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
Doerin Glenn A Commadc
80.7
Kenny Ann B Nanuet
79.9
Scarbeck John W Oakdal«
79.8
Dosline Robert Bayside
79.6
Dorsman Neil W Spring Val
78.8
Crowley Edward Far Rockaway ..77.8
Wierman Richard Endwell
77.5
Goodman Kenneth Kings Park ....76.5
Goldstein M M Copiague
76.2
Boccio Michael Mattituck
75.7
Diorio Frances Utica
74.8
Smith Robert L Whitesboro
74.2
Mascitelli W J Phoenix
71.9
Pullen Philip L Flushing
70.9
Pogni Stephen D Poughkeepsie , 70.7
EXAM 35391
ASSOC CIVIL ENGR
Test Held Dec. 8. 1973
List Est April 23, 1974
1 Clark Philip J Rexford
96.4
2 Jacobsen W H Elilora
95.0
3 Scheffer Conrad Amityville
94.7
4 Catanzaro Jack Dix Hills
94.5
5 Schwcrz Robert Babylon
93.6
6 Serth John A Elnora
92.7
7 Weidner Charles St James
92.7
8 Groskoff R T Monsey
92.2
9 Pascopella Fred New Rochelle ....92.0
10 Contegni Joseph Bellerose
92.0
COPARTNERSHIP
NOTICES
11 Chiampou K C Bay Shore
92.0
12 Semenick Andrew Nesconset
91.9
CENTRAL P R O P E R T I E S
13 Naginey George Altamont
91.0
Several City agencies do their
OF LIMITED PART14 Ordway Peter H Albany
90.3
own recruiting and hiring. They CERTIFICATE
NERSHIP OF CENTRAL PROPERTIES
15 Muhlig F N Elnora
90.3
include: Board of Education —STATE OF NEW YORK. COUNTY 16 Beach Foster Ballston Lk
90.1
OF NEW YORK, ss.: WE, the underFrein James E Northport
90.0
(teachers only), 65 Court St., signtd, desiring to form a Limited Part- 17
18 Masfropietro D Hopewell Jet ....89.9
nership pursuant to the laws of the State
Brooklyn 11201, phone: 596- of
19
Jennings
Frank
Ilton
89.9
New York. CERTIFY as follows: 1.
89.8
8060: NYC Transit Authority, The name of the Partnership is the 20 Reider Robert E Elnora
21 Donovan Edmund Rocky Point ..89.7
PROPERTIES. 2. The pur370 Jay St.. Brooklyn 11201 CENTRAL
pose of the Partnership is to purchase
22 Stone G S Scheneaady
89 4
all distribution rights to a motion picture
phone: 852-5000.
23 Strapec John S Poughkeepsie
89.1
entitled "Mussolini: Last Act. " for the
88.9
United States and Canada, and to dis- * 24 Treadway Walter Albany
25
Cordes
Raymond
Bohemia
88.9
The Board of Higher Educa- tribute, exploit and turn to account in
26 Chamberlin W F Schenectady . ..88.9
the
Uniti-d
States
and
Canada
the
rights
tion advises teaching staff ap- at any time held by the Partnership in 27 Romnno David F New Hartford..88.7
88.4
plicants to contact the individ- connection therewith and for no other 28 Cavota Paul L Bellmore
3. The principal place of bus29 Moody Wesley P Guilderland ....88.3
ual schools; non-faculty jobs are purpose.
iness of the Partnership is 1 Gulf & West30 Winslow Frank W Marcellus ....88.2
filled through the Personnel De- ern Plaza, Borough of Manhattan, City 31 Morfopoulos C J Smithtown
88.1
and State of New York. 4. The name
32 McGuffey Verne Schenectady
88.0
partment directly.
