STUDENT RIGHTS See Editorial Page Y [L A61F .ilit r t an I . 4 A , 11 D)ati SMORGASBORD High-35 Low-18 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 98 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, January 24, 1976 10 Cents Eight Pages *q ~ f ItCUSEE WM L Supports strike State Representative Perry Bullard yesterday expressed his "strong support" for the Ann Arbor Tenants' Union rent strike and said he was intro- ducing a bill which would provide a legal struc- ture for tenant-andlord collective bargaining. "Collective bargaining will bring rationality into the situation," Bullard said, "by allowing an orderly, as well as equitable, settlement of dis- putes." Happenig's . . are hardly rich today. The Ann Arbor Ecology Center holds a workshop on urban ecology and ;community organizing skills from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Calvary Presbyterian Church, 2727 Fern- wood . . . The Engineering School offers an all-day "Card Box Clean-up" at the Computing Center and NUBS . . . and the Music School has an 8 p.m. Arts Chorale program at the Power Center. 0 All the news fit to plant The House intelligence committee has learned that the CIA planted stories with the Reuter news agency and foreign news media, according to a committee source. Reuter, a British-based wire service, provides news for many U.S. media, in- cluding The Daily, The New York Times and The Toledo Blade. CIA Director William Colby report- edly told the committee that Reuter was considered a foreign news agency and therefore was "an open target," but that American news service such as the AP were untouched. The source added that Colby said 11 fulltime agents posed as journalists and that The Company maintains a liason with the State Department and the U.S. Information Agency to warn them of planted stories so Ameri- can government agencies will not rely on them as factual. In London, the managing director of Reuter said: "Reuter has been in the news busi- ness for 125 years, largely because we know the difference between the truth and lies. If any so- called intelligence organization has paid stringers to pass its handouts to Reuter in the guise of news, it is highly likely that organization has been wasting the taxpayers' money." Resurrection 79-year-old Baltimore woman was brought back to life Thursday after being dead for 37 years. Rosalie Kelly, 79, vanished without a trace in 1939 and was declared dead. She tured up re- cently in a Maryland nursing home and has been battling to inherit her own estate ever since. Fortunately, her $8,000 estate was never dissolved and Kelly's rights to administer it have been restored by the Baltimore city court, which finally confirmed- she was alive. 0 Victory for voyeurs Uninhibited swimmers still have a right to grin and bare it on the nation's only legal nude beach, but they'll have to put up with crowds of gawkers The San Diego city council voted 5-4 this week to continue allowing nudity on their famous Black's Beach, a 900-foot strip of sand and broken glass near the San Diego campus of the University of California. "We've already heard about skinny-dip tours coming here because of this," complained Councilman Lee Hubbard. "I can see San Diego becoming an international Mecca for tourists of all kinds, with stops at the zoo, Sea World and Black's Beach." Sort of like Central Park, the Empire State Building and the Times Square hookers, we guess. Burger burgeon Now you can suffer from indigestion and mal- nutrition in London, too. McDonald's has cleared the way for a new greaseburger outlet, gaudy golden arches and all,, in March on the Hay- market, a famous boulevard in the shadow of Buckingham Palace. But the chain's head in Britain, Bob Rhea, has to gamble against a few problems with his London chophouse. Britons like to eat everything with knives and forks, and they generally don't take kindly to strangers putting seasoning on their food. However, they prefer their "chips" with vinegar, an ingrediant Mac's leaves out. Rhea had to back down on another problem-the queen's agents decided the word "hamburger" in blazing neon lights might "lower the tone" of the neighborhood. "It was not worth arguing with them," Rhea says. "They will even- tually come to realize the word 'hamburger' is nothing to be ashamed of." Judging from experi- ence, we'd predict Mac's will be ashamed about a little more than words. Rhea's not stopping there, either. "We want to see those golden arches all over England. That would make the people in the States very happy," he says. Unless they eat the stuff, too. On the inside ... You'll find an account on the state of war in Northern "Ireland by PNS writer Richard Boyle on the Edit Page . . . Arts gives you its weekly oo i Food fi0 By DANA BAUMANN Did you ever sit through an entire lecture thinking only of a Milky Way candy bar? Do you ever glut yourself on secret late-night refrigera- tor raids when there is no one around to discover your insatiable gastronomical binges? If you answer "yes" to either or both of the above questions, you may be suffering from a serious compulsive eating problem. It is a prob- lem widespread enough on this campus to have prompted several students to found a chapter of Overeater's Anonymous (OA), where compulsive eaters can gather to discuss their problems with others and plan methods to combat their afflic- tion. JULIE teaches fourth grade. At 170 pounds, she can hardly be described as pleasingly plump. Yet, compared with her previous peak weight of 242, she might as well be Olive Oil. "Can you 'believe it? I used to sneak down to the kindergarten room on my breaks and eat their cookies," she said. "All the children knew me, because I was always down there eating. Giroud. may talky at grad f