NATION/WORLD The Michigan Daily - Thursday. September 24, 1998 - 9A Hurricane Georges Two new planets found outside of solar system w a f ..,.::'t,. The Washington Post Astronomers aided by a precocious young amateur have found two new planets orbiting Sun-like stars, includ- ing one with the most Earth-like orbit of any of the worlds detected outside the solar system so far. The discovery brings the total num- ber of confirmed extra-solar planets to an even dozen. But, until now, all the planets were in orbits much closer to, or much farther from, their stars than is Earth, whose distance from the Sun's warmth is within the so-called life zone where conditions are neither too hot nor too cold for life to evolve. "We wondered if nature rarely puts planets at one Earth-Sun distance," said Geoffrey Marcy, of San Francisco State University and the University of California at Berkeley, whose team detected the new planets with the pow- erful Keck telescope in Hawaii. "Now we know that such planets are not rare." It is unlikely, however, that this partic- ular planet harbors life. Located around a star known only as l{D210277, 68 light years away in the direction of the constel- lation Aquarius, the planet is about the mass of Jupiter Marcy said, which means it is most likely another giant gas planet with no hard surface. Moreover, while the planet's average distance from its star is just slightly greater (by about 15 percent) than the Earth-Sun distance of 93 million miles, this planet actually travels along an oval- shaped orbit that carries it twice as close to its star and 1.6 times as far out as Earth, with associated climate swings. (Earth's orbit is almost perfectly circular.) "It's really quite a dramatic swing, reminiscent of comets," said Marcy. Marcy, along with colleague Paul Butler of the Anglo-Australian Observatory in Australia, has discovered nine of the dozen known extra-solar plan- ets. lie noted that more than half of them are in oval, or "eccentric" orbits. - w The second newly discovered planet . is another oddball -whipping around its star at the smallest distance found so far -- one twenty-fitlh the distance of'- Earth from the Sun.The yellow star IID 187123, a near twin of the Sun, is locat- ed 154 light years away in the direction of Cygnus (the Swan). On this planet, a "year" -- one complete circuit of the star - lasts just three days. Stephen Maran, spokesperson for the' American Astronomical Society, said of the latest findings: "They continue to stretch perceptions of what solar sys- tems are like ... (For example), it had, been considered significant that none of' the (extra-solar) planets had orbits like . Earth's. Now it turns out it was just sta- tistics. They didn't have a large enough sample." AP PHOTO A resident in Altos de Chavon, La Romana, located 120 miles from Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, surveys the damage yesterday caused by Hurricane Georges which struck the country Tuesday.- Employers craft new rules for workplace romance ,am -m m m m m m m Los Angeles Times After discovering last spring that two of his executives were involved in an adulterous sexual relationship, the owner of a Los Angeles manufac- turing company acted swiftly. But he didn't take the time-honored tack of transferring, rebuking or firing one or both ofthe lovers. Instead, he asked them to sign a two-page contract -- an "informed consent" agreement *nded to crimp their ability to sue the company if the relationship ever turns ugly Monica Ballard, a Santa Monica, Calif., consul- tant hired to meet with the two executives and help them through the legal procedure, called the inci- dent a sign of how the workplace has changed. "In the '50s, people sneaked around and had affairs," she said. "Now they have the CEO and strangers they've never met coming in to chat in a very adult way about their sex life." This is the state of office romance in the late 1990s, an era when sexual harassment and other types of workplace lawsuits have employers run- ning scared. Fading away are the days when many companies and government agencies would look the other way and risk being hit up for sexual harassment damages later. At the same time, other bosses who once would have acted on reflex and forced out some- one suspected of having an office affair now are responding more cautiously. Rather than invite invasion-of-privacy or wrongful-termination suits, some organizations are coming up with more flexible solutions or trying to find a mid- dIe ground in dealing with love in the work- place. Employers lately have been spurred to action by recent U.S. Supreme Court sexual harassment rul- ings. Occasionally, top executives pay a steep price for messy romantic entanglements, particularly if harassment or other abuse is alleged. Public agencies have focused mainly on romances between bosses and their staffers. L.ast month, for example, New Jersey Attorney General Peter Verniero announced a "date-and-tell" policy for his agency. Jnder the rule, supervisors are sup- posed to report any "consensual