and place of residence of each General
33 Legg Edward A Tannersvilte
87 9
Partner interested in the Partnership is
34 Carrigan James Elnora
87.7
Ralph Scrpi, 1 Gulf & Western Plaza,
STATE — Regional offices of
New York. New York. 5. The name,
35 Gibbons Thomas S Farmingdale..87.7
the Department of Civil Service place of residence and amount of ca»h 36 Davies Edward K Mohegan Lk ..87.6
and the share of profits or
37 Fucker. Albert J Amsterdam
87.6
are located at the World Trade contributed
other compensation by way of income
Euckor Albert J Amsterdam
87.6
Center, Tower 2, 55th floor, New which each Limited Partner shall receive 37
38
Rumsey
John
P
Melrose
87.5
by reason of his contribution is set forth
York, 10048, (phone: 488-4248);
39 Cuddy Michael J E Northport ....87.4
in Schedule "A" annexed hereto and made
87.3
State Office Campus. Albany, a part hereof. 6. The partnership term 40 Francese M M N Merrick
shall commencc on the day upon which,
41 Burns Richard W Watertown ....87.1
12226; Suite 750. 1 W. Genessee pursuant to the Partnership Law of the 42 Brady Richard F Elnora
87.1
of New Y.ork, the Certificate of
St., Buffalo 14202. Applicants State
43 Gibson John L Watervliet
87.1
Limited Partnership is duly filed in the
44
Tierney
Joseph
Albany
87.1
may o b t a i n
announcements office of the Clerk of the County of New 45 Symanski Paul J Latham
87.0
and thereafter from year to year,
either in person or by sending York,
46 Gallo Frank N Brooklyn
86.9
and shall terminate on January 3, 1999
86.7
a stamped, self-addressed envel- unless sooner terminated. 7. No addi- 47 Weitzman Joseph Delmar
tional contributions may be required to
48 Dugan John P Loudonville
86.6
ope with their request.
he made by the Limited Partners to the
49 Edelsteiri A Flushing
86.6
Partnership. 8. The contribution of each
50 Lehr John A Watertown
86.6
Various State
Employment Limited Partner shall be returned to him 51 Bryden James E Voorheesvil
86.5
at such times (after distribution of the
86.5
Service offices can provide ap- motion picture has commenced), as the 52 Perr,;gaux G R Schenectady
53 White James F Troy
86.5
has paid or made reasonable
plications in person, but not by Partnership
54
Thornewell
W
Bay
Shore
86.4
provision for all debts, liabilities, taxes
and contingent liabilities; all cash remail.
55 Powell Davi4 C Fairport
86.3
ceived from time to time, by the Part56 Briggs Bernard Ballston Lk
86.3
Judicial Conference jobs are nership in excess of said cash reserve 57
Houghton Peter Voorheesvil
86.2
filled at 270 Broadway. New shall be paid to the Limited Partners 58 Strazdis Albin Richmond HI
86.2
until their total contributions shall have
York, 10007, phone: 488-4141. been thereby fully repaid, and thereafter, 59 Remick Richard Averill Park . ..86.0
60 Hart Edward J Albany
86.0
in accordance with their Partnership
Port Authority jobseekers should percentagL-s
61 Moody Edward M Schenectady . 85.9
after payment of two ( 2 % )
contact their offices at 111 percent to the General Partner as com- 62 Jonas Ferdinand Shoreham
85.9
9. No Limited Partner shall
63 Fullam Donald F Poughkeepsie .85.9
Eighth Ave., New York, phone: pensation.
have the right to substitute an assignee
64 Hiss John G Albany
85.8
in his place, without the written consent
620-7000.
65 Mannix Thomas M Rhinebeck . 85.7
of the General Partner. 10. No additional
66 Classen Werner Waterford
85.6
Partners may be admitted into
FEDERAL — T h e U.S. Civil Limited
67 McConnell John Rome
85.3
the Partnership. 11. No Limited Partner
68
Varanouskas
J
P
Flushing
85.2
^hall
have
any
priority
over
any
other
Service Commission. New York
Limited Partner as to contribution or a<
69 Rizzuto I F Albany
85.2
Region, runs a Job Information to compensation by way of income. 12. 70 Llanes Thomas C Pawling
85.2
In the event of the death, retirement or
71 Slattery Stuart Nassau
85.1
Center at 26 Federal Plaza. New disability.
General Partner, the Partner85.1
York 10007. Its hours are 8:30 ship shall be dissolved unless 75% of 72 Kearnan Edward Albanv
Limited Partners shall, within eighty
a.m. to 5 p.m., weekdays only. the
(80) days select a new General Partner
and
elect to continue the Partnership.
Telephone 264-0422.
