Page 2-Tuesday, January 31, 1978-The Michigan Daily Food Co-op buys The new county jail: its own By CORDELIA KATZ Winter squash, curly broccoli, dim- pled cheese and rosy fruits that pereni- cally reside at the Packard People's Food Co-op can rest assured they'll never be tossed out in the cold. Rather than wait for an eviction notice, the Co- op yesterday bought the building it has been renting for the past five years. The unanimous decision to buy the building was made earlier this month in an emergency meeting at the Co-op. "I HOPE this will start a trend for community organizations," said co-op member Bill Dobbs. "It's very import- ant for them to own their own build- ings,." The co-op had been looking for a new storefront for over a ,year. Meanwhile, the building's owner, Art Smith had decided to sell the property, leaving the SaS 4. _ 629 EAST UNIVERSITY SPECIAL BUY 2 GET 1 FREE! uilding co-op without a lease for several mon- ths.- The emergency meeting was called when Smith was offered $35,000 for the building by the co-op's neighbor, The Spaly Group, Inc., a real estate firm. ACCORDING to co-op members, relations between Spaly and the co-op have been strained. They said the coop had reason to believe it would be evict- ed if the company bought the building. The only promising alternative to the house-turned-storefront was another house located across the street. It was larger, had parking available, but was twice as expensive. When the coop was refused a bank mortgage on the new house, co-op members ruled it out. To buy its present quarters, the Peo- ple's Food Co-op was required to match the price offered by th Spaly Group. In fact, Smith had made the terms so favorable for the co-op that real estate salesman George Fahmie, while advis- ing the co-op on the sale, joked that if it didn't buy, the building, he would. Sorry George. boon or b By MARTHA RETALLICK Is the new Washtenaw County Jail a $10 million boondoggle or a long-over- due remedy to the currently over- crowded facility on West Ann Street? County Jail Administrator Mike Mon- tgomery and University law school Prof. David Chambers discussed this question at last night's annual meeting of the Washtenaw Community Bail Fund. TO MONGTOMERY, the new jail in Ypsilanti Township near Washtenaw Community College, is "one of a kind." The jail's innovative design has already sparked national and international curiosity, he added. Montgomery and Chambers both acknowledged that the major problem with the current jail is its over- crowding. The present facility can hold 124 inmates. But, the jail must now hold an average of 165 inmates a week, Mon- tgomery said. In the past, surrounding county jails have handled Washtenaw's overflow. Some of Washtenaw's inmates have oondoggle? been held in facilities as far as 100 miles from Ann Arbor. CHAMBERS RECALLED one Washtenaw inmate who was instituted as a trustee at the Isabelle County jail. The inmate also had arranged to have pizza brought into the jail every night. Needless to say, that man did not want to come back to Ann Arbor to stand trial, Chambers said. The new jail should help the over- crowding problem "in the short run," Chambers said. But, since the county "will instantly have a surge in size, we don't know what the judge's response will be," he added. He pointed out that in the past, the overcrowding has provided leverage for such groups as the Community Bail Fund to have prisoners released on bail. IN SPITE OF the nearly completed jail's features-including single cells, an indoor gymnasium and complete medical and dental facilities-Mon- tgomery emphasized it is only a physical structure that will be only as good as the rehabilitation programs underway within it. To Chambers, the quality of those programs will also depend on the prison staff. "We may have the best medical facilities in the country, but what can we do if no one gets the message that an inmate needs help?" he said. "Who makes the decision of who goes into the padded cell?" Hairstyles to please Long or Short DASCOLA STYLISTS " 615 E. Liberty.