The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 22, 1988 - Page,3 A Group helps tenants deal with owners }BY ROSE LIGHTBOURN Landlord-tenant disputes are commonplace in Ann Arbor, as they are everywhere else. Skyrocketing 3 rents, poor repairs, immense security deposits, and lack of privacy are just some of the gripes tenants have with their landlords. The Ann Arbor Tenants' Union, although its most recent rent control project failed, supports tenants hav- ing problems with their landlords, and lobbies for progressive legisla- tion for renters in the city. FINANCED through a Michigan Student Assembly student fee, the Tenants' Union was created 20 years ago to aid tenants in the Washtenaw County area. Staffed by two full- time student employees and work study students, the Union serves students and non-students alike. Most complaints concern repair } problems. During the fall, however, fees and security deposits are tenants' greatest concerns. the rent control vote against students who worked for the implementation of rent control. i The rent control controversy be- agan in late October 1987, when a bill was submitted to the State Senate, that would prohibit any municipality from enforcing the regulation of rent or practice "price fixing." The bill passed the Senate and was sent to the State House. Yet active lobbying by corpora- tions like MichCon and Detroit Edi- son aided the bill's passage through the House, she said. GOVERNOR James Blanchard signed the bill into law July 4, de- spite a sit-in protest by the Tenants' Union and other state-wide tenant organizations. Defeated in. the city's April elec- tions, the proposed rent control ac- tion would have limited increases in rent to three-fourths of the inflation rate, providing the apartment was up to state standards. Some 120 cities nationwide, including college towns such as Cambridge, Mass. and Berkeley, Calif. as well as New York City currently have rent con- trol. Yet, the proposal lost by a 2-1 margin here, where 60 percent the residents are renters. KAREN HANDELMAN/Dcly Not where the dorms buy theirs Milan resident Al Kierczak sells vegetables at the Farmers' Market on Fourth Street. The market is open Wednesday and Saturday mornings from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. All the produce, flowers, antl other goods are either homegrown or handmade. Class stresses ethics in business Tenants' Union employee Claudia Green said attention paid to last year's rent control controversy put housing issues in the public eye. As a result, complaints have increased considerably. BUT SHE SAID activism has resulted in a "notable backlash" after 'THE What's happening it Speakers EECS Seminar - Dr. John Makhoul speaks on "Vector Quantization." EECS rm 1200. 4 p.m. Dr. Ali Mazrui - "Israel and South Africa: Strange Bedfellows or Natural Allies?" Rackham Amphitheatre, 7 p.m. Sponsored by Palestine Solidarity Committee. Zecharia Kallia - "Joshua and Judges 1 in Biblical Historio- graphy." 3050 Frieze Building. 4 p.m. Sponsored by the Program on Studies in Religion. Saskia Kersenboom - "Dasi Attam: The Ritual Repertoire of the Devadasis of South India." The a Museum of Art, 8 p.m. Free. ' David Peterson - "Aztec Militarism and the Conquest of Mexico." Ruthven Museums Build- ing, rm 2009. 12 noon. }Physical Chemistry Seminar - "Structure, Bonding, and Reaction Kinetics on Surfaces using Synchrotron Based Spectro- scopies." Prof. John Gland. Chemistry Building, rm 1200. 4 p.m. Peter Cryle - "Convincing and Constraining: Aspects of Debate in Literary Theory." West Conference Room, Rackham. 4:10 p.m. Sponsored by the Dept. of Romance Languages and Literature. Meetings LIST n Ann Arbor today "How to evict your landlord." meeting, MSA chambers, Michigan Union. 7:30 p.m. Mass 3909 BY M. ANNA SCHLOSSBERG Ivan Boesky made headlines nationwide in 1987 when he was charged with insider trading on Wall Street. In Ann Arbor, Gelman Sciences, Inc. wants to pump ground water contaminated with dioxane into a well, despite fears that they may contaminate area drinking water. In these and similiar cases, members of the business community must decide what is the "right thing to do." The University is trying to ensure that its graduates are trained to make such decisions. THE SCHOOL of BusinesscAdministration began to offer an elective class in business ethics in the fall of 1987. This term there are three sec- tions of the one credit, six week long pass/fail course. "Ivan Boesky is the greatest recruiter we have," said Prof. LaRue Hosmer, who teaches the course. "I think people are becoming more aware of the ethical issues in business." Hosmer, a professor of corporate strategy and director of the Magna Office of Entrepreneurial Strategies at the business school, became inter- ested in business ethics many years ago when, as owner of a company, he was offered a bribe. Since then, he has focused his research and writ- ing on the topic. ACCORDING TO Hosmer, there are two types of ethical dilemmas. In the first, the ques- tion is, "Will I do the right thing?" In the second - which is the focus of the class - the question is, "What is the right thing to do?" "Is it right for a company to cut costs by firing lots of people? Is it right for power companies to use coal, even though it creates acid rain? On the other hand, is it right for them to raise consumer costs by three billion dollars to pay for the necessary filters? What do you do when benefits to one group cause harm to another?" Hosmer asked. 