poppi s
SpOnOkOpittQ Crisp layers of fillo
pastry filled wifn feta cheese and
spinach, served with potatoes yahni and
vegetables $5.85
GREEK PEASANT FOOD,
WINE-AND SPIRIT!
.675 East 13th
’ Closed Tuesday
343-0846
Game offers market experience
By Frank Shaw
Of th* Emaraki
A finance club project that
sets up a securities market
based on the NBA basketball
playoffs could be the chance
to get some experience in the
marketplace without worrying
about getting burned.
For a nominal charge of
$5.50, each entrant will receive
a portfolio with one card for
each playoff team. At the end
of the playoffs, each ticket of
the winning team will be
redeemable for $5.
Entrants need not be
business majors or basketball
buffs.
Here's how it works.
Say you get your portfolio
and decide the Blazers are go
ing to take it ail. You buy, steal
or borrow all the Blazer
coupons you can find, trading
away all your other tickets in
the process. If the Blazers win,
you can redeem each ticket for
$5, making a hefty profit in the
process.
You hope.
The idea is the brainchild of
Good friends will be there
come hell or high water.
Your friends didn’t know a
scrum from a dropkick. And they
obviously didn’t know enough to
get out of the rain. But they did
know how much this rugby game
meant to you. So they hung in
there -downpour and ail.
Now that
the games over,
make your best
move of the day.
Ldwenbrau for _
everybody.
Lowenbrau. Here’s to good friends.
« '983 See* fi’ewco r. U S A by M^<e* fi'e**<>Ty Co Mi Aau.ee W!
a group of four students: Bill
McNamara, Gordon Murdock,
Tom Boyle and Jim Lange.
Murdock originally got the
idea from a market simulation
Stanford University conducted
during the 1980 presidential
primary.
Some people are curious
and afraid of the stock market,
Murdock says. The simulation
gives students a chance to get
first-hand experience without
losing their shirt.
The group expects to sell
250 to 500 portfolios, at a rate
of two to three per person.
The team’s prices will be
linked to how well they do in
the first games, Murdock says.
As soon as a team is
eliminated, its tickets will
have no value in the
marketplace, while the price of
other tickets will increase.
Students are encouraged to
seek out information that
could affect a team’s
performance.
Murdock suggests reading
the sports page and watching
for injuries to key players.
Along with providing the
portfolio, the Finance Club
will arrange for meeting times
when participants can barter
for tickets and will provide
listings of current ticket
prices.
The portfolios will be
available Friday at 12:30 p.m.
in the Gilbert Hall breezeway.
For more information call
345-7364.
Job training
seminar set
A job training seminar for
Save-Net of Oregon, a com
munications company now hir
ing for summer marketing
positions, is set for 7:30 p.m.
Friday in Room 133, Gilbert.
Mac Soderquist, marketing
manager for Save-Net, will
conduct the seminar.
Save-Net, one of four com
munications firms scheduled
to visit the University this spr
ing, is offering part-time and
full-time summer positions.
Save-Net and the other
three companies lease
telephone lines from Pacific
Northwest Bell and sell long
distance service to individual
subscribers, according to Em
mett Williams of the University
job location and development
office.
Am-Net, another Oregon
company, will visit campus
May t to train job applicants.
Other firms sending represen
tatives in May are U.S.-Call and
MCI, a communications com
pany of Washington D.C.
For more information, call
ext. 3214.
WILDERNESS
FIELD STUDIES
EARN COLLEGE'
CREDIT
Natural history, wildlife
studies, nature writing,
environmental philosophy,
field ecology. Courses for
1983 in the Pacific NW,
Sierra Nevada, Utah,
Hawaii. Spring Summer/
F;,all Quarters available.
For information \
write or phone:
Sierra institute
Carriage House
Bo* C
UNIVERSITY OF
CALIFORNIA
Santa Cruz. CA
?S06-4
(4081429 2761