The Michigan Daily-Saturday, February 7, 1981-Page 3 Citizens enraged over n By DEBI DAVIS The state's controversial halfway house program came under fire Thur- sday night when about 125 concerned citizens met with Michigan Department of Corrections officials to discuss the community residential program, which places pre-parole prisoners in the community to ease their transition back into society. Most of the two dozen citizens who spoke at the meeting were violently op- posed to the proposed corrections facility, and many questioned the way the entire community residential program has been run. THE COMMUNITY residential program consists of several phases of institutionalization for pre-parole prisoners. A corrections facility, the most heavily guarded of the three types, provides 24-hour supervision of the prisoners. A halfway house, or resident home, as it is called by the DOC, has fewer restrictions than a corrections facility. Prisoners must report weekly to a field agent and be in each night by a specified curfew. FINALLY, THERE is extended furlough, the level of least supervision, in which a prisoner lives with friends or family in the community. He or she must also report weekly to a field agent, but curfews are less strict because "spot checks" are less frequent. In all three types of pre-release situations the prisoners are required to have a job or be actively seeking em- ployment. City Administrator Terry Sprenkel charged Thursday night that the state has run an "unsafe, haphazard" aif way operation without adequate super- vision. He also objected to the state's disregard for the local community, saying that John Gellick, supervisor of the Ann Arbor resident home program, has failed to notify the police of the number, location and status of prisoners in the program. GELLICK DENIED the charge, saying that, as a former police officer, he recognizes the need to inform local police, and has always done so. Others present at the three-hour house has forced the DOC to expedite placement of prisoners in the com- munity program. CITY COUNCILMAN Earl Greene (D-2nd Ward) said, "We are absolutely outraged that you (DOC) bring people into the community who are going to kill and maim us." Greene was referring to a December murder and January restaurant robbery, both allegedly committed by halfway house residents. Richard Bailey, father of the young woman who was killed in the December 'We are absolutely outraged that you (the DOC) bring people who are going to kill into the community AP Photo Dinner is served r This snow statue captured first prize for the members of Delta Sigma Phi fraternity at Michigan Technological Univer- sity's annual Winter Carnival. This is the fourth first-place win in a row for the fraternity. 5R AmtLrak Saturday mail face Reagan ' budget ax and maim us. -Earl Greene, city councilman meeting objected to the past record of halfway houses in the city. In Ann Arbor, all of the ap- proximately 80 pre-parole prisoners are either living in one of the three existing halfway houses or are on extended furlough. The DOC hopes to establish a centralized corrections facility at 1700 Broadway which would house ap- proximately 70 prisoners. WILLIAM KIME, a corrections department representative from Lan- sing, said Thursday, "The 70 prisoners are already in the community. The question is, how are they going to be housed?" He added that prison overcrowding WASHINGTON (AP) - Saturday mail deliveries, Amtrak train service, and urban programs - survivors of last year's spending cuts - face a new threat from President Reagan's budget. ax, according to internal ad- ministration documents obtained yesterday. The documents, listing a wide range of possible spending reductions, were prepared by budget director David Stockman, and contain plans for slashing the budget in nearly every major area outside the military. THE DOCUMENTS, some of which were made available to The Associated Press, focus heavily on social progar- ms, including Medicaid, Social Security, food stamps, unemployment