13. No Limited Partner may demand
Federal entrants living upstate and rewive property other than cash in
CIVIL SERVICE BOOKS
return for his contribution. Dated: New
(North of Dutchess County)
York, New York, June 3, 1974. Martin
and all tests
should contact the Syracuse Area Shamberg. 139 S. North Carolina Avenue,
Atlantic City, New Jersey. 4.90%, S30,Office. 301 Erie Blvd. West. 000;
Chirles Marshak. Plaza Apartments,
PLAZA BOOK SHOP
Atlantic City, New Jersey. 4.90%, S^O,Syracuse 13202. Toll-free calls 000;
Martin Green. 8103 Bayshore Drive,
380 Broadway
may be made to (800) 522-7407. Margate. New Jersey. 2.45%. 515,000:
Goldberg. 8110 Bayshore Drive,
Albany. N.Y.
Federal titles have no deadline Maxwell
Margate, New Jersey. 7.35%, $45,000;
Albert Gardner, 1537 A^untic Avenue,
unless otherwise indicated.
Mail
&
Phone Orders Filled
Atlantic City, New Jersey, 2.45%, S15.Edward R. Knight. 7 N. Thurlow
INTERGOVERNMENTAL — 000;
Avenue, Margate, New Jersey, 4.90%,
Cobble Hill Center Corp., 15
The Intergovernmental Job In- 530,000;
Nevins Street. Brooklyn, New York,
formation and Testing Center ').8%, $60,000; Carl Easton & Jacqueline
815 Park Avenue, New York,
supplies information on N.Y. Eascon,
New Vork, 9.80%, $60,000; Dr. Robert
City and State and Federal jobs. Hirsch, 63 Station Road, Great Neck,
York, 2.45%, $15,000; Gedney H.
It i3 located at 90-04 161st St.. New
Baldwin. 277 Canterbury Drive. Ramsev.
"Famous for German
New
Jersey, 2.45%. 515,000; Robert
Jamaica, Queeas, 11432 and ofAmerican Food I Fun"
Neustadter. 8 S. Pembroke Avenue, Marfice hours are from 9 a.m. to gate. Ntw Jersey. 2.45%,. $15,000; MilHome of the
Neustadter. 9 S. Union Avenue, Mar5 p j n . weekdays. The phone for ton
gate. New Jersey. 7.35%. $45,000; EdGerman
Alps Festival
Information about city jobs is ward Baron. 4 S. Rumson Avenue. MarNew Jersey. 2.45%, $15,000;
623-4100; for state. 526-6000; gate.
Robert Rothenberg, 2205 Pacific Avenue.
Atlantic City, New Jersey. 2.45%. $15,4nd for federal. 526-6192.
DELUXE RESORT HOTEL
000; Albert Rothenberg, 2205 Pacific
Avenue, Atlantic City, New Jersey,
110
ACRES of RECREATION
2.45%. $15,000; Howard Roemer. 8
Greenville Place. Ramsey. New Jersey.
overlooking
our own lake
2.45%.. $15,000; S. Stuart Mally, 4700
Olympic Style Pool — All AihAtlantic Avenue, Atlantic City. New Jerletici
and
Planned
Activicic* —
sey, 2.45%., $15,000; Paul Moroflfsky, 8
Dancinfl and professional caccfBarbara Lane, Irving, New York, •».90%,
tainmeoi
every
'<> o^f
.S30.000; E. Modet Co.. 79 Pine Street,
Fabulous Bavarian
Alpint GmNew York, New York, 4.90%, 530,000;
FOR I N F O R M A T I O N ragarding addeni Cabaret".
Steven
L.
Schwartz,
110
East
42nd
Street,
vartitamant. Plaaia wr!ta or call:
New York. New York. 4.90%. $30,000:
LOW JUNE RATES
Dr. Robert Hackett. 444 East 82nd
JOSEPH
T.
I F U E W
COLORFUL BROCHURE
Street, New York, New York, 2.45%..
WITH
RATES
* SAMPLC MENU
515,000;
Stanley
Schechter.
151
Birch303 SO. MANNING
ILVD.
wood Avenue. Jericho. New York,
A L I A N Y T. N . Y . PHOII* IV 2 - S 4 7 4
4.90%, 530,000; Dr. Leonard Rakow,
Dial 518-622-3261
Indian Road, Fiefdstone, New Jersey,
Bill * Johanna Bmuw- H«ttt
2 45%. $15,000. GENERAL PARTNER:
MAYFLOWER-ROYAL COURT APARTMENTSRalph Serpi, 132 Brookville Rd., Glen
PurllRf 8. N.Y. Zip 12470
FMrnitliid. Unfurnishid. and R « « M .
