2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 10, 2000 F7 "That's New England School of Law, since the first day we opened our doors. We were the only law school ever established exclusively for women. Today we continue to open doors for both men and women with innovative and relevant programs including the War Crimes Prosecution Project, opportunities for overseas study, a business law center and coursework that ASSASSINS Continued from Page 1 Damerow co-chairs the Society's board with LSA Junior Will Calcutt. "We encourage the societal aspects, Calcutt said. "These aren't Just strangers, these are students in the school. We encourage honesty and good sportsmanship and just overall good fun" Students who play cannot be shot while in class, at work or while fulfilling any other obligation for a club or activi- ty. The only actual buildings on campus that are considered safe are the Under- graduate Library, the Mason and Angel halls, and any building where a particu- lar student had class that day. The rules of the game are complicat- ed. Assassins are not allowed to shoot a person from inside a house or residence hall room. IHowever, it is legal to shoot someone from outside. For example, if a student leaves his door open in a resi- dence hall, an assassin can shoot from the hallway. Students cannot be shot while outside of their rooms in the resi- dence halls. "A good way to find and "kill" people is to find out where they live from the site's Webpage," Appelblatt said. "Then have someone who's not playing get them to open their door so you can shoot them. The Webpage lists where people live, as well as have the pictures of people who are playing. That way we know who's playing:' But on a campus with 30,000 people, strategy is essential. "The two people I killed just weren't paying enough attention," Engineering junior John Zwinck said. "One guy was includes Internet Law. Looking to the future is what we've always done." DirectorCo New England School of Lawe ABA-accredited Member of the, -Michael Scharf; Prgfessor ,aterf)r International Law & Po/icv JD. Duke University School of Law 154 Stuart Street Boston, MA 02116 (617) 422-7210 admit@admin.nesl.edu www.nesl.edu Association ofAmerican Law Schools Wednesday, October 11:4:30 - 6 PM, University of Michigan Business School, Wolverine Room U.S. to meet with North Korean leader WASHINGTON - The highest North Korean official to visit Wash- ington in a half-century of limited contacts plans a historic meeting with President Bill Clinton today, amid signs the State Department soon may remove the communist country from its list of state sponsors of terror- ism. Clinton will hold a midmorning meeting with the first vice chairman the country's National Defense Commission, Cho Myong Nok. He is described as the right-hand man to North Korean leader Kim Jong 11. After a daylong visit to San Francisco, Cho arrived yesterday night for meetings with Clinton, Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, Defense Sec- retary William Cohen and members of Congress. Cho did not speak on reaching his downtown hotel, but in a written statement he said: "It is an important task before our two governments to promote the (bilateral) relations onto a new stage consonant with the enyi- ronment of peace and reconciliation prevailing on the Korean peninsula at this historic moment into a new century." "During our visit we will do our best to have frank discussions with Ameri* leadership so as to remove deeply rooted and age-old distrust and make an epochal change in advancing the relations between our two countries onto a new stage. Nerve cell research cals inside each of the brain's 100 bil- ion iterconnected neurons. earns two Nobels The result has been a vastly improved grasp of the molecular Two American neuroscientists and underpinnings of Parkinson's disease, a Swede who helped discover the schizophrenia, depression and o1 key mechanisms by which nerve neurological disorders, and insig cells in the brain communicate with into the biochemical basis of learning each other to create moods, memo- and memory. ries and mental illness jointly . received the Nobel prize in physiol- iardson: Racial ogy or medicine yesterday.y bt rofiling a problem The prize,,awarded annually by the i~I Nobel Assembly of Sweden's Karolins- WASHINGTON - Amid linger- ka Institute and worth about $915,000 ing resentment among Asian-Ameri- this year, went to Paul Greengard of cans over the Wen Ho Lee case, Rockefeller University, Eric Kandel of Energy Secretary Bill Richardson Columbia University and Arvid Carls- announced safeguards yesterday son of Sweden's University of Gothen- guard against racial profiling with burg. the department or among its private Their separate but related pursuits, contractors. which began in the 1950s and continue Richardson said he would "not toL- to provide the basis for today's hottest crate even hints" of racial profiling neuroscientific discoveries, have gradu- and ordered his inspector general to ally drawn researchers' understanding investigate whether any such activity of the brain down in scale from an ini- has occurred. tial focus on nerve cells to a close-in "We have made progress address- view of the chemicals those cells ing concerns of racial profiling,b secrete and eventually to the molecules more needs to be done," Richards and genes that respond to those chemi- said. ARw~dND THE WORLD it * the country's economy, which was EU to nt sanctOfls severely damaged by NATO bombing against Yugoslavia during last year's Kosovo war. In a significant concession, the BRUSSELS, Belgium -The 15- isters indicated they would not see nation European Union voted unani- link the release of reconstruction aid to mously yesterday to start lifting the early extradition of Milosevic to sanctions against Yugoslavia, deciding stand trial on war crimes charges before to reward it's new democratic govern- an international tribunal in The Hague. ment immediately and to put off ques- tions of whether former President Germany to soon. Slobodan Milosevic might be sent abroad to face war crimes charges. ban neo-Nazi party EU foreign ministers meeting in Luxembourg agreed to remove an BERLIN - Intent on stand embargo on oil deliveries and a ban on against neo-Nazis, Germany's top law commercial air travel to Yugoslavia, but enforcement official said yesterday they maintained a freeze on Belgrade there is enough evidence to seek a ban government assets, and a selective ban on a far-right party accused of fanning on visas, to guard against any attempts racial hatred blamed for recent attacks by Milosevic or his associates to leave on foreigners and other minorities. the country with stolen wealth. Interior Minister Otto Schily cited The ministers said they were pre- growing support for the move after pared to welcome a Yugoslavia run by meeting with the three German states newly inaugurated President Vojislav who endorsed the government's drive to Kostunica back into the mainstream have the National Democratic Party of European nations, and they dangled declared unconstitutional. 4 the promise of $2 billion in aid over the next seven years to help rebuild - Compiled from Daily wire reports. The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter termrs by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $100. Winter term (January through April) is $105, yearlong (September through April) is $180, On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $3 . Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Collegiate Press. 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