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After living quietly for five months on the outskirts of Los Angeles with her two children, Rosa Delgado came home one day to a rude surprise. Her landlord had sued to have her evicted, contending that he needed her $390-a-month apartment for his sister. Delgado, 28, a nurse's assistant, at first refused to move. Eventually she settled out of court, accepting her landlord's offer of a little cash and a 30-day grace period in which to find a new home. But when she began apartment hunting, she encountered some unexpected resistance. One landlord objected...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Computers: An Electronic Assault on Privacy? | 5/19/1986 | See Source »

...many states across the U.S., tenant lists have become a growth industry. "It seems to be an idea that is catching on," says Paul Jenney of Springfield, Mass., whose Landlord Reports Computer Service will, for $4, deliver a profile of any one of 100,000 Bay State tenants who have ever butted heads with their landlords. Denver-based RentCheck boasts a coast-to-coast network; its subscribers control 2.5 million rental units, some 10% of the % total U.S. rental housing supply...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Computers: An Electronic Assault on Privacy? | 5/19/1986 | See Source »

Tenants also have complaints about their landlord's plans for improving the property. Capital improvements allow property owners to raise their controlled rents...

Author: By Gawain Kripke, | Title: Tenants Say Harvard Rents Illegally to Businesses, Cover-Up Denied at Recent Fact-Finding Hearing | 4/22/1986 | See Source »

Today the three live in a rented room, and their landlord threatens to report them to immigration authorities every time they try to resist his demands for higher rent...

Author: By Oded Salomy, | Title: Centro Presente: Giving Refugees a Headstart | 4/11/1986 | See Source »

ALTHOUGH THE PLAY is technically very smooth, the acting is spotty. Even when the script offers good lines--a rare though welcome treat--the delivery often falters. By far the most refreshing work is done by Joe Walsh in portraying a stereotypical ex-jock turned landlord. Walsh adds some genuine hilarity to the play's forced jokes and frustrated humor...

Author: By Evan O. Grossman, | Title: IRS Fails to Tax Imagination | 3/15/1986 | See Source »

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