Head. N Y. 1154$. 2%. —0—.
P k « u HE 4-1194 (Albany).
ARCO
BAVARIAN MANOR
A U G . 16 to A U G . 25
ALBANY
BRANCH OFFICE
73 Esmond William Elnora
85.1
74 Giardina James Buffalo
85.0
75 Chenet Jacques Jamaica
85-0
76 Gentile Cesare Bellmore
84.9
77 Clark Everett Wappinger Falls ....84 7
78 Hibbard J L Albany
84.5
79 Burke Peter S N Babylon
84.5
80 Borrusc B T Kenmore
84.5
81 Henkin Herbert Albany
84.3
82 Moorhead Frank Greene
84.3
83 Weld James F Hamburg
84.1
84 Frechette Eldon Sackets Hbr
84.1
85 O'Rourke Donald Hauppauge ...84.1
86 Byron James F Albany
84.0
87 Sakalian Harry Peekskill
84.0
88 Calkins Roy H Schenectady
84.0
89 Zatwarnicki F P N Y Mills
84.0
90 Critchlow W H Buffalo
84.0
91 Canestrari D B Rexford
83.9
92 Hager Daniel J Unadilla
S3 8
93 Matula Donald P Schenectady ....83.7
94 Coles Herbert J Ozone Park
83 6
95 Fischer Fred H Ossining
83.6
96 Dunn Walter M Massapequa
83.6
97 McNaught Earl D Guilderland....83.5
98 Garden Eric W Wappinger Falls..83.4
99 Houghton Robert Ballston Lk ....83.4
100 Mack Paul J Schenectady
8.^.3
101 English James M Canajoharie ....83-2
102 Boulin Donald H Rome
83.1
103 Burnett William Slingerlands . 83.0
104 Kallman W E Brentwood
83.0
105 Bechle Louis R Fairpon
83.0
106 White Floyd E New Hartford ..83.0
107 Trenk Abe Pt Washington
82.9
108 Stabler George Albany
82.9
109 Cesire Julius I Carmel
82.8
110 Bellair Peter J Albany
82.6
111 Anderson John O Wynantskill ..82.6
112 Donnelly V G Smithtown
82.5
113 Christman K J Wappingers FIs ..82.5
114 Skoglund Emil E Elnora
82.4
115 Wager Frederick Shushan
82.3
116 Lennon William Warrensburg ..82.2
117 Kuzloski James Rocky Point ....82.2
118 Heidrich Eric M Bayside
82.2
119 Mignogna M J Wappinger FIs .82.1
120 Hollenbeck R L Canisteo
82.0
121 Kerr Charles L Tully
82.0
122 Potts Richard R Oxford
82.0
123 Steffens H F Binghamton
82.0
124 Mahaney William Rochester ....82.0
125 Fastert Henry I Ravena
81.9
126 Calkins Florant Fulton
81.9
127 McGovern James Bronx
81.9
128 Russo David J Voorheesvil
81.8
129 Urich Ralph T Poughkeepsie ..81.8
130 Kearney Edward Loudonville ....81.8
131 Murphy James J Albany
81.7
132 Perkins Arthur Schenectady ....81.7
133 Stewart Austin Fairport
81.6
134 Honor Stanley D Kings Park ....81 4
135 Halpin John J Glenmont
81.4
M6 Dale Martin G Hyde Park
81.4
137 Labelle Jay L Voorheesvil
81.3
138 Worden Fred W Rochester
81.3
139 Edinger Jon P Marion
81.3
140 Flohr Edwin G Binghamton
81.2
141 Perry Robert J Schenectady
81.2
142 Wohlschetd T E Delmar
81.1
143 Rose Michael J Watenown
81.1
144 Saraniero D J N Babylon
81.1
145 Abbott Edward B Rochester ... 81 0
146 Bennett A M Rochester
81.0
147 Kohlbacher G E Hamburg
80.9
148 Gee Eugene Albany
80.«
149 Adams Edward F Ontario
80.6
150 Gleeson Joseph Hyde Park
80.5
151 Schroeder A A West Islip
80.5
152 Roy Derik J Albaty;
80.5
153 M.-rritt David M E Rochester . ..80.5
154 Coiey Richard M Scripto Ctr ....80.5
155 Novak Eugene E Morris
80.4
156 Evans Thomas F Utica
80.4
