Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, t t Some students to withhold dorm rent (Continued from Page 1) began last Wednesday, students have had to contend with left- overs for meals, longer food lines, accumulating debris and slower bus service. THESE DISADVANTAGES, the rent strike coordinators believe, are enoigh to justify withhold- ing rent. The average dorm resident owes $250 in rent fees for this month, and with a projected 450 students signing up for the rent strike, the University may have to do without $100,000 for the time being. But there are problems. The deadline for payments was yesterday, and many po- tential participants have already paid their bills. In addition, a University. some students' accounts are Teich said handled by parents, who might about this ca not be pleased with the idea comment on' of their offsprihg supporting a ing laws wou strike. added, "if (th THERE IS SOME doubt con- legitimate gr cerning the legality of the strike, ditions, they as well. While Michigan law (to withhold provides that tenants can with- Officials fr hold rent due to inadequate ser- fi could f vices, it does not necessarilyfierdoo apply to the University. testrike, but "It's a test case," admits Mil- personnel sa ler. "It certainly has never been pernne sa done before at any University." given no sped Paul Teich, of the Michigan how to hand Student Assembly's Housing Re- Tuition pas form Project, said he knew of eluded in th no previous case concerning a TU advises st landlord/tenant relationship in fees in ther he knew nothing ase and would not whether state hous- uld apply to it, but he students) have a ievance to the con- do have the right rent)." om the Housing Of- ot be reached yes- imment on the rent Student Accounts y. they have been cial instructions on le unpaid bills. yments are not in- e rent strake, and' tudents to pay these normal manner. r- Record trade deficit linked to January's severe cold WASHINGTON (A) - A re- i cord monthly trade deficit and the biggest drop in the nation's economic indicators index since the 1974-75 recession were blam- ed by the government yesterday on the severe January weather. Because of plant shutdowns and transportation snarls, ex- ports of goods declined 7.8 per cent during the month to give the nation a deficit in its for- eign trade of nearly $1.7 bil- lion. THE INDICATORS index that is supposed to foreshadow future economic trends was off 1.2 per cent in January, the big- gest decline since a 3 per cent drop in January of 1975 during the depths of the recession. The Commerce Department said the weather was a major contributor to both adverse economic reports. It said it "had a pronounced impact in di- minishing the volume of goodsj moving out of the country." I Job layoffs were up, and the average number of hours work- ed in a week was down. BUT THE government still is confident that the economy is improving and predicts that most of the economic ground that is lost during the winter will be made up during the re- mainder of the year. The drop in ' exports was across the board, with food down $144 million and machin- ery and transportation equip- ment dropping $615 million. While total exports were dropping to $9.6 billion during the month, imports rose by 2.3 per cent eo nearly $11.3 billion. EVEN BEFORE the weather took its toll on trade activity, the nation was running substantial deficits in its trade accounts. It had a 610 million deficit in December and a total deficit during 1976 of nearly $5.9 bil- 'lion. The previous record month- ly deficit of just over $1 bil- *11 f wl I . <: , .. t s : * _ \ I A t f y gene-T f- ,T' Y F . ; '\2 'rz ;_ . - . ;y' ;4. , r I HAPPENINGS 763-1107 THE ROBERT ALTMAN FESTIVAL CONTINUES ... With ANDREW SARRIS, the DEAN OF AMERICAN FILM CRITICS, on March 3rd, 7:30 p.m. at Rackham Auditorium. Mr. Sarris has written much on Altman and films in general. He is a regular contributor to THE NEW YORK TIMES and THE VILLAGE VOICE, as well as the founder of the Society of Cinema Studies. Admission: $1.25 AFRICAN QUEEN Friday, March 4th-7:30 p.m. & 9:30 p.m.- Nat. Sci. Auditorium-$1.25 A Mediatrics Presentation - ECLIPSE JAZZ Presents... ANTHONY BRAXTON in concert Friday, March 19 at the Michigan Union Ballroom There will be two shows at 8:00 and 10:30 p.m. General Admission: $3.50 FUTURE WORLDS: E. F. Schumacher Alternatives to large-scale technoloay, with emphasis on human needs and creativity, will be discussed by British economist E. F. SCHUMACHER at 7:00 p.m. on Sunday, Match 13th. Dr. Schumacher, author of the in- fluential "Small Is Beautiful: Economics As If People Mattered," will be speaking on "Facing the Future: A Closer Look at Appropriate Technologv" at Hill Audi- -torium on the University of Michigan campus. There is no admisison charge. UAC MUSKET Presents THE MUSIC MAN America's Marching Musical MARCH 31-APRIL 3 Tickets on Sale Now! Group Rates Available U.A.C. PRINT SHOP Do you need bus posters, signs for your office or memo work? Call the UAC Print Shop, 763-1 107, 3-5 every- day, for QUICK, CHEAP SERVICE. TICKETS NOW ON SALE AT TICKET CENTRAL -THE MUSIC MAN -THE ROBERT ALTMAN FESTIVAL -ANTHONY BRAXTON CONCERT Additional tickets can be sold at 'the Ticket Central for a 5 fr service chargie. lion was set in November of last year. The Commerce Department said the decline in its composite index of leading indicators was the first in four months and it offset completely a 1.2 per cent increase in the index in Decem- ber. Economists say it takes at least three months for the index to establish a trend in any one direction, so a one-month de- cline isn't viewed with alarm. The agency didn't blame all of the decline on the weather, but said, "The severity of the Janu- ary weather undoubtedly had an impact of unknown magni- tude on the nation's economy," including building activity and manufacturing output. NINE OF THE 12 components in the index were off in Janu- ary, including job layoffs, up to 1.3 per 100 workers from 1.1 in December, and ' the average workweek, down to 39.7 hours in January from 40 hours in December. Also off in January were sales deliveries, change in cash and other liquid assets, build- ing permits, changes in sensi- tive prices, stock prices, the money supply and new orders for goods. Two components improved, net business formation and con- tracts and orders for plant and equipment, while the 12th com ponent, on changes in business inventories, was unavailable. 'Ain postpones meeting (Continued from Page 1) THE SOURCE described the meeting as an expression of Amin's policy of "government by discussion" in which peo- ple were asked to voice prob- lems directly to the leader. Reports. reaching Nairobi in- dicated about 200 Britons had been summoned along with the Americans to meet with Amin at Entebbe. British diplomats said they were trying to con- firm the report. The cancelled session was or- iginally scheduled for yester- day but then reset for' tomor- row.. WHILE INSISTING he plans to honor the Americans, Amin also p his' troops on 24-hour alert d warne the United State against .-nting a commando raid on Entebbe like the Israelis mounted last sum- mer. The government - controlled radio said Amin was in a "jov- ial mood" when he met with a group of Americans and other { foreigners who work for Ugan- da airlines at Entebbe airport yesterday. The radio said Amin told the foreigners he had summoned all Americans living in Uganda to a meeting because le had pre- viously met with other exnatri- ates "even the British" - and the Americans hd been wondering why they were left out. The broadcast said Amin thanked American missionaries and those in other fields for taking care of the welfare of Ugandans. They and other ex- patriates :deserve honors for their good work, e reportedly said. 1H 4 0YC 0 c 0 'Sb6 N . *e=:r. '-.a.. 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