Wednesday, October 2, 1991 The Battalion Page 5 ^1 Economy um J ior ® leads some s to graduate l" an school From Page 1 127 ion. imfor learsal. all Op.m. ker 103. nation. wedt. | lean 150 ; 01 for afer 0321 n. to 6 I nt 104 of i 197 for f ctivities I 6 pm tional f 847- I center averages about 3,000 per I semester, but he expects that to in- I crease this year because of the I economy. In the face of hiring freezes in I most industries, many students I nationally are skipping the job I search and applying to graduate I schools. A&M's graduate school I applications, however, do not re- | fleet the national trend. Most of I the increased numbers at A&M are I in international and out-of-state I applications. "I wouldn't tie our numbers to I the economy, but there's some evi- I dence on the national level that I graduate applications increase I when the economy is bad," says I Gary Engelgau, executive director I of admissions and records. "It's I just that we're not necessarily re- I fleeting that at the moment." Dr. Harvey Tucker, director of I University Graduate Studies be- I lieves the increased interest in I graduate school is attributable not I to the economy, but to A&M's I growing prestige. "Year after year the number of I applications goes up," Tucker I says. "I believe it is because of the I number of programs, the quality I of them and their perceived excel- I lence." Another sometime indicator of I a poor economy is an increase in I people seeking their teacher certi- | fications, which is again happen- J ing, Keck says. Reynolds says the economy I will improve because of its self- I correcting mechanisms. Those I same mechanisms that will bring I the economy out of its slump, I however, will likely drive down I salaries. "What will bring us out of this is if wage increases moderate," he says. "The price of labor is impor tant. If business can keep labor costs low and increase profits, it will kickstart the economy. Lower salaries or at least lower increases turns out to be a good thing. It gets people back to work." Most economists believe the economy will turn around by next year, but it might be too late for the Class of '91. ite ill Jose lack at i i\\ Neal ks eed w 1 if you ;and There j Gambling returns to Colorado CENTRAL CITY, Colo. (AP) - A little bit of the old West returned to three historic Colorado mining towns Tuesday as gun shots, the slap of cards and the buzz of slot machines marked the opening of legalized gambling. At 8 a.m., state Sen. Sally Hop per pulled the handle of an an tique one-arm bandit in Central City in a joint ceremony with near by Black Hawk. Nearly 100 miles to the south in Cripple Creek, near Pikes Peak, replicas of Wild Bill Hickok's six-shooters were fired in the air to signal the new era. More than 1,000 people waited for the grand opening of 13 casinos in the towns, which hope gam bling will revive their moribund economies. "It's really ironic. A hundred years ago gold was discovered. Now we have our second gold rush," said Ray Drake, a Cripple Creek historian and municipal judge. "I've watched it go downhill, downhill, and I got a little dis turbed by it. But, by God, Cripple Creek has come back," said Mayor Henry Hack. "We've had mighty tough times," said Central City Mayor Rand Anderson. "The cost of gov ernment has been exceeding our ability to pay. Historic preserva tion is our most important mis sion." Gambling casinos opened last year in Deadwood, S.D., taking ad vantage of the gold rush-era am biance of the town where Hickok was killed during a poker game. The venture has been a money maker for casino owners, the town and the state. Iowa, Illinois, Mississippi and Louisiana have legalized riverboat gambling on the Mississippi River. Iowa already has launched five riverboats. Colorado voters last November overwhelmingly approved a con stitutional amendment allowing limited-stakes gambling in the three historic mining towns. Gam bling is limited to slot machines, blackjack and poker, and there is a $5 ceiling on bets. Nerd House by Tom A. Madison Spade Phillips, P.l. Tnsik DLl'3CGCOCTDCZ3CDCIDG. : :3GZX: S5®£3e3G2)E3Gii -ir--->r -ir~. TAM IO t-11 HmtRJ. UHAT‘5 IT LIKE BEING 'tONG OFTHE hlEKD5, ’ ‘ The Gm Geek / you mu, 'Duke of Dorks ' ? ” € n you Beusw ■wprf\ EX-tfooriMfl-TF VfiNTrD \ PeAD BECAUSE I loooLt> ] ays ceme omly ouB / ieeR in the fftiDae’/ ms /ituTrosT , SH5EP OND BT. ’Si Roi.FrtHD DdLF KesbuKBcreD n/E Fboft DEAD REVEILLES . But SOMETW/Ate WEWT HorRiBly wRomsD oh. Personified , Soto; N/iro?ALj^ecE. 'Tost i CE -Dl SP£a/ciki6p by Matt Kowalski WH4T THE w4s HBckT Dour Kwow wHoSE REUfafoNf is RI6HT. THIS WHY HT LEAST MY PRAYER . Covers most Monotheistic ONE’S. 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