-NATION/ WORLD The Michigan Daily - Friday, February 4, 2000 -7 w*i Harvard student wins $1 M on NBC game show By ictoria C. Haett Harvard Crimson CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (U-WIRE) - Har- d Law School student Rahim Ober- holtzer became the biggest game show winner in television history two weeks ago - but NBC forced him to keep his million- dollar fortune a secret until Wednesday, the show's air date. Over the course of two episodes of the primetime quiz show "Twenty One," Ober- holtzer amassed the record sum of $1,120,000. "It's hard to think that's it's real until you actually see the check," Oberholtzer said. Oberholtzer's record-breaking win prompted fanfare on the episode that aired last night. "You are the game show king!" host Maury Povich told him, as blue and white balloons tumbled around him. Oberholtzer, who is a third-year law student, defeated a series of competitors by answering multiple-choice questions -- with subjects rang- ing from Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet to the hit film Jerry Maguire - and expanded his winnings from $100,000 to his wallet-bursting total. The hardest question, Oberholtzer said, con- cerned landmarks in Greenwich Village in New York. "Since I had never been to Greenwich Vil- lage, it was difficult," he said. Oberholtzer plans to spend his winnings on a variety of causes. "I'm going to use some of it to help out my family, some of it for paying off loans, some of it for a scholarship fund I want to set up. I'm going to take a vacation to Europe,"he said. "Twenty One," which airs weekly, is a struc- tured as a race between two contestants to accumulate 21 points. Contestants play until they lose, meaning that prizes in excess of $1,000,000 are possible. As he handed Oberholtzer stacks of cash, Povich asked the student what he would do next. "I go back (to Harvard) tomorrow morning for a final exam," Oberholtzer said. Already, Oberholtzer has become infamous among his fellow law students. A majority of those buried in their books last night at Langdell Library had heard word of the game show winnings. "It was all the rage (when we returned from winter break)," said Kristin Van Vleck, a third-year law student. "I knew he had won some hundreds of thousands of dol- lars. So yeah, you could say I'm jealous." At the urging of her mother, Lisa Dellaquila, a first-year student, had seen the episode. "She wanted me to see if I knew who he was," she said. Jhe boy is back in town Mu offers students investment help INVESTING Continued from Page 1 good fundamentals of investing." Warsaw invests on dljdirect.com. Warsaw uses the Website because it offers options such as extended mar- ket trading, which allows investors to buy selected stocks an hour before or after the market opens and clos- es. Warsaw said he has learned through MII to look into investing techniques "most beginners don't know about," such as using limit orders and stop- sell options. Most Websites for investing are easy to access and join with an online application. On etrade.com, information including place of employment and address must be entered. When applicants are fin- ished, they print it out, sign an account agreement statement and send it in with a check for at least $1,000 to begin investing. Chubb said he started investing by using money that his father gave him to learn about the stock market. "He said that if I lost the money then it would teach me that the stock market is an easy way to lose money," Chubb said. In order to help students minimize losses, Yen said, MII focuses on how to decipher the confusing informa- tion found on Websites such as charts and future esti- mates. "The downfall of online investing is the amount of information involved for the college student. In some ways it hurts them because they can't utilize the infor- mation," Yen said. Warsaw said he is so cautious about investing he puts a stop-sell option on his stocks "so that I don't lose." This way, if a stock decreases to the price that he sets, the computer is programmed to automatically sell that stock. "One hundred percent of my money is in the market. In this market it's hard to lose - as long as you do your research," Warsaw said. Despite all of the students involved with online invest- ments, some still prefer using a stock broker. "Most online trading sites use prices that are slightly higher and aren't as competitive. When you have an experienced broker, it is easier to get a more competitive price," LSA freshman Rochan Raichur said. Chubb said he had a traditional stock broker before investing online but found the fee to be too steep. "I went through Prudential and it was any- where from $50 to $300 a trade and now it's only $8," he said. Yen said online investing companies are able to charge such low prices because they are saving money on cus- tomer service. "It's a lot cheaper if you have high volume and low costs because companies such as E-trade can charge low commissions," he said. Democratic presidential hopeful Bill Bradley makes a surprise appearance on ate Night with Conan O'Brien" Wednesday night. WT Bauer to drop out of presidential race kl '"O e &-:-" LU H SUPERVISOR needed 1.5 hrs ay at $8.75/hr. Involves monitoring elem. school strdents in lunchroom and on playground. Call Honey Creek Community School at 734-994-2636 for more info. MACKINAC ISLAND resort hotel seeking summer staff- front desk, dining room, kitch., bicycle shop & maintenance. Contact Iroquois Hotel winter office (in Ann Arbor) at 327-9660, Email lroQuois@freeway net MAKE UP TO $2000 in one week! Motivated student organizations needed for Ma icing project. Call Heather @ 1-800- 3009 for more details. NEED EXPERIENCE (and money?) 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"This has been a long, arduous process," Kweisi Mfume, president of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, said yesterday. The agreements will bring "real, meaningful, lasting change," he said. Both Fox and CBS will add execu- tives in charge of diversity who will implement and monitor network efforts, it was announced at separate news conferences held by the NAACP and other civil rights groups that took part in the protest. The network agreements, much like those signed by NBC and ABC last month, focus on changes in minority representation throughout the compa- nies - both on-screen and off. Minor- ity recruitment will be considered in writers and a Jargely black cast. CBS promised to increase the num- ber of development deals with minori- ty writers, producers and "other talent for the 2000 fall season and beyond." Like the Fox agreement, the CBS pact was virtually devoid of numbers that might provide measurements of success. But the network executives said they were committed to the effort - and Mfume said biannual evalua- tions were planned. "It's not a matter of having come a long, long way, but of still having a long way to go," Mfume said. The end result, Mfume said, should be creation of television that con- sumers can feel good about and new opportunities in the entertainment industry for men and women of color. Although most criticism was direct- ed at the four major broadcast net- works, Mfume said he hoped cable channels and other broadcasters would use the agreements as a basis for self- examination and change. The networks opened negotiations I