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Project Safe Place begins fund raising ■Coffee, chocolate and cookieswillbesoldto raise money for chi Id renin crisis situations By Darren Freeman Oregon Daily Emerald Caffeine is the key to surviving finals week. At least, that’s what a local charity is betting on. Project Safe Place, which pro vides information and support to teenagers in crisis, will be selling gift boxes filled with coffee, chocolate and cookies today and Tuesday from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m. outside the University bookstore. At $5 per box, the packages will be white boxes with yellow rib bons and tags reading, “Good luck on your finals.” “They’re for students to enjoy or buy for friends during dead week, and the proceeds will go to chil dren in need,” said Project Safe Place coordinator Jill Bishop. A national program founded in 1983 by the YMCA Center in Louisville, Ky., Project Safe Place is a network of businesses and or ganizations that help 11- to 17 year-olds who Eure runaways, homeless or in crisis. The contents of the boxes were donated by Starbucks, Fenton & Lee and Chocolate Decadence. Investment continued from page 1 The group has to give the first 5 percent of any earnings to DA Davidson but gets to keep half of the remaining 95 percent. The oth er half goes to DA Davidson as well. “We treat it like it’s our own money,” said George Kosovich, a senior finance business major and director of investments for the group. “It gives us incentives, and it gives [DA Davidson] some re turn too.” Senior finance business major and the group’s director of opera tions Steve Zogas, said he often stumbles to his computer after get ting up in the mornings to check how the group’s stocks are doing, and other members come into the office to see how the market is do ing every day. Together with Zogas and Adam Barycza, director of information and a senior business finance ma jor, Kosovich started the group in the fall of 1998. However, their dream of investing real money did not become a reality until this fall. “I think what motivated a lot of us was an interest in real world ap plication,” Kosovich said. Zogas said students spend about 20 hours a week analyzing different industries and stocks and preparing recommendations on which stocks to invest. After presentations on stocks and in dustries, the group, which cur rently has about 20 members, takes a vote. The majority decides how the money is invested. Barycza said working with the Starbucks store manager Steven Traffas said the coffee shop donat ed about $200 worth of coffee. “Normally, we don’t give so much,” he said. “The store had a surplus, and it was a good oppor tunity to get rid of it and to have the benefit go to somebody else. ” Fenton & Lee owner Janele Smith said her company donated about 30 chocolate replicas of the University seal. “Our emphasis has been deal ing with youth,” Smith said. “This seemed like it was along that same vein.” Project Safe Place has partici pating businesses in Springfield and the Bethel neighborhood in Eugene, and Bishop hopes to ex pand the program throughout Eu gene during the next two years. “We try to intervene before youths take things into their own hands,” Bishop said. When a child seeks help at a Pro ject Safe Place business, identified by a diamond-shaped yellow and black sign, an employee calls a lo cal emergency center, which sends a volunteer to the scene to offer the youth food, shelter or advice. Last year, Project Safe Place helped 32 youths deal with prob lems ranging from rape to family disputes, Bishop said. Bishop said she hopes to sell 200 gift boxes. investment group takes up as much time as part-time employment. “It’s like having a job,” Barycza said. But then again, it’s not. “You are surrounded by people who have the same interests as you and like doing the same things, and we really are a cohe sive group. It’s one for all and all for one,” Barycza said. “You don’t think of it as work. ” The group is currently investing in such companies as Lucent Technologies, American Eagle Outfitters and InFocus System. Zogas said the group refuses to fol low the current trend of putting all ihonies into brand new startup In ternet “dot-com” companies but tries to invest mostly into compa nies in the Northwest. “That kind of gives us a niche market,” he said. Zogas said active membership in the investment group has given students an edge in the job market. He said he and three other stu dents have signed contracts with investment banks on Wall Street, which he attributes to his work with the investment group. “Oregon isn’t exactly on the map for investment banking,” he said. Working with the group has complemented their classroom experience at the University with some experience investing real money. The group hopes to be able to manage some of the Universi ty’s endowment soon. Kosovich said being able to invest Universi ty funds would show that the Uni versity trusts its students and its classroom education. P.O. Box 3159. 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