Saturday, May 28, 1977 TF4E MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine _audaMas 8 17 TEMIHGN ALYPgeN! Daily Classufieds (Continued from Page 8) PERSONAL BREAKOUT. Tie most chalenging video sree) is at the Cross Eyed looe. E. Liberty. Open every day. cF528 nThVE'S LUNCH-Come for home .xtInBreakfotall day, great ntoand egg cotta. 3 cog omelets ,h fresh vegetables and fresh noon sprouts served all day, Sundays n-8. 1313 South University. etec OPtES--As low s'aO. IMPRESS Sal the Cheapest !). 524 E. William, 6-4821. cFtc STAHOATE: 7705.28'GLC tust made it in before the deadline to 'et this in. If you don't hear from me by 7705.31 at midnight oter the plants and nail the let- c rs oodcr the TV. Hone a nc r :tunid hon; and thanks so much too Thursday Friday counting. luv ya, c.urchin dFS28 VISIT ANN ARBOR'S only gem lab before youspend your'cMoney need- essly. Pine nquality dionndsand loon prices on all engogemnt and wedding rings. Austin Diamond, 1209 S. University, 663-7151. . eFtc SUSAN B. Alas, my identity has been uncov- ered, Yes, it's me-Attilla the Bun and Boo-Boo Bear, the Jesus-freak, and, yes, even Mary Macp, too! How come Itnever see younaround here hen I get in? Doesn't everybody enjoy spending their evenings at the Daily? Have you seen that new com- mercial on TV with the DS con- dOctor advertising RenCen? ("Now appearing . . ."). Bye for now. P.S. We've really GOT to stop meeting loke this. dF601 IHE DISTINCTION of being South s only drogstore belongs to the Village Apothecary, 1112 S. Univ. Aoc. oFte ANNDE: Rould 00 yo lave meth wa? '10he placeorhas 0110h a tranqullit- --)oslere, I can't stated the smiling lfas Please Hurry (?) back-but t te slow scenic route. PRANCIS dP52t PREGNANT? Need help? 011 Problem Pregnancy Help. 769- 01 'regnancy tests available. eFtc READ and USE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS PERSONAL JAZZ 0t the University Club with the Root's -'in 11d Friends Noel Cun- ningha, p11i0o; Ted Harley, bass; Olapo Olso lauter, drums; and fea- turing Vincent York of the Mercer E1ington Band on alto sax. Friday and Saturday evenings 9:30 p.m.- 1:30 .m. in the 0111 rektail lounge in the Michign Union huilding. Ask hostess for free trial member- ship. 763-2236. chFtc WANTED - Ori-inal, utpublished, short stories or novels by college writers. h-J Syndicate, P.O. Box 9055, Daytona Beach, Fla. 32020. 22F602 FRIENDS LAKE COMMUNITY 80- acre wildlife preserve near Chelsea- Swimming, sailing, canoeing, pic- nicking, camping. All-year member- ship $50 per adult. Children free. Brochure from Bloos, 2005 Penn- 001011, Ann Arbose40103. 43P61- AVON'S SUMMER SALE s next month. For free broehure or information call Audrey Sein at 662-4401 anytime. e~te CAROL AND PHYLLIS F.-. I LOVE YOU BOTH, MADLY. THEOPHILUS. cFtc DISSERTATION SPECIAL LOWEST PRICE IN TOWN FOR COLLATED COPIES RACKHAM QUALITY GUARANTEED COPYQ U ICK 1217 S. University, 769-0560 cFte XEROX AND OFFSET fast, low cost duplicating COPY QUICK 1217 S. University 769-0560 cFtc PERMANENT WEIGHT LOSS Tlugh B he ha i rModification Wolverine Institute, 973-1480.c Ft HoUSing- (Continued from Page 8) the Michigan State Housing De- velopment Authority (MSHDA), "are not geared to financing downtown housing because of the parking requirements." WHILE DEVELOPERS and landlords quite rightly com- costs involved in constricting new housing, Paul Teich warns that, "no one should imply that landlords still aren't making a lot of profit off of existing structures." Landlords may in fact be mak- ing too much money on their "slum dwellings" to justify a move to the new construction market. "The immediate response," con- tinues Teich, "from anyone who knows economics is, how can you make high profits and, yet no one can afford to build. This seems to be the key ele- ment people don't understand. The answer is laissez - faire economic theory doesn't work in this case Costs in construction run indhpendent of return in existing housing." "People are electing to oper- ate existing properties because the incentive to tear them down doesn't exist." comments one private landlord and develop- er. Adds William Tyler "If you have an existing investment that has a good yield to you, to toss that away, or tear it down and build a new one - the re- turn that you would get from the new structure would have to be substantially higher to justify the investment." Few landlords, including