157 Reid William J Albany
80.3
158 Ruby John G Schenectady
80.3
159 Rcstino John E Manlius
80.3
160 Charlebois John Watertown
80.1
161 Handelman W Great Neck
80.0
162 Bailey Roy R Hancock
80.0
164 Chilberg C E Schenectady
79.9
163 Moore Lyndon H Loudonville ..80.0
165 Jermano John R Newark
79.9
166 Hoyt Richard B Voorheesvil ....79.-'
167 Shaw Lawrence D Norfolk
79.7
168 Ducharme Paul E Scheneaady ..79.7
169 Allison Joseph Latham
79.5
170 Daulton Tom R Bath
79.5
171 Pierson James W Poughkeepsie..79.5
172 Barley Richard Rochester
79.5
173 Saladino John J Commack
79.4
174 Leiswing Edward West Seneca..79.3
175 Church Richard Hornell
79.2
176 O'Connell James Albany
79.2
177 Thimble Richard Timbuktu
79.2
178 Oey Henry G Albany
79.1
179 Carson Travis Albany
79.1
180 Bloom Alan N Hyde Park
79.0
181 Weaver Robert J Newtonville ..79.0
182 Maglaras C N Whitestone
79.0
183 Larose Howard E Watertown ....79.0
184 Beal David B Albany
78.9
185 Manzolillo J M Commack
78.7
186 Wynne John J Yorktown Hts ....78.7
187 Werner Thomas Checktowaga....78.7
188 Thomas Robert E Merrick
78.6
189 Stelzer Henry R Rochester
78.5
190 Lucas Richard A Albany
78.5
191 Deitch Ira Brooklyn
78.4
192 Norris James D Watertown
78.3
193 Jacobson Howard Guilderland ..78.3
194 Eisenried J A West Seneca
78.2
195 Tonneten Gordon Staten Is
7N.0
196 Greer Lawrence Yorktown Hts .78.0
FRIENDSHIP INNS
SKYLANE
STATE & GOVERNMENT
EMPLOYEE RATES
FREE CONT. BREAKFAST
1927 Central Ave - Rte S
2 Mi Off Northway Ex. 2W
Call
For
518-869-0002
Reservations
Pancake
&
Opening
Steakhouse
Soon
in
197 Tirunu Gaidis Hyde Park
77.7
198 Cavanaugh D G Schenecudy ....77.6
199 Crapo F.arl M Latham
77.5
200 Drapeau Norman Delmar
77.5
201 Bellerjeau W R Altamont
77 5
202 Burns Leo E Syracuse
77.5
203 Witte Frederick Schenectady ....77.4
204 Beuel Edward G Commack
77.2
205 Joseph Kenneth Lancaster
77.2
206 Moroney James B Elnora
77.1
206A Smith Donald J Eggertsville ..77.1
207 Irwin Bruce R Watertown
77 I
208 Palma David F Nassau
">7.0
209 Cox David B Greenfld Ctr
77.0
210 Butler Bernard Loundonville ....77.0
211 Brainard D G Westerlo
77.0
212 Halbin Peter E Babylon
77.0
213 McCord Robert G Syracuse
77.0
214 Arceri Louis A N Babylon
77.0
215 Connolly John F Nassau
77.0
216 Carter Raphael Bronx
77.0
217 Cerlini Peter A Hicksville
77.0
218 Talay Michael F Catskill
76.9
219 Brulning Arthur Wyckoff
76.9
220 Cornish Edward Watertown
76.9
221 Griffin Kenneth Salamanca
76.9
222 Schapfel Frank Pt Washngtn ....76.7
223 Georgopoulos S Troy
76.7
224 Dannehy T E Schenectady
76.7
225 Lehmkuhl Thomas Fairport
76.6
226 Doyle John C Newburgh
76.5
227 Anagnost John S Camillus
76.5
228 McDougall R T Syracuse
78.5 '
229 Tenenbaum Harry Farmingvle ..76.5
230 Vyce John M Schenectady
76.4
231 Stevens James W Loudonville ..76.3
232 Grout Frederick Pleasant Val ..76.3
233 Hcretz Michael Albany
76.3
234 Lenaerts John D Huntington Sta 76.1
235 Idzi Ronald A Oriskany FIs
76.1
236 Brink Donald B Almond
76.1
