Pitted Against Each Other S tudents of international relations at the University of Pittsburgh don't just read about diplomacy, they practice it as world leaders in a game of global conflict. During the final three weeks of the fall term, political-sci- ence professor Richard Cot- tam-who's been playing war games with his students for more than 25 years-divides the 30 or so upperclassmen into eight delegations. At a cock- tail party in his home, Cottam impersonates the secretary- general of the United Nations and distributes a complex geo- political scenario. The power- ful "student-nations" are not limited in their possible ac- tions: they can launch inva- sions, plan assassinations, sign treaties or initiate nuclear war. At this year's opening session, a student dressed as a terrorist burst in with a phony machine gun. Would-be Gorbachevs or Kaddafis begin by spending dozens of hours researching their assigned countries- sometimes letting other class work suffer. The assignment can also wreak emotional hav- oc. A few years ago, according to Cottam, a Jewish couple broke off their engagement when one of them, represent- ing the PLO, came to sympa- JIM dLuun --iu'i'ulR IiIUL Treaty deals to ICBM launches: 'Guerrilla'and 'diplomats' thize with the Arabs. What Eastern European country motivates students to become during the Solidarity move- so involved? "On one level the ment. "Students acquire an game is a struggle between appetite for power." Machia- countries. At another it's a velli would have wholeheart- struggle between personal- edly approved. ities," says grad student Arie Sphiez, who represented an JOHN BURKMAN Jr. in Pittsburgh Safe or Sexist at Oregon? university-funded "es- cort" service is a wel- come sight for women at the University of Oregon, but some people wonder if it discriminates against men. Project Saferide is known as a rape-prevention shuttle that offers free rides to, from and around campus every evening from 6 to midnight. Since it was established three years ago, more than 4,000 women have used Saferide-and the number of reported rapes on campus has declined. "It wasn't fair that women were plan- ning their lives around day- light," says former Saferide director Shannon Meehan. But the shuttle, which is funded from fees paid by all students, has come under some fire for its women-riders-and-women- drivers-only policy. (Men may work as dispatchers.) Support- ers insist that the all-female policy is the only way to ensure women's "safety and sanity," says Meehan. "If a potential rapist were to ride the van and get off at a stop with a female passenger, we'd be leaving her when he was the association's academic vice president, "I got the feeling that people were taking down the notes but not actually learning." NU's ad- ministration cautiously ap- proved the service, similar to ones offered at such schools as Cornell, the University of Wisconsin and Berkeley. A doz- en professors agreed to partic- ipate, but so far the note-takers labor only in five introductory science classes, chosen because of their large size. Professors say they have not noticed changes in academ- ic performance or attendance since the service began, possi- bly because only 45 NU stu- dents gambled on the system. One freshman anthropology student cheerfully confides that she enjoys sleeping late and says that paying for notes "makes it so you don't have to go to class.' But majority senti- ment appears to be that stu- dents don't benefit unless they do go, since it is difficult to understand what's going on just by reading someone else's shorthand. Still, on a frigid morning when the wind whips off Lake Michigan, having a stand-in for your 8 a.m. can seem awfully tempting. SARAH OKESON in Evanston NEWSWEEKONCAMPUS 29 'Trying to make the night more equal': The shuttle is no man 's land as vulnerable as if she had walked alone." Sixty percent of 200 men surveyed by Meehan last year support the no-men policy, she says, and many expressed gratitude that the transport was available to girlfriends and wives. According to current director Cin Chubb, "We're try- ing to make the night more equal for both genders." DIANNE DANOWSKI in Eugene Noteworthy at Northwestern For $15, payable to the stu- dent-government associa- tion, students in five classes at Northwestern can hire fellow students or teach- ing assistants to take notes for them. Says Gary Rintel, who suggested the service last year MARCH 1988