Ty- ler will concede that the pro- fits they reap are unreasonable. However when they in the next breath insist - and many con- tinue to do so - that there is no housing shortage, that prices are not unreasonable and the creation of a new supply is on- feasible - their lack of inter- est in changing the status quo is a powerfil indication that economically speaking, they are more than satisfied. Why do the economics of the situation dictate that a land- lord will choose to maintain an old house when he or she could potentially charge even higher prices to more tenants in a new structure? Because a landlord's income is not derived from rent alone. "LANDLORDS ARE not just in the business of renting houses. Rather they are in the business of buying houses, rent- ing them and selling them," ex- plains Jonathan Rose who is also an attorney 'for the MSA Housing Law Reform Project. "Landlords would like consum- ers to believe that their only profit is the difference between revenues and expenditures. But that's ONLY one of five pro- fits.that landlords make." According to Rose the A, B, C's of housing profits go like this: : A) appreciation - increased value of property due to rising values of land, housing and in- flation. B) - breaks on capital gains tax - the profit derived from the sale of a house is taxed at a lower rate than that of the normal income tax C) - cash flow profit - dif- ference between monthly rent and expenditures D) - depreciation allowance - while the value of a house and land invariably increases over the years, tax laws allow a sizeable credit for the theoret- ical depreciation of the value of a structure as it gets older, which in reality means more income for the landlord. E) - equity buildup-although landlords list mortgage pay.- ments (paid by the tenant's rent) on a house as an expense, those plarments in fact are retmrned to the landlord in the form of cash when he or she tcsiiia the house aisd will be returned to the landlord in the form of c,,sh when he or she sells. Beca'se och figures play an iiartnat n0rt in a landlords profit piritire, income state- ments. e101 if tenants could get a lurk:itothem, iould he dis- torted. "I have no way of knowing what the distortion rate is local- ly," says Teich, but I have seen examples where the rate of return may range up to 40 per cent higher than that re- flected in financial statements." Since a substantial portion of a lpndlord's hidden profits are derived from tax loopholes, much of the profit he or she makes will be determined by the income tax bracket. Accord- ing to Teich that means that, "Landlords who have high in- comes already will make more money than "poor" landlords, because the richer ones are in a higher tax bracket and the tax savings they will get from such things as the fictional de- precia'ion of the building are higher." On the other hand, land- lords who own less property and fall into lower income tax brackets frequently feel their profits more easily threatened by such things as spiralling utility rates and increased property tax assessments. One such private landlord says he would favor some kind of renf control because, "It would not only limit my profits but it would guarantee them. In the last couple of years the rental increase in the city has just been enormous. And yet we have a very big building that we are selling because our costs have gone to a maximum See HOUSING, Page 10 OPEN MEMORIAL WEEKEND Billiards * Pinball * Bowling at the UNION OPEN 1 :00 P.M. SAT., SUN., MON. Reduced Rates for Billiards and Bowling TONIGHT! MAY 26 .MAY 27 MAY 28 MAY 29 8P.M. 8 P.M. 8 P.M. 7 P.M. $3.50 $4.00 $4.00 $3.50 " Love, Laughter, and Heartbreak iBIack America" *--Alice Childress' Adulco Award Winning Play * LYDIA MENDELSSOHN * PECIAL. 50. off any Ticket for Studenfi and Senior Citizens .$1.00 off Totol Cost if T'sekcts are Purchosesi for All 3 * Shows. Tickets Lsdma Moodelsoho, Tix/mnO s t Joo'sons "J" Shop vTue.Sot 30 Lberth Music Shop, IF YOU MAILED A POSTCARD TO EACH OF THE MICHIGAN DAILY'S \MDERS* Telling them of your business, or your next sale, or your group's latest project, IT WOULD COST YOU $3,150.00 , FOR POSTAGE ALONE YOU CAN REACH THE SAME READERS WITH AN AD THIS LARGE FOR JUST $67.05 And we'll deliver it in something they won't throw in the wastebasket THE PAGES OF THE LATEST DEADLINE IN THE STATE 764-0554 *Established by U-M Institute for Social Research