urday, June 2, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Nine .,r.,.,June2." 973_HE'_MER{,IY..gein Lie detectors used o screen applicants (ontiued from8.e01) t one point late in the inter- ., he was asked if he had r lied to get a friend in able. Tired and confused, he "he might have, at one time hen he was a child. The in- ogator pressed, demanding es, places and circumstances. ob left the motel room, ex- sted and upset wondering why h a grilling was necessary and rful of how the highly per- al information obtained in the rview would be used. ILL YINGER, the district nager of Stop 'n Go Foods, s the tests were initiated wt a year and a half ago be- se there was considerable em- e theft. People come to us with the pose of stealing,' he says, ing that since the testing bec the amount of theft has irduced. You can't be naive about " Arnold McCardell of the sing agency says. "Most ie who have worked have n something." inger claims the tests are used to determos ;in ap- ant's basic honesty. "We use it to tell if they are ng the truth on the applica- . The test does not deter- e who we hire,' he says. e continues, "We ask no per- t questions. We ask if they re owever, -another spokesnnn the company admits the graph test is both in depth quite personal. "We probe areas, including drug use, lifting, criminal record and ral dependability," he told pplicant. nger said the testing was tly confidential. "As far as ow the records are destroyed after the test is taken." t McCardell stated that he s all test records on file in office. "State law requires I a file for two years," he such law exists. 1 polygraph operators must icensed by the state, but as no official requirements have set forth, especially con- ing retention and destruction ecords. A five man State d of Forensic Polygraph miners has been appointed he governor to oversee the asing. The board has not yet approved by the state sen- op 'n Go receives an oral rt from McCardell the day tests are given. This is fol- d by a written report about $2.00 8:30 FRI.-SAT. United Artist's GEORGE GERDES longtime friend and teacher of Loudon Wainwright a week later. "The only person I give the information to is the requester (in this case Stop 'n Go)" McCardell said. HE WILL NOT, he added, even give out previous test in- formation on an individual who has already been tested once. That person must be tested again. "I would lose my license if I gave out that information," he said. For less than 100 tests a year, McCardell charges $35 per test. This includes a detailed. written report. For a shorter report he charges $30, and for only an oral report the price drops to $28. In' all cases the actual test and questions remain the same. Yinger believes pre-employ- ment polygraph tests are "be- coming more and more popular everywhere. It eliminates per- sons of questionable character thereby increasing store profits," he added. A DAILY SURVEY of local stores, however, found few others using polygraph tests. All Pants Galore stores give the tests as a matter of company policy. Village Green stores in Detroit also use lie detector tests. Arby's Roast Beef in Ann Arbor informs their employes that they can be asked to take a lie de- tector test after being hired. "It's on the application is case anything ever came up we would be legally able to use it," the manager says, "but we've never given one yet." The Ponderosa Steak House in Ann Arbor states on its applica- tions that employes can be sub- ject to lie detector tests. But the manager holds that a test has never been given to hourly em- ployes. Because of legal reasons, "It's being taken off of our new applications," he said. JOHN HODGE, personnel di- rector of Meijers Thrifty Acres, finds the whole practice ques- tionable. "To use a 'ie detector test would indicate a lack of trust. To hire someone is a dis- play of trust. That's a contradic- tion." While it is perfectly legal to have prospective employes sit through a test, the situation be- comes more complex for present employes. "Once you get a job you can refuse to take a test," said Gerald Bennetts, director of Bennets' Lie Detector Service and School in Detroit. "They have to have your consent, and they can't fire you if you refuse." He reported that a law govern- ing the use of polygraph tests was passed earlier