4 Page 10-Saturday, June 13, 1981-The Michigan Daily GRADUATE ENROLLMENT DECLINE POSSIBLE Hig'h costs, cutbacks hurt grads Continued from Page 1) need for engineers, who are "snatched up" by in- dustries as soon as they get their degrees. THE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION has not been so fortunate, Sussman said. Low admissions in education graduate school programs caused most of the over-all enrollment declines in the past five years, the dean said. The inability of education students to obtain even student teaching positions in the last academic year was led to a lack of incentive in the education programs, Hooper explained. One interesting development is that the number of foreign student applicants has increased by 25 per- cent while the number of domestic students has decreased, both Hooper and Sussman said. SUSSMAN SAID that even though some of the graduate fields are experiencing tough times, the "programs have stronger students now." Applicants "It (tuition) is like the cost of living. It goes up faster than anyone's raise." -Rackham Graduate School Financial Aid Officer Mary Jarret still consider the quality of the school as well as the amount of financial aid available, he said. Butts, who was Director of University Financial From AP and UPI ANKARA, Turkey-Rescuers pulled some 800 bodies from the debris of an earthquake-stricken Iranian town and toiled against time to free another 5,000 people believed buried beneath their homes, the official Pars news agency said yesterday. But a spokesman for the governor's office in Ker- man told The Associated Press in Beirut that the figures were exaggerated. He said 1,500 were feared killed. AIR FORCE helicopters flew tents, blankets and medicine to the devastated town of Gol Bagh for the second day. Tehran Radio said more food and water were needed to aid the town's 40,000 stricken inhabitants. The spokesman for the governor's office said 80 percent of Gol Bagh was devastated. Most of the population lived in mud houses that caved in during the first tremors Thursday, trapping whole families in the rubble, he said. "On an average, in every five-member family at Aid several years ago, said that the proposed changes in GSL programs aren't law yet, and that grad students should continue to apply for aid. The Senate Committee on Human Resources and House Committee of Education and Labor have been busy determining student aid appropriations all week, Butts said. A program now being proposed in the Senate com- mittee could actually increase appropriations for grad students, Butts said. Members are considering making spouses and parents of grad students eligible for parent loans. A similar support program for undergraduate students was recently passed in the state legislature. least three members were killed," the E ars news agency said. A GOVERNMENT source in Tehran reported by telephone that the final death toll would not be known for several days. Geophysical experts in Ankara said the death toll almost certainly would have been higher had the quake that measured 6.9 on the Richter scale oc- curred a few hours earlier. As it was, most people were outside their homes when the quake struck shortly before 11 a.m. HUNDREDS OF survivors were taken to open spaces where relief workers set up tents and "people's kitchens" with government supplies and public donations, reports from Tehran said. Medical teams were dispatched to disinfect the devastated areas, since water and electricity sup- plies were cut, the reports said. A quake-measuring 5.8 on the Richter scale oc- curred in the same region in December, 1977, killing about 580 people and injuring 1,000 otl\ers. I 4 5000 still missing in Iranian earthquake 4 4 *********************r* **** WIN YOUR OWN, PINBALL MACHINE * DETAILS AT THE CROSS-EYED MOQSE * 613 E. Liberty Bring this ad in and receive 4 games for the price of 2! Good June 15 thru July 27 Only At The Cross-Eyed Moose Guitar Junior at..Rick's. (Continued from Page 9) renditions of worn old blues standards like "Sweat Home Chicago." The best thing they played all night was "Little Queenie," and that's because it was a Chuck Berry song the band could play confidently, since they knew it couldn't fail. Guitar Johnson and company need time to develop, to get used to each other, and to earn enough money to buy some more equipment (the drums looked like they had been rescued from the Salvation Army). But more than anything else, they need a little creative gumption, a whole mess of in- spirational leaps of faith. I hope they find the missing pieces, if only to keep that rarity of rarities - a female blues drummer - employed. And Guitar Junior is too great a poten- tial talent to just fade from the scene.