Senate likes education goals WASHINGTON IAI') —Thu Clinton administra tion won Senate approval Tuesday of legislation to implement national eduction goals and ensure that students are adequately prepared for the "jobs of tomorrow." "Those hills will benefit America's most valuable resource - our children." Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell. D-Maine, said He predicted the result would be "a (letter country, (with from an is o nomic and social perspective." Meanwhile, on a third school bill, the Education Department accepted a House committee's < orn promise that earmarks to the poorest children n share of education dollars for the disadvantaged • but not as much ns the administration had sought. The Senate voted 71-25 in favor of the Goals 2000 bill, the centerpiece of the administration's leg islative agenda for education. The separate School to-Work Opportunities Act, approved by a 02-5 1 vote, authorizes .$;t()0 mil lion in state grants for partnerships lietween high schools and businesses to help students who do not go on to college The bills now go to separate con ference committees that will work out differences with the House " ffiis is lure education’ (fiat offers hands-on learning to help students envision and plan lor the jobs of tomorrow " said Sen Paul Simon. D III i Inef sponsor of the work-opportunity plan Ijilxir Set rotary Holier! Reich noted that both meu suros passed with Republican support "There is no partisanship when it i omes to schools, when it comes to kids," he said As the Senate acted, the House Education and ljibor Committee voted -41-1 to target new money approved for the so-called Chapter I program for disadvantaged students to the poorest school dis tricts In fiscal 1995, that would total about $700 million of the $7 billion the administration has pro posed for Chapter 1 Ninety-three percent of the nation's school dis tricts and 66 pen ent of all public schools ret eive some Chapter I funds because the funds are spread so thin, the poorest distru ts have insufficient mon ey to serve all their high-poverty s< bools, the Edu cation Department salt!. file department had proposed targeting 50 per i ent of the Chapter I funds That would have hud the efft-t I of redui mg federal education dollars to about half the counties I bis is us strong .is we t ould have gotten," suit! Education Undersecretary Marshall Smith He said the deportment would press its original proposal when the hill goes to the Senate The Goals 2000 vote comes five years after the nation's governors and then-president Bush agreed to six national education goals The legislation would write those goals into lass It also would nuance efforts to develop voluntary national stan dards in key subject areas and provide S400 mil lion in grants to states and Ux.nl governments that want to reform their education programs "There is a real yearning in this country for change in education,” Education Se< retnrs Richard Riley said He said the measure provides a framesvork for helping teachers, schools and parents bring about the kinds of changes needed to promote a world class education for every < hild in America The Senate, by a vote of 59-34. defeated an amendment that would have cut off federal funds to programs that distribute contraceptives to minors without parental consent An alternative, telling those agencies to en< mirage family participation in control eptive distribution programs, was approved 'll 2 Senators also defeated r)2 4 1 an amendment that would have laum hud an experiment to give poor students a i hoii e of attending publit or private si hoots The House version of Goals 2000 would require states to develop standards in such areas ns cur riculum content and to ensure that all children have an equal opportunity to learn The Senate measure would encourage those standards The Senate hill also would encourage si hool dis tricts to allow students a brief period of silence for reflection, and would deny federal money to any s<.hool district that prohibits "i (institutionally pro tected prayer." The six national edui-ation goals state that b\ the year 200(1 —All i hildren will arrive at si hool ready to learn —The high si hool graduation rate will ini reuse to at least 90 [ien ent —Students will master challenging subject mat ter —U S students will be firs! in the world in math and science —All adult Americans will he literate and able to compete in a global economy —Every school will lie free of drugs and violence Florida State researcher learns how to make taxol using common chemicals TALLAHASSEK. Fin (AP) — A Florida Stale University chemist tins figured out how to use i ommon chemicals to make taxol. a ( am er drug until now extracted only from the scarce Pacific yew tree or the twigs and needles of similar plants "It's a scientific, research breakthrough," researcher Robert Holton said Tuesday "It may also l>e important for cancer patients not only now • but in years to come." The taxol now being used comes from the Pacific yew in old-growth forests home to the endangered spotted owl. at cord ing to Saul Schepnrtz. who over sees treatment research at the National Cancer Institute in Hethesdn. Maryland Hut an alternative method using the twigs and needles of similar plants has been perfect ed and should be approved sometime tins year. Schepartz said. That method, discovered by Holton nearly three years ago. involves about four different chemical reactions it's known as semi-synthesis. Total synthesis - the laborato ry production of taxol from com mon chemicals - involves some 40 different chemical reactions and takes about two weeks, Holton said "It's a significant lab accom plishment." Schepartz said He estimated at least a dozen labs nationally had been working on taxol synthesis. "There's intense interest in it." he said Holton's twm synthesized the drug Inst month nnd got word Monday that the Journal of the American Chemii al So( iety would publish articles about the process. "We did it We re tired." Holton said, adding that many of his colleagues had called the total synthesis of taxol an impossible challenge 'It's like ( limbing to the top of a moun tain that's never been climbed Imfore.” Holton's achievement “may enable researchers to devise more-effective, less-toxic drugs of the taxol class and could thus have a significant effect on can cer treatment." said Samuel Hroder, director of the National Cancer Institute. Hroder has called taxol the most important cancer drug in 15 years. It has shown the most promise in the treatment of ovarian and breast cancers in women who have not responded to treatment with other drugs It also has shown promise in early trials against certain lung cancers. It takes the txirk of about three full-grown trees to produce enough taxol to treat one cancer patient. The trees thrive in the shade of the same dwindling old growth forests that are home to the threatened northern spotted owl. Lawsuits to protect the owl habitat have brought logging to u virtual halt on national forests in the Northwest, where most of the yews are found FCC extends cable revenue freeze while it conducts review WASHINGTON (Al’j Thu Fedurul Communic alums Commission is extending thu frou/.u on i ablu TV rev enues to May 1 r> while it ( undue ts n review of the prit us charged for service A revenue freezes imposed last year during implemen tation of new rules was due to expire Fob 15 Hut nn outcry last fall over changes in how cable com panies hill customers - which resulted in charges that many people received higher hills - led the agency to reconsider its rate rules. The agency is expected to review its rules this month and officials said extending the revenue freeze would make it ensiur to implement unv new regulations At the same tune, local communities are in the process of < edifying their hx al i able companies as monopolies, a prix ess that permits them to regulate basic c able ser vice As of till! end of January, systems hove been < unified for 7,500 of the nation’s 33.000 communities with cable Commission offic oils said the revenue freeze also extends the time for the remaining communities to ac t Rote regulation cannot be enforced until local com munities have received FCC certific ation that the local cable company operates us a monopoly and thereby is covered by the new law. It's up to the local authority to enforce the law gov erning charges for basic service - the package of channels comprising local broadcasters and government and pub lic access c able channels. The FCC enforces the section of the law that dictates how much a company can charge for channels beyond basic service But the commission will not take any ac tion until it gets subsc riber complaints By extending the freeze, the KCC is trying to maintain a stable pricing situation until local communities are prepared to enforce the law. Many questions have surfaced since cable companies announced billing changes in September to comply with the new cable law Variations in channel packaging and equipment charges caused individual bills to go up or down, but the freeze prohibited companies from collecting any more in overall revenue than they had six months earlier. Consumers who believe the changes caused excessive charges for cable channels beyond the basic package cun generate FC.'C action against the company by filing a complaint with the commission. 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