personal relation- ship" that they strike up with subordinates. Although informed consent contracts such as the one used by the Los Angeles manufacturing company remain a rarity, they are drawing atten- tion in legal circles. Sometimes jocularly referred to as "love con- tracts,' these agreements are being promoted by San Francisco-based Littler Mendelson, the biggest law firm in the nation that specializes exclusively in employment issues. The pacts pro- vide a measure of legal protection for employers who lack other options. These developments, all told, reflect an evolu- tion in employers' thinking since the not-too-dis- tant past when Ross Perot, the two-time presiden- tial candidate, boasted that he fired adulterers while he was head of Texas-based Electronic Data Systems. Today, employers fret that fired adulter- ers can sue for wrongful termination, claiming that they were discriminated against because of their marital status. CLIP THIS COUPON * AND SAVE OUR 30-DAY GUARANTEE Try us out for 30 days. If you're not totally satisfied with our Sunday services, you don't have to come back. 5 LABOR OF LOVE CHURCH1 Dr. Charles E. Hawthorne, Pastor 3350 Textile Road, Pittsfield Township k? The dome c/nureh just off Mich. Ave. between US-23 and Platt ~ An Evangelistic, Edifying, Equipping Church Sunday School - 9:00 a. Sunday Service - 11:00 am. ' For more info, give us a call a (734) 528-DOME (3663) 'A church that offers { no empty promises." 4 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 schools curb violence with various methods The Wkashaogon Post Eager to prevent their schools from being the next target of violence, edu- cators across the country are taking extraordinary steps to root out poten- Ey dangerous students long before they reach for a gun. A Pennsylvania school district even sends children who just threaten vio- lence through the same detention sys- tem they would face if they commit a burglary or rape. Georgia has set up an anonymous toll-free hot line to receive tips about possible violence. An Oregon principal offers cash ,' ards for students who report t eats. Chicago public high schools now hold mandatory "advisory" peri- ods each week, during which groups of students meet with the same teacher for a half-hour to talk about their lives and problems. Many other school districts have enacted zero-tol- erance policies: One threat - no mat- ter how trifling -- and you're out. For years, schools have been impos- ing strict weapons bans, tightening War ity and even requiring children to ar uniforms in a desperate effort to reduce violence. But the new measures represent an acknowledgment that cur- tailing violence can sometimes mean pinpointing problem children before they strike out. What the schools hope to avoid are the kinds of tragic ram- pages that hit a half-dozen schools last year, killing 12 students and two teach- ers. In most of those cases, educators note, the child culprits had sent out warnings that they would strike well before they attacked. Charlottesville High School in Virginia tightened its procedures after a student who had been suspended for cutting classes showed up at school. Perhaps the trickiest aspect of track- ing down threats, educators and stu- dents agree, is getting children to "snitch" on their peers. Often, children rompted by that incident and by more violent episodes he has read about in the news, Thompson has ordered teach- ers to report any mention of violence, "even if it's a journal-writing section or getting a note and passing it from one student to another." Students who make even a veiled threat face 10 days of sus- pension. The new policy represents a sharp change from the past. Last year, when a ninth-grader told another student he was going to shoot Thompson, the prin- cipal called the student and his parents in, determined he "was just messing around" and sent him on his way. "Now I think I would have made a suspension from school and made sure one of the psychologists saw him." 'Te challenge, many educators say, is figuring out whether a child who makes a verbal threat is simply engag- ing in idle playground chat. September is AIDS Awareness Month join us at the... Michigan AIDS Walk Sunday 9/27@2PM Downtown Ann Arbor-Main and Williams (Edison Parking Lot) for further information, e-mail us or call 572-9355 gkexec.98@umich.edu The Golden Key National Honor Society is an international organization that recognizes the nation's brightest students. We promote service and social opportunities to over 1000 members, and initiate campus wide activities such as AIDS AWARENESS MONTH. a a : ,s +w . ____ ___ ____ ___ ____ _ E Infinite opportunities. Dynamic careers. 1 Tricia Ciee began building her future in 1995 within GE's Technical Leadership Program. Today, she's an Account Manager at GE Power Systems. .... You have a future here. Please Join Us for Meet the Firms Friday, September 25" Office of Career Development 9:00 am - 5:00 pm Please con firm dates and times with your Career Placement Olice for any last minute changes. www.gecareers.com =r.'-