this year. HE COMMENTED that when tested, the results alone can't get you fired, even if the test shows an employe is lying about stealing. "As long as you don't confess, they can't fire you." AND NOW A WORD FROM OUR RETR *w w ubic oo ,. DAILY PROBE Mellen si (Continued from Page 3) to warn In that capacity, sources say, was a " Mellen was in direct and con- 0 Sev tinuous contact with Larry Grat- spoke v. wohl, a confessed FBI informer perience who was then a key figure in the funded1 Detroit Weatherman collective. mid-1960 Grathwohl, whose undercover hiding s activities w e r e described at mer SD length in a May 20 New York not say Times s t o r y, encouraged and ganizati trained Detroit "Weatherpeople" salary. in the use of explosives and used 0 One the alias of "Sam Karp," sources SDS act say. encounte The sources suggest that Grath- 19bilia wohl/Karp was receiving direct ly social orders from Mellen. repeated GRATHWOHL IS currently tes- man. M tifying to a San Francisco federal grand jury probe of Weatherman activities. He has refused to talk to reporters. Accounts of Mellen's actions have also bared the following a d . Mellen told fellow SDSe:s that he attended San Francisco State College but was vague con- than an cerning his experience there. An official. employe in the college's records conduct department told The Daily thatcndsct Mellen did earn a B.A. degree council there in 1960, but grew appre- council hensive after noting that Mellen partmen had "a delinquency" with the BOTH college and refused to give fur- BOTH ther explanation. week. * Mellen sought emolooment Repor with a radical group in Chicago found a in 1970 after other Weatherman fondal figures had gone underground. ceptable Several West C o a s t activists to Murr traveled all the way to Chicago topho -- - ---- - - -- Rights I concurre Visitor loses the me his selec father, shoes to confi making (Continued from Page 3) tion c o m p a n y or something." MARO Late last week, penniless and awareo barefoot, Heather arrived in Ann having t Arbor. Her uncle, whom she has other in not seen since she was a little Masters girl, no longer lives here. He is from Y listed in last year's phone book undergr as J. A. Broduer, of 1330 Mc- Intyre. Her friend Helen has also moved and her home on Ashley is boarded up. With no money, no shoes and no friends, Heather began worry- ing. She finally went up to a stu- dent and asked for help. He en- trusted her to Gail Knudson, a waitress at Bimbos. GAIL HAS turned detective t'n try and locate Heather's father, bitt Jonathan Collins, San Fran- 1C cisco has proved to be less than Ho Chi1 sffiaient information. into Cat All the ohone numbers the wo southern have tried have failed. The nam. Birean of Immigration said they have too much paperwork to be THE ab- to trace a visa. said the Heather can't remember what noi isI oean liner she took from Lon- offensiv don to New York or what airline Tho tall she flew from New York to San Francisco. "Ther coming "I AM MORE into neople then the Kis the names of shins," savs Heath- work or er. "That seems so boring." win pol H,1ther sacs it is too early for two, her father to begin worrying. said. H° was nlanning to live in San Kissin F r a o c i s c o for another five week t months. "Besides, I travel a lot underst and so does he. "I once got lost in Gernany na for three weeks. A German fam- DA ilv took me in until the woman I was staying with snotted my ftither on the street. She dragge d him into the house by the arm saying. 'You have a daughter DAY CALF here, yo" have a da'ighter hare.' Ciiier' It was really quite funny. Open usee SACUA "I'M NOT WORRIED," she 2 pm. Carillon said. "We always manage ti get lonneur, back together and I call Gail nary er. a pm. mother now." CAREERF So Heather is living on Hill I NTERV Lice Edue. St. in a pair of borrowed sandals fire on Mc with her adoptive "mother" in- dieates fo til she learns what street her anese bus father lives on. Japan. Qi "Really," Heather Collins sA l erEnf "I'm just not very observant." ng Eng.o the group that Mellea pig." eral sources asy Mellen aguely of "t}:aching, ex- s" with a governmen:- group in Africa in the 's. "He appeared to be omething bad," one tsr Ser recalls; Mel'en would which "government or- on" was paying his former non-Weasherman ivist was "shocked" to r Mellen at a November iference of the Student tion Committee, a mild- ist anti-war gron which ly berated SDS-Weather- ellen. the activist recalls, uspected spy gave no explanaation of his p.ub- lie presence months after other Weatherman leaders na l vanush- ed to escape the FBI. Reporters from The Daly aad The Fifth Estate, a Detroit bi- weekly, have so far been inable to locate Mellen. A NUMBER OF soirces say the tall, slim 37-year-old i3 now in his native state of California. One account placed him in an as- yet unidentified radical group in the San Francisco B ay area some three months ago. Another source says Mellen now lives and teaches -ear Los Angeles, where he was born. indidates for city Iministrator named aontinued from PageS) y other local government The administrator must the day-to-day city busi- d act as a liaison between and the various city de- ts. HAVE been invited for interviews early next tedly the Republicans l seven candidates ac- The Democrats pointed ay and Maroney as the ices. While the Human Party council members ed, they found none of n outstanding. y refused to comment on ction. He said he wished er with council before a statement. NEY SAID te was un- of his status other than been asked to attend an- terview. He received a degree in urban studies 'ale University and an aduate degree from the University of New Haven. The candidate nominated cs administrator must te approved by council. Mayor games Ste- phenson reportedly is looking for a person who will have biparti san or tripartisan support from council. Stephenson said yesterday the list under consideration has been narrowed to two people, bitt re- fused to name them. While other candidates for the post may be considered, reliable city hall sources indicate "almost cer- tainly either Murray or Maroney will be the next administrator." THE SEARCH for a new ad- ministrator began months ago when then City Administrator Guy Larcon announced his retire- ment. Larcom, the city's first administrator, held the job for 18 years. George Owers will serve as acting administrator until July 1. By that time council is expected to make a final decision concern- ing the new administrator. U.S. bombing in ambodia resumes despite Senate ban ontinued from Page 1) Minh trail through Laos, tmbodia, then into the sector of South Viet- WASHINGTON soirces ir assessment is that Ha- preparing to launch an e if the Kissinger and ks fail. e is no do'ibt of a forth- communist offensive if singer - Tho talks don't if the communists don't itically in a month or one intelligence expert ger indicated eirlier this 't he had reached "new andings" with Tho in their rrmnd of talks DIst month. He said he exnected that the un- derstandings will be concluded satisfactorily during the forth- coming meeting with Tho. "A GREAT deal denends then on whether the new understand- ings will ha imnlemented," Kis- sing-r said. Infrirmnts in Saigon pointed it-- that the items being discts- sed by Kissinger and Tho are the 5- te - oa- ians of the origin-I ne-cra ee-rment, sign- ed Jn. 'a- wi-h h-e never been innlamented. There isno g-4r-tee that thev -er will be seriosl! nit into ff nt, -onsid- ering the mistrist h-to 'en the two onnosing narties in Sooth VietTIam. ILY OFF'CIAI lI 1,771TN, Saturday, June 2l 'n 764-7460 to sien up for interview ENDAR or stop in Career Planning & Place- Monday, June 4 ment Office. Communications Committee: TEACHER CORPS PEACE CORPS tine. 3524 5AB, noo. TECE CRP PE E OP Meeting: 4025 Adnmn. B PROG.: A rep will be in this office June 7 to interview candidates. Open Recital: Hudson Ladd, caril- for grads. who majoredi i Eng. iB.A. in Baird Carillon, Burton Tow- Eng. or Secondary Teacher w/major in Eng.) Three yr. program leading to PLANNING & PLACEMENT M's degree ii yr. at Lackawanna Pub. tIEWS ON CAMPUS: Time- Schools, & 2 yrs. w Peace Corps, par- Systems, will be in this of- ticipating in Afghanistan. Interns re- on., June 4 to interview can- ceive $90,wk & free tuition. r Instructors of Eng. for Jap- ACTION / PEACE CORPS VISTA will . men in Tokyo, & Osaka, be in Rm. 3529 of S.A.B. June 12. 13 & ualifications are. 1) Teach- 14 to discuss opportunities with inter- ig. major, or 3) esp. in teach ested students. Appts. not necessary as a Peace Carps volunteer. but do stop by to visit with reps.