insurance, welfare, and housing. But they also target cuts in programs for transportation, energy, rural areas, space exploration, and urban economic development. Republican congressional sources said Stockman was particularly in- terested in finding cuts in programs that benefit business, so as to avoid the appearance that the poor will bear the brunt of budget reductions. "THE ADMINISTRATION is trying to put together a picture of basic fair- ness intwhich everybody's sacred cows are affected," said one GOP budget of- ficial, who asked not to be named. Reagan plans to review Stockman's APPEN INGS FILMS AAFC - Allegro Non Troppo, 7, 10:20 p.m., Robert Breer Animation Night, 8:40 p.m., MLB 4. Alt. Action Films - The Rose, 7, 9:30 p.m., MLB 3. Cinema Guild - Willie and Phil, 7,9:05 p.m., Lorch Hall Aud. Cinema II- Edvard Munch, 7, 10 p.m., Aud. A, Angell. Classic Film Theatre - Take the Money and Run, 1, 4, 7, 10 p.m., Where's Poppa?, 2:30, 5:30, 8:30, Michigan Theatre. Mediatrics - Dirty Harry, 7 p.m., The Eiger Sanction, 9:10 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. PERFORMANCES Abeng - 7th Annual Minority Arts & Cultural Festival, Poetry Reading, 3 p.m., Benzinger Library, Fashion/Performing Arts Show, 8 p.m., RC Auditorium. School of Music - Contemporary Directions Ensemble, Carl St. Clair, cond., 8p.m., Rackham. U. Musical Society - Pianist Oxana Yablonskaya, 8:30 p.m., Hill Aud. Music for Solo Piano - Amy Fynck performing works by DeBussy, Beethoven, Haydn and Ravel, 8:30 p.m., First Unitarian Church, Recital Hall, 1917 Washtenaw. MISCELLANEOUS Alpha Delta Pi Sorority - Rockathon for Ronald McDonald House, 8 a.m.- 8p-.m., Mott Children's Hospital. Rec. Sports - Children's Sports-O-Rama, 9 a.m.-1 p.m., NCRB. Abeng - 7th Annual Minority Arts and Cultural Festival, Art Exhibit, 10 a.m.-6 p,m., EQ, Frat./Sorority Exhibit, 1-3 p.m., East Quad. Exhibit Museum Planetarium, "Cosmos: The Voyage to the Stars", narrated by Dr. Carl Sagan, 10:30, 11:45 a.m., 1:30, 2:45, 4 p.m., Ruthven Museum. Children's Community Center - benefit Mexican Dinner and Coffee House, 5-11 p.m., Halfway Inn, Church St. Asian Amer. Assn. & Chinese Students Assn. - Lunar New Year Celebration, dinner, variety show, 6:30 p.m., South Quad. Computing Ctr. - Bob Blue, "MTS File Editing and MTS I/O", 7-9 p.m., 2003 Angell. International Center - Japan Club Party, 7 p.m., International Center. Folklore Society - Contra/Square dance, all dances taught, 8 p.m.- midnight, Mich. Union. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of: Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI., 48109. SAMICHIGAN STUDENT SEMBLY IS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR THE POSITIONS OF: ELECTION DIRECTOR Responsible for management and organization of campus- wide MSA General Election for April 7 & 8, 1981. budget proposals early next week before he sends his spending cut package to Congress Feb. 18. The cuts are expected to total $40 billion to $50 billion for fiscal 1982, which starts Oct. 1 Speaker Thomas O'Neill told repor- ters yesterday he will try to block any Reagan cutbacks that would harm the poor. "They'll have me watching out for them," he said. O'NEILL SAID he would cooperate in correcting "inequities in government," but would not preside over dismantling of social welfare programs and allow the government to "exploit the many for the profits of a selfish few." Among the proposed spending cuts that would affect business - as well as the general public - is a recommen- dation to reduce the proposed postal subsidies in former President Jimmy Carter's 1982 budget from $1 billion to $800 million. The budget document notes that such a change would almost certainly renew the possibility the U.S. Postal Service would eliminate Saturday mail deliveries. STOCKMAN ALSO is seeking elimination of the Economic Develop- ment Administration, which was created to help economically distressed areas by providing grants, loans, and loan guarantees to attract private in- vestment and new jobs. Regional development commissions