Two Florida universities have decided to name a school and an institute after former Gov. Reubin Askew. Florida State University will add Askew's name to its School of Public Administration and Policy. The University of Florida will establish the Askew Institute on Politics and Society, designed to bring together leaders in government, business, education, agriculture and the media to address critical issues of the day. Askew, 65, is an alumnus of both universities, having earned his bachelor's degree in 1951 from FSU and his law degree in 1956 from UF. Askew was governor from 1971 to 1979. Since 1990, he has been a tenured professor at Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton, where students recently voted him a Distinguished Teacher of the Year. He will continue to teach at FAU, as well as the University of Central Florida and Florida International University, then will switch his primary appointment to the FSU school that bears his name in fall 1995. "This is the first FSU school or college to bear the name of an individual," said FSU president Talbot "Sandy" D'Alemberte, an old friend, who added that faculty and administrators concurred in the choice. Casino drive in high gear TALLAHASSEE _ One of several groups pushing casino gambling is collecting 5,000 to 7,000 signatures a day, its leader said Tuesday. "We've now exceeded 50,000 petitions," said C. Patrick Roberts of Proposition for Limited Casinos. The group would allow casinos at horse tracks, dog tracks and jai alai frontons. In addition to those 30 casinos, another 17 would be allowed across the state, with three promised for Dade County and two for Broward County. "In two to three weeks, we should be filing before the Florida Supreme Court," he said. Constitutional amendments proposed by initiative groups are reviewed by the court. To get on the November ballot, some 430,000 signatures must be verified by mid-August.