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3 GLR 1 (1999)

handle is hein.journals/gmglwr3 and id is 1 raw text is: GAMING LAW REVIEW
Volume 3, Number 1, 1999
Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.

Editorial
A Word from the House

L  OCKED WITHIN THE TREASURES of John Stein-
beck's The Grapes of Wrath lies a small trea-
sure-a short chapter in which the author steps
away from the main story line to recount the
efforts of a turtle to cross a highway. Plodding
along at the steady pace set by Aesop's older
and more renowned tortoise, Steinbeck's turtle
slowly makes its way across the empty road.
As insignificant as a single turtle crossing a sin-
gle road may seem in the grand scheme, to
the turtle, it is clearly an event of great impor-
tance. As the turtle nears the opposite side,
however, a single automobile passes almost
without warning and at great speed, grazing
the turtle and flinging it up into the air, back
toward its point of departure.
After landing and waiting a few moments for
the perceived danger to pass, the turtle cau-
tiously emerges from its shell, surveys the sit-
uation, reorients itself, and begins once again
its journey across the road, still proceeding
steadily and still determined to reach whatever
fortune awaits it on the opposite side of the
highway.
If I might be so bold as to presume Stein-
beck's intent, the turtle embodies the charac-
teristics we most admire in the personalities
that populate The Grapes of Wrath--courage,
steadiness, and a strong determination to do
that which must be done, without concern or
care for the effects of powerful forces over
which one has no control. But in addition to
representing the fortitude of his characters, and
even the most basic traits of mankind itself,
Steinbeck's turtle reminds me of the gaming in-
dustry. Steinbeck reminds us that while it is in
our nature to constantly bemoan the present in-
stant, the most successful individuals, and in-
deed, the most successful industries, fix their
gazes on the horizon and-keeping their eyes
on the prize-set out for the long haul with pa-
tience and resilience.
There are those who say that the gaming in-
dustry has grown too fast, and has failed to

pace itself to the degree necessary to maintain,
or to grow, its success. Still others believe that
gaming has no rightful place in a well-ordered
society, and must be cast out like a possessing
demon. I believe that these detractors, how-
ever, focus too much of their attention on the
worries of today and not enough on the long
term. After all, in the long annals of earth his-
tory we are only a few steps removed from the
days in which gambling meant forsaking the
ordinary apples near the base of the tree and
risking bodily injury to climb to the top to
snatch the sweeter fruits, or forsaking apples
altogether and attempting to fell tastier, and
more dangerous, live game. One should not ex-
pect that all the kinks will have been worked
out so early in the process.
The growth of gaming as an industry has
paralleled the human emergence from a world
in which survival itself was a gamble to one in
which most of us-certainly all of us reading
these pages-exist in relative comfort, never re-
ally worrying about where the next meal will
come from, or whether a strong breeze through
the cave will extinguish our last flame and
leave us in the cold and darkness of winter.
Gaming seems to have grown as a supplement
for our insatiable thirst for challenge and for
risk-that same desire for risk that brought us
out of the caves in the first place, brought us to
new worlds and gave us wings. Nothing ven-
tured, nothing gained-is that not as good a
definition of gaming as any other?
Kyl bills and abstention movements aside,
the forces that move gaming forward are un-
deniable and steady, and after each setback, the
gaming turtle will inevitably emerge from its
shell and press onward, steadily and with great
purpose.
Dawn R. LaRochelle
Herrick, Feinstein LLP
New York, New York

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