would also be eliminated along with several other urban grant programs for an overall saving of $1.6 billion, the documents show. Spending on Amtrak and mass transit programs would be sharply reduced. STOCKMAN recommends cutting Amtrak's subsidy by about one-third in 1982 and more in later years, with ex- pected major reductions in train ser- vice and dramatically higher fares. "To sharply reduce federal subsidies, routes and trains should be dropped if they don't meet a strirgent threshhold test" of profitability, the documents said. The new tests, which would require trains to cover 50 percent of their costs in 1982 and 80 percent by 1985, would eliminate more than half of Amtrak's routes outside the Northeast. State unemployment rate rises sharply DETROIT (UPI) - Michigan's unemployment rate rose sharply from 12.2 percent in December to 13.7 per- cent in January due chiefly to the con- tinuing slump in the auto industry, the Michigan Employment Security Com- mission said yesterday. MESC Director S: Martin Taylor said the 1.5 percent increase gave Michigan its highest January jobless rate since 1975, when the figure also hit 13.7 per- cent. THE NUMBER OF unemployed workers across the state rose by 61,600, from 524,000 in December to 585,000 last month, the MESC said. A year ago, Michigan's January unemployment rate was 10.3 percent with 439,000 out of work. Yesterday's announcement was un- welcome news to state officials. "Although some increase in unem- ployment is normal in January, the current, increase is fairly substantial, especially when you consider thattwe have had double-digit unemployment since January of last year," Taylor said. Taylor attributed the increase in unemployment to layoffs in the auto in- dustry along with seasonal job losses in construction and retail trade as many who held temporary holiday jobs joined the ranks of the unemployed in January. NATIONALLY, the unemployment rate remained unchanged at 7.4 percent in January, with 7,847,000 out of work. In Lansing, state Budget Director Gerald Miller noted the MESC figures were not seasonally adjusted and said the adjusted figures might show an actual increase of only .8 percent. "More important is the number of employed and the number of unem- ployed," Miller said. "January is always up - that's not unexpected. We expected to have a weak first quarter and we're going to have a weak first quarter." President Abraham Lincoln was shot by assassin John Wilkes Booth in 1865. murder, said the program has been run by "profiteers" who wish to make money at the expense of the com- munity. But Louis Rome, owner of three for- mer halfway houses, including the one in which the alleged murderer Timothy Hughes lived, said he "went in the red" operating his homes as halfway house facilities. ROME'S HALFWAY houses were closed shortly after the murder when his staff resigned. Roger Schoultz, one of Rome's staff members sasid in an interview yesterday the staff resigned ,because of a lack of security, whih should be provided by the DOC. "The officers came around at the same time every night," Schoultz said. Schoultz said some of the men were out all night, only returning for bed checks. "Even if they weren't in bed, frequently nothing was done," he said. ANN ARBOR 2 INDIVIDUAL THEATRES 5th Ae o f liberty 761-9700 The year's No. 1: No. LILY Y TOMLIN CHARLE GRODIN THE INCREDIBLE SHRINKING (PG) WOMAN Daily-8:30, 9:50 Sat. & Sun. 1:50, 3:40 I I -AN(PG) Robert Last 14 Days Daily 6:00 Sat. & Sun. 1:00, 3:00 M :: $ ;; >< <: 1 mmr STUDENTS FACULTY STAFF NOMINATE OUTSTANDING TEACHERS, RESEARCHERS, AND COUNSELORS FOR A FACULTY AWARD: ACHIEVEMENT AWARD: For Associate and Full Pro- fessors FINAL 14 DAYS the Shadow directed Warrior by Akira Kurosawo Daily 6:30, 9:15 L- I RECOGNITION AWARD: For Assistant, and Junior Full Professors. Associate, I BARGAIN MATINEES Wed., Sat.Sun. $2.00 ttl 5:30 Ann Arbor CHEAP FLICK All Seats $2.00 Friday and Saturday ,.,E2! at Midnight AMOCO OUTSTANDING TEACHER AWARD: For Reg- ular Facultv Who Have Demonstrated Excel-