-668-9329 * 3739 Washtenaw-971-9975 " 613 N. Maple-761-2733 " 611 E. University-662-0354 A Masters Degree in RADIATION PROTECTION at The University of Michigan OPPORTUNITIES AVAILABLE for: * Financial support for qualified graduate students " Research in radiation dosimetry and radiation biology " High-paying, interesting jobs in a growing profession in which the demand for graduates far exceeds the supply. Interested students in engineering, physics, biology, chemistry, pre-med, or any of the other physical or biological sciences should call 764-0523. Daily Photo by BRAD BENJAMIN Barbed wire frames this view of Washtenaw County's new $10,000,000 jail, which is located in Ypsilanti Township. Senate group alters Panama. pact WASHINGTON (AP) - A Senate memo with committee, alarmed by Panamanian came about warnings that a second plebiscite BUT OVE might be necessary on the Panama of 10 sena Canal Treaty, scrapped, a previous Majority Le action yesterday and found another Calif.), an way to incorporate U.S. security (R-Vt.), w guarantees into the pact. treaty expe On a pair of 14-to-1 votes, the tacking of a Senate Foreign Relations Committee would make sent the treaty to the Senate, with datory. recommendations that it be ratified After an at the end of an expected two to five staffers, di weeks of debate, withdraw ti THE CHANGE involves inclusion mended ins in the treaty language of an Oct. 14 meadd -theC memorandum of understanding ial - the Ca which was agreed to - but not signed inserted ir - by President Carter and Pana- articles oft manian leader Omar Torrijos. The the pact ra memo spells out a U.S. right of prior- ated as a 1 ity access to the canal in emergen- agreement cies and a right to use military force States to re to defend the waterway. Senate waterway t leaders say this must be included if year 2000. the pact has any chance of passage. Yesterdad Last Friday the committee voted Senate to y, 13 to 1 to recommend Senarte adoption the mative of a new article for the treaty, incorporating the Carter-Torrijos ity. terms an explanation of how it t. ER the weekend, a group ators led by Assistant eader Alan Cranston (D- d Sen. Robert Stafford, ere told by Panamanian rts that, in their view, the anew article onto the pact e another plebiscite man- emergency meeting with he committee decided to he Friday vote. It recom- tead that the same mater- arter-Torrijos memo - be each of two existing the neutrality portion of ther than being incorpor- new article. A companion provides for the United elinquish control over the o the Panamanians by the y's action left it to the full, decide whether to amend which requires only the votes of a simple major- .................. .. .5 .Y Carter to ask halt on atomic (Continued from Page 1) their satellite was designed to be destroyed during its fall and that it would not explode. The President said he knew no more than the public knows about what searchers have found in- Can- ada.. CANADIAN officials said earlier in the day that two American wildlife scientists had found radioactive wreckage from the satellite, which plunged to earth Jan. 24, cutting a 9- to 10-foot crater into ice on the Thelon River in the Northwest Territories. The wreckage was described as structural tubing and a smashed metal canister. The two Americans showed no signs of radioactive contamination, the officials said. At his wide-ranging news confer- ence, Carter also said: " Rejection of any phase of his tax, our rear OPREPAR E FOR-e4ath MCAT" DAT * LSAT" GRE GMAT -"OCAT -VAT -SAT NMB1,111 ECFMG-"FLEX-VQE NAT'L DENTAL BOARDS NURSING BOARDS Flexible Programs & Hours There IS a difference!!! K MP N EDUCATIONAL CENTER Test Preparation Specialists Since 1938 For Information Please Call: (313) 662-3149 For Locations In Other Cities, Call: TOLL FREE: 800-223-1782 Centers in Major US Cities toronto. Puerto Rico and Lugano. Sw tterlan'C satellites jobs and inflation-fighting programs could aggravate the nation's econom- ic problems. He said success depends on "a very careful balance" between conflicting priorities. If necessary, the President said, he would try to exert influence on Congress and through the American people to keep his programs intact. " He has no intention at this time to intercede in the nation's coal strike by invoking the Taft-Hartley Act, which would require miners to return to work for an 80-day cooling off period. Nonetheless, he conceded that prospects for an end to the strike do not look good. The President said he hoped the United Mine Workers and the coal operators would speed up a resolu- tion to their dispute. " Egypt has asked the United States for F-5E fighter planes and Israel and other Middle East nations have requested weapons as well. Carter said his National Security Council will make recommendations this week and he will decide later this week what to recommend to Con- gress. Carter said he does not have "a map or a plan" for Mideast boun- daries to offer visiting Egyptian President Sadat later this week. --SPE at the Bagel Fctory 1306 S. University INTRODUCING our NEW Salads: potato-cole slow 4 oz. serving--normally 39C NOW 1 9 with anyesandwich (Good through Feb. 1) "ALWAYS FRESH, 7 days .. 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