The Michigan Daily -Tuesday, July 19, 1983 - Page 3 tenants win cleaning fee ease By MICHAEL WESTON Two former Eastern Michigan Univ- ersity students won a major court bat- tle against their landlord last week that could save all Michigan renters some money. Mike Smolen and Pete Mikelonis won hack $37.50 that their landlord, Dahlman Apartments, took out of their security deposit for cleaning carpeting and furniture in their apartment after they moved out. THE TWO filed suit in Washtenaw County Circuit Court in early 1980 but when Judge Henry Conlin refused to hear the case, they took it to the Michigan State Court of Appeals in Lansing. Last week, their persistence paid off - a three-member panel of appeals Dooley's moves to the beat: Dance floor approved By HALLE CZECHOWSKI Students will have a chance to shake their thing at Dooley's now, after city council voted unanimously last night to let the popular bar build a dance floor. Three years ago Dooley's had a small dance floor and juke box, but assistant manager Bernie Knoblich said they are planning something to trip the light fan- tastic this time around. "IT'S GOING to be a lighted dance floor with lights right in the floor," Knoblich said. Knoblich said the bar owners decided to request a dance floor after receiving several requests from patrons for a place to dance. The owners are also planning to ex- tend the present bar eight-and-a-half feet and to build a small bar on the second floor so no thirsty patron has to wait more than two or three minutes for a drink. OTHER renovations will include new fans and lights on the bar, new car- peting and tiling, and a new paint job for the walls. Council also awarded a permit to Ashley's, a restaurant/bar on State Street, to feature a solo entertainer Wednesday and Thursday nights. Jeff More, one of Ashley's owners, said the restaurant has already begun booking acts. In other council action, members unanimously approved a resolution authorizing the city to try additional methods to control Ann Arbor's troublesome pigeon population. About 10 residents came to the meeting to support the move. Council also passed a resolution sup- porting a group of students who are bicycling from Seattle, Washington to . New York in order to raise money for charities. The group is expected to pass through Ann Arbor in the next week or two. Landlord must repay money taken from security deposit judges ruled that under the state's Lan- dlord-Tenant Relations Act and Con- sumer Protection Act, apartment managers cannot take money for cleaning out of a security deposit. Money can be deducted from security deposits only for unpaid rent or utilities, and damage which results from conduct that is not "ordinary," the court said. HOWEVER, the judges left intact the right of landlords to charge a non- refundable cleaning fee up front - at the signing of the lease - completely separate from the security deposit. Attorney Gary Victor, and EMU business law professor who represented the two former students, said that the case could help many renters who want to sue their landlord over a similar violation. Victor is in the process of filing a class action suit against Dahlman Apartments, which will entitle all of the company's tenants to recover any cleaning fees they were assessed illegally. DAHLMAN Apartments and its at- torney Steven Zarnowitz had no com- ment on the decision. Jonathon Rose, an attorney for the University's Student Legal Services, agreed that the precedent-setting decision meant that renters in Ann Ar- bor and throughout the slate could try to recover any cleaning costs deducted from their security deposits. But even though Rose said he saw the victory as "significant" for tenants, he added that it would have little effect on area landlords. "All landlords have to do when they lose (a security deposit case) is add a couple dollars to the mon- thly rent, and they're back to go,'' he said. Ice cream man A cloud of dry ice mist floats past Gino Ventura as he unloads ice cream at the Michigan Union yesterday. With the weather being so unbearably hot, it's a safe bet that ice cream isn't the only kind of Stroh's that's selling. H jun ex the H Re fill wit tra son his at ton stu rel str thi sur sai Potter's credtivitydoesn t pay By JAYNE HENDEL to eat he has to sacrifice his own in- can still sell pots," he said. F terests and create works that will sell. have lost much of their indepe] is studio looks like a tree fort kids in Instead of making sculptures, Remson because of the financial squeeze ior high school would love to play in - must make practical items which artists market, he said. cept for the collection of teapots and people will buy such as teapots. ALTHOUGH Remson earn sculptures baking in the sun. "The basic middle-class housewife Master's degree in fine arts frc Hiding beneath the trees behind I.B. sort of things sell," he said adding that University, finding work wasn' mson's enormous kitchen and rooms only about half of his customers buy his "I came off the education assemt ed with pottery is a studio decorated works as pieces of art. with nowhere else to go,"he said. h mounds of wet clay waiting to be Remson's teapots are expensive and Remson sells his work at art fa nsformed by the magic skill of Rem- he counts on buyers paying more for galleries nationwide in addit 's hands. hand-sculpted beauty that is also fun- teaching pottery classes at the A ctional. "People will get their money's bor Art Association. REMSON, a local artist, will display worth in an emotional sort of way," he But there are even problems works in front of the Michigan Union said. at art fairs, Remson said. Art fai the Ann Arbor Street Art Fair THE PRICE is mostly determined by have a hierarchy of artists th( norrow. Remson built his backyard the amount of time Remson spends from, he said, and although R idio, and although he loves his working on a piece, he said. has set up a booth at the Ann Arb axed style of living, it has been a Art fairs are Remson's bread-and- for 12 years, he said it takes a lon uggle, he says. butter. Artists not only make money to build a clientele that will buy "I've spent as long learning to do from the fair but also exchange ideas artistic works. s as someone does to be a brain and learn from each other. There is hope, though, Remso rgeon, but it doesn't pay as well," he The poor economy in recent years has since potters don't really pea] d. had a crippling effect on artists, Rem- they're about 50. FOR A potter to make enough money son said. "It's astounding that any of us Potters ndence in the ned a om the I easy. bly line irs and ion to Ann Ar- selling r goers ey buy lemson bor fair ng time purely an said, k until