237 Kelly Joseph W Loudonville ....76.0
238 Eldering A H Stuyvesant
76.0
239 Burdick Jerome Rome
76.0
240 Lawrence J C Lagrangevil
75 8
241 Oppizzi Peter A Pelham Manor..75.8
242 O'Connor Paul Wappinger FIs 75.7
243 Golden James R Scotia
75.6
244 Miller Robert J West Seneca ....75.6
245 Young Jack O Cobleskill
75.5
246 Petrou Edward J Plainview
75.4
247 Novak Raymond F Binghamton..75.4
248 Lenehan John J New Rochelle ..75.3
249 Caruso Joseph J New Hartford..75 3
250 PolUrd Philip Binghamton
75.2
251 Erikson Harold Greene
75.0
252 Tetelman B Massapua Pk
75.0
253 Parker Burdette Delmar
75.0
254 Gramling Bruce Hopewell Jet ..74.9
255 Hamm William F Jamesville ....74.9
256 Ames Fred F CanUteo
74.9
257 Connors Thomas Schenectady ....74.8
258 Hughes John S Cheektowaga ....74.7
259 Poirter Paul J Latham
74.6
260 Tocke Joseph M Hamburg
74.5
261 Reimels Gordon Watkins Glen ..74.5
262 Hall Crisfin C Troy
74.4
263 Tvjmple James H N Chadiam ....74.2
264 Queen David F Rhinebeck
74.1
265 Cook Charles S Farmingville ....74.1
266 Cheney Richard Albany
74.0
267 Smith Stark W Binghamton
74.0
268 NONE
269 Menth Edwin G Buffalo
73-9
270 Clark William H Delmar
73.9
271 HaUtead Purdy Pleasant Val
73-8
272 Greene Milford Syracuse
73.«>
273 Kirk Frederick Slingerlands
7.^.6
274 Dielly Edward D Westport
73.5
275 Jackson Stanley Fayetteville
73.4
276 Carroll Charles Waterloo
73.4
277 Jackson Harry Schenectady
73.3
278 Moon Thomas J Shenectady
73.3
279 Perry Richard W Ballston Uc ..73.3
280 Herschenhorn E Loundonville ....73 2
281 Rutland L H Scotia
73.0
282 Corbistero J A Cobleskill
72.9
283 Graudons David BalUton Lk ....72.8
284 Hayes Richard G BalUton Sp« ..72.8
285 Reed Howard J New Lisban ....72.2
286 Vieni Charles P Claverack
72.1
287 Hartley Robin S Wappinger Fls..72.0
288 Kleimao Irving Bellerose
71.9
289 Fosdick C R Saratoga Spg
71.5
290 Winkler William Schenectady ..71.3
290A Barkcvich John Hyde Park ....71.2
291 Fitzpatrick M W Ashland
71.0
292 Gurley Lewis M Waterford
70.7
293 Rosenberg Neil Greenlawn
70.7
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
EXAM 35450
ASST SOILS ENGR
Test Held March 23. 1974
LUt Est June 13. 1974
Andrews Frank J Schenectady
Dassatti Edwin Slingerlaods
Mondillo Joseph Slingerlands
Smith Paul D Troy
Strohmaier R G Schenectady
Labarron Earl R Hornell
Matusrek Carl S Valatie
Warrender Robin Troy
Kuthy Richard A Elnora
Carlo Thomas A Schachticoke
Rever William F Schenectady
Marley Michael Schenectady
Dicocco John B Schenectady
Coombs Arthur F Sauquoit
Minnitti A Amsterdam
Ernst Floyd R Averill Park
Berquist Robert Slingerlands
Chaikin Jason Brooklyn
....84.7
83.1
....82.1
79-1
77.7
77.0
76.1
75.1
74.1
....74.0
....73.9
73.9
73.5
73.1
73.1
72.9
72.6
70.7
— SUITS-US FARM " 1
350 acres of fun & relaxation. Di»
cover wonders of farm life. COWS
calves, chickeiu. lambs, pigs, poaie*
Hayride* & marshallow roasts. Pool
Ashing, tennis & Square Dances or
property. Golf, auaioos, antique*
nearby. 3 hot ateals daily. Pv't bath.
