Te Mchigan Daily Vol. XCI, No. 16-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, May 28, 1981 Sixteen Pages City proposal protested By NANCY BILYEAU A handful of civil rights activists' staged a formal protest in front of City Hall yesterday, voicing their opposition to proposed City Council ordinance thtwould require halfway house prisoners and parolees to register with the city within 10 days of establishing residency in Ann Arbor. The proposed ordinance, drafted in response to Council members' concern over the dangers posed by halfway house inmates, must first be approved by Council after a public hearing and second reading before going into effect. ACCORDING TO Washtenaw County American Civil Liberties Union Chair- man Calvin Michael, such an ordinance is "unnecessary" and violates several : v A lone downtown pedestrian, shielded b Salaries reflect hi-mtech, d em and PrisonersO rights may be violated by Council's action constitutional protections and rights. The proposed ordinance reads: Every prisoner and parolee "shall, upon establishing residency within the city, contact the city administrator within 10 days and provide the city ad- ministrator with his or her name, date of birth, driver's license, and social security number, address and telephone number of residence, duration of expected stay in the city, - ,.ari in o rr 1 According to Michael, the measure would virtually brand a halfway house prisoner or parolee, singling him out from other groups or classes of people in violation of the Due Process Clause. THE PROPOSED registration or- dinance also violates the rights to privacy, equal protection, freedom of association, and the Commerce Clause of the Constitution, Michael said, ad- ding that to his knowledge, this is the first proposal of its kind in the country. The "Prisoners and Parolees" or- dinance passed the first reading last Tuesday over the objections of Coun- cilman Lowell Peterson (D-1st Ward) and Democratic Councilwoman Susan Greenberg, also of the First Ward, who voted against it. According to Greenberg, who said she was "appalled" by Council's proposal, the ACLU may file suit again- st the city if the ordinance is passed into law. Council's actions are "a hysteria ap- proach to the halfway houses," Green- berg said. Peterson agreed, sdying, "It's easy for people to get hysterical, there's a great deal of misunderstan- dings." LAST FEBRUARY, the city's Zoning Board of Appeals unanimously defeated a petition for construction of a "half-way" correctional facility state officials hoped would house up to 70 pre- parole prisoners. The proposal was voted down in the wake of a two-month controversy over the likelihood that criminal activity allegedly committed by city halfway house residents last winter would in- crease if another facility was built. According to Greenberg, the Council had approached the city administrator for means by which to regulate the local prisoner and parolee problem. But, Greenberg said she didn't foresee "a format that would violate constitutional rights." HOWEVER, Councilwoman Leslie Morris (D-2nd Ward) said that although See PRISONER, Page 6 Calm at Jackson Michigan's prisons were calm yesterday following waves of riots at three state institutions Tuesday and last week. See story, Page 3. Doily Photo City Slicker y his shiny black umbrella, hurries through yesterday's downpour. by JACKIE BELL By JOHN ADAM Two starkly different images of a University graduate exist in many peoples' minds. Either the graduate is beseiged with offers from the many firms attracted by his technical degree, or he is an LSA liberal arts graduate scrambling for any job he can get his hands on. But according to Harold Fowler, acting director of the Career Planning and Placement Office, the job prospects for liberal arts students are getting better each year. "A LIBERAL arts degree could be as valuable as an MBA (Masters of Business Administration) or an engineering degree if the students dig in and look at their careers," Fowler said, recommending that students come to the University's placement center as early as their freshman year in order to sharpen their skills and get a feel for the job market. "You should like what you're doing" and not avoid LSA just because technical careers are offering more money, Fowler said, since "all jobs require a certain amount of creativeness" and this creativity is lost if you don't like the job. Virginia Stegath, a University Career Planning ad- visor, said almost every company has opportunities for liberal arts people, "but the demand isn't there like it is for engineering and computer science." ONE STUDENT IN CCS (Computer Com- munications Science) had seven job offers from firms like IBM, GTE, Hewlett Packard, and Ford at a salary range from $21,600 to 23,700, Stegath said. "All computer science graduates must have had four or five offers," she said. Liberal arts students' biggest opportunities are in sales, Stegath said, which usually pay under $15,000 but sometimes have benefits such as unlimited use of s car. "After five years of experience there's not nearly as much of a salary differential between an MBA and a BA," she said. "It depends just how you perform on the job." FOWLER ESTIMATES that possibly 50 percent of University liberal arts students go on to Graduate See JOB, Page 6