'Is it right for a company to cut costs by firing lots of people? Is it right for power companies to use coal, even though it creates acid rain?' -Prof. LaRue Hosmer, who teaches business ethics "Ethics is not just opinion," he said. "There are principles of analysis that can be used. Ethi- cal question are touched on in other classes, and students are asked what they think, but you don't learn much from sharing-opinions based on intu- ition." RACHEL GOLDFADEN, a business school senior who attends the course, said, "Business is not just a profit and loss game anymore. It has many social consequences which I feel I must be aware of." Josh Rossman, a junior majoring in finance, agreed. "The general opinion among business students is to go for the money, unless they take a course like this. I thought I was missing some- thing with that attitude, that my knowledge might not be adequate." The course attracts non-business students-as well, including Susanne Schnell, a graduate st- dent in the School of Education. "I wanted to see the perspective they would take. In any field you're going to run into dilemmasathat have consequences. for yoursef- and others," she said. HOSMER hopes to teach ethics as a regular three-credit graduate course next semester, bringing together business, law, education, add public policy students. Eventually, he would lilge to see the course required for business students.- "Professor Hosmer's class is very important, and we are seriously considering expanding it this winter," said Tom Kinnear, associate dean Of MBA programs. "We are undecided abogt making it a requirement, because we don't want other professors to feel that they don't have t address ethics in their classes." "The tragedy of the United States is that at one time our goal was liberty, justice and equal, ity, but not anymore. Our goal now seems to b success over the short term, and I don't like that," Hosmer concluded. Involved in Michigan Political Action Committee - Mass meeting, Michigan Union, Alexander rm D. 6:30 p.m. University Lutheran Chapel - Bible/Topic Study, 1511 Washtenaw Ave. 7 p.m. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foun- dation - Mass meetings. Con- ference on the Holocaust, 6:30 p.m. at Hillel, 339 E. Liberty. Progressive Zionist Caucus, 7 p.m. at the Pond Room, Michigan Union. Tagar, 8 p.m. at rm 1209, Michigan Union. Israel Information - Yafet Ozery, a representative of the Jewish Agency's kibbutz aliyah desk, will be at Hillel from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. to answer questions about programs in Israel. Latin American Solidarity Committee - Mass meeting and film: "Witness to War," followed by a speech by a Salvadoran refugee. Anderson Rooms A and B, Michigan Union. 8 p.m. Macromolecular Research Center - "Longitudinal Acoustic Mode (LAM)xStudies of Poly (Ethylene Oxide). Thesis Colloquim by Kigook Song. IST Bldg., rm 1114. 3:30 p.m. Performances The Beat - The Holy Cows perform at 10:30 p.m. Doors open 9:30 p.m. 215 N. Main. $3 cover. The University Club - Juice performs at Soundstage. 10 p.m. Save Big Bucks on a Personal Comap uter! U-!Mstudents,facufty, and staff can take advantage of 41% - 58% off retailprices on Apple, BM> and Zenith personaif computers throug hi21-M's Computer K(ickff Safe.. , i ' . To help you decide on a system, take a test- drive and talk to a representative at the Hands-On Display in the Michigan Union Mall loam - 6pm "' ... s .,1 ' " s a w Student Struggle Jewry - Weekly MLB, rm B101. 6:30 for Soviet meeting at p.m. w* American Civil Liberties Union - University of Michigan chapter meeting. Hutchins Hall, rm 116. 7 p.m. LSA StudentnGovernment - Weekly meeting, 3909 Michigan Union. 6 p.m. Public Interest Research Group in Michigan - Kickoff for campaign to clean up toxic waste, voter registration and edu- cation. PIRGIM office, rm 4109, Michigan Union. 7 p.m. Career Planning and Place- ment - Preparing for Medical School. CP&P office, Student Activities Building. 4:10 p.m. r..nra t,.. Pno.. _ fw.. -R a The Ark - Susan Mazer Dallas Smith perform New Jazz. 8 p.m. Tickets $8.50. and Age Furthermore Arts All Day - Media demonstrations and previews of events for the coming year from the office of Arts & Programs. Michigan Union Pendleton Room, 2nd floor. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Free. Star Trax - Record your own vocals over background music - free! Zims, Briarwood Mall. 8:30 p.m. to 12:30 p.m. Ushers - University Productions Call 763-6181 for more informa- tion, or pick up an information book/order form at: .1ff campus computing sites Campus Information Center, Micigan 'Union ComputingPResource Center Photo and Campus Services Order your computer today! '/ * a , 4