Family SuitM. Brochure. 607-832
4369. Bovina Center No. 5 NY
13740.
COFFEE POT ALWAYS HOT
Trav.l • Werld-wid.
SAVE $20. on travel charter grp pks*
Adv in State offices. (Applied acaioti
land arrangenaents oaly — Subjca to
availability.)
BYTNER
TRAVEL
5L«.463-1279
vO
Dutchess Deputies
Aim To Bargain
Utica Chapter Dinner-Dance
(From Leader Correspondent)
P O U G H K E E P S I E — F o r a l o n g t i m e s h e r i f f ' s d e p u t i e s in
New Y o r k S t a t e c o u n t i e s h a v e b e e n u n d e r p a i d a n d c o u l d be
f i r e d a t t h e w h i m of t h e c o u n t y s h e r i f f , b u t t h e D u t c h e s s
C o u n t y Civil Service E m p l o y e e s Assn. u n i t is n o w t r y i n g to
change all of that.
Dutchess CSEA, according to he said.
unit president Bernard Viet, is
It will probably take a few
trying to get job security and ad- months for details to be worked
equate equipment for the nearly out for union representation for
140 employees of the Dutchess the sheriff's employees, but this
County Sheriff's Office. The unit action is definitely on its way
is holding a series of hearings in Dutchess County. Mr. Viet
with the County Board of Repre- concluded.
sentatives and officers of the
Sheriff's Department to set up a
separate bargaining unit in t h a t
department.
Philip Caruso, far right, president of Utica chapter of the Civil Service Employees Assn., welcomes
(Continued from Page 1)
One of the things at issue is
tions, failed to result in any con- some of the CSEA officials who attended recent dinner-dance for chapter members. From left are
job security, calling for Civil
Richard Cleary, CSEA vice-president who heads Syracuse Region 5; Jake Banek, president of Oneida
crete agreement.
Service status for the deputies.
Later in the month. Governor Educational chapter; Thomas H. McDonough, CSEA acting president; Louie Sunderhaft, Region 5
Under the present setup, appointWilson, addressing delegates to executive vice-president; James Moore, president of Utica State Hospital chapter; Nicholas Cimino,
ment and discharge of deputies
the Special Delegates Meeting president of Transportation District 2 chapter, and Ray Pritchard, president of Fort Stanwix chapter.
Is almost solely within the provat the Concord Hotel, expressed
ince of the sheriff. Mr. Viet
his wlllingess to resolve the
pointed out.
question.
Take Risks
The Governor said: "I am
"These men perform the same willing and anxious to extend
duties and take the same risks the letter of agreement for anof local police, yet they do not other year. If CSEA is willing to
receive anywhere the same com- continue, I will order state reppensation and benefits accorded resentatives to approach in an
to regular police departments," affirmative manner discussion of
Mr. Viet said.
objective proposals from your
He also noted that Dutchess I'epresentatives." While the Govdeputies have very antiquated ernor's statement was greeted
automobiles with which they with general applause, many
have to perform sometimes dan- CSEA officials believed that the
gerous road patrols and traffic Employees Association had already made its proposals for the
control duties.
"There are patrol cars here career ladders, and were still
with as much as 212,000 miles waiting for an objective response.
on their odometers, and with
Mr. McDonough's call for an Being greeted by Utica chapter president Philip Caruso, left, are CSEA treasurer Jack Gallagher, Syradamaged front ends," he said.
October resolution of the career cuse Region 5 supervisor Frank Martello, former Central Conference president Clara Boone, CSEA actThe Dutchess unit CSEA pres- ladders is the first major policy ing president Thomas H. McDonough and Region 5 president Richard Cleary.
ident also pointed out t h a t some statement on the subject since
(Leader photos by Emmet Blum)
of these deputies might be in- the Governor's speech.
volved in shootouts with dangerMcGowan Re-elected
ous criminals. "They have antiIn other major action at the
quated firearms which might not Mental Hygiene Workshop, Wilgive them much of a chance to liam McGowan was re-elected to
survive a gunfight with someone
the chairmanship of the Mental
armed with the latest weapons,"
Hygiene Council, with Gregory
he said.
Szurnicki as vice-chairman and
ALBANY—The solicitation
Some Opposition
Betty Duffy as secretary.
of s p e c i f i c c o n t r a c t d e m a n d
Mr. Viet said there lias been
Mr. McGowan, highest ranki t e m s f r o m CSEA s t a t e w i d e
opposition to union organizing
ing Mental Hygiene employee in
o
fficers, s t a t e division c h a p in the department of Dutchess
the CSEA hierarchy, is the
ters and state executive comSheriff Lawrence Quinlan, but
Western Region 6 Mental Hymittee members has begun in
the deputies have not let this
giene representative to the CSEA
preparation of completing the
stop their efforts.
Board of Directors. He is also a
demand package the Civil Ser"These deputies deserve a lot CSEA vice-presidemt heading the
vice Employees Assn. will place
of credit. They are the ones who Western Region as its president.
on the table later this fall when
have pointed out the urgency of
He Is also a past president of
the state contract reoE>ener neproviding job security for the the West Seneca School chaipter. In charge of hospitality for the function were, from left. Mary
gotiations start.
members of their department and
Logalbo, chairman Phyllis Bowen and Ervina Dekin.
Mr. Szurnicki, from Kings
we in Dutchess CSEA are g<nng
In a letter from Dorothy RaPark State Hospital, repi-esents
tmmim
to do our best to back them up,"
bin, chairman of CSEA's resoluLong Island Region 1 on the
tions committee, the officers,
CSEA Board, and Ms. Duffy,
chapter presidents and executive
president of Pilgrim State Hoscommittee members are requestpital chapter, also represents
ed
to submit resolutions coverRegion 1 on the CSEA Board.
ing the specific Items they wish
Plaques were presented to Ms.
to have discussed when the state
ALBANY — N o n e w d e v e l - Duffy and to Ann Bessette, prescontract reopener talks are held.
ident
of
Harlem
Valley
chapter
o p m e n t s h a v e o c c u r r e d a s of
and Southern Region 3 represenThe CSEA collective bargainL e a d e r p r e s s t i m e in t h e s t a l ing agreements call for reopenled d e p a r t m e n t a l
n e g o t i a - tative, for their long meritorers this fall to discuss salaries,
tions between the Civil Service ious efforts on behalf of Mental
Hygiene
employees.
health Insurance exclusive of
Employees Assn. and the State
dental Insurance,
disciplinary
Both women are holdover
University of New York (SUNY).
procedure, and agency shop.
Board members who had served
The talks are at impasse and when Mental Hygiene had only
Resolutions concerning these nethe next step will be a meeting four Board representatives elecgotiations should be forwarded
between the president of CSEA
to John M. Carey, CSEA Coorted on a statewide basis. Current
and the State Director of Em- Board representation for Mental
dinator of State Negotiations, at
ployee Relations to try to reCSEA headquarters,
33
Elk
Hygiene is 14 representatives Decorations committee membeni for dinner-dance were, from left
solve the differences. A fact- elected on a region wide system. Christene Fedor, Maryann Scarafile and Margurite Curcio.
Street, Albany. N. Y. 12207.
finder will be appointed to enter
the talks if that session is unfruitful.
Meanwhile, CSEA representato gain a foothold hi Westchestones,
(Continued from Page 1)
improved benefits effective Jan.
tives are still steaming over the
Tom Luposello, CSEA South1, 1975."
reneging on an agreenient con- Town of Greenburgh employees ter."
CSEA represents all civilian ern Region field supervisor, said
The election will be held in
cerning time and attendance are unified in wanting CSEA to
that immediately after the elec- the cafeteria of Town Hall berules for institutional teachers continue as their bargaining rep- employees in the Town of Greenresentatives. However, we strong- burgh and there have been alle- tion "CSEA will be prepared and tween the hours of 9 a.m. and
by the State Department of
ly object to an Illegal challenge gations that the representational ready to negotiate a new con- 12 noon. All employees will be
Mental Hygiene, reported in last
tract for increased salaries and permitted time off for voting.
by an outside union attempting challenge has political overweek's Leader issue.
Renews Call
Hq. Is Seeking
State Contract
Demand Items
Nfi Progress
In SUNY Talks
Creenburgh Election Due Despite CSEA Protests
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