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Page 2
Thf Red and Black
Tuesday, April 20,19K2
Kinko’s will reopen soon
Losses could hit $8,000;
smoke hits R&B, barber
By SUSAN UACCETTI
Km aixl HI., k si.ft Writer
The regional manager of
Kinko's Copies said em
ployees would try to reopen
the fire-damaged store
within the next three weeks
Dana Jennings, regional
manager of Kinko's. said the
store, which suffered an
estimated 17,000 to $8,000 in
damages in a Friday-
morning fire, was covered
by insurance
"We lost our three main
copying machines and the
store has also suffered ex
tensive smoke and water
damage," Jennings said
Kinko's will not be
responsible for the loss of a
$100,000 ruined copy
machine leased from Xerox,
she said
Kinko's, a division of
Kinko's Graphics Inc., does
not own the store at 299 East
Broad Street, but leases it
from a private landlord
The offices of The Red and
Black, directly above
Kinko's, as well as Mr
Haircut No. 1 next door
suffered some smoke
damage.
Jennings said the store’s
insurance company would
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look at Mr Haircut No. 1 and
The Red and Black offices to
see if any damage claims
need to be filed
No other buildings were
damaged by the fire.
The fire was reported by
an Athens police patrol car
at 2 a m Friday Four
rescue trucks, using 700
gallons of water, put out the
fire The fire was contained
in the middle of the store at 4
am, said Athens fire in
spector Luther Garrison.
Store manager John
Gaither, who reportedly left
thestoreat 1:30a.m. Friday,
told Jennings it was possible
he dumped an ashtray into
the trash can before he left,
Jennings said
Inspector Garrison said
Monday that investigators
had ruled out any "possible
suspicion of arson as the
cause of the blaze." He
confirmed that the fire
started after smoking
materials that had not been
extinguished were dumped
into a garbage can.
The work already
promised by the store will be
completed at Kinko's Baxter
Street store until restoration
of the downtown store is
complete.
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college square
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OtNIRAL CINCMATHIATRKS
Get your opinion
in print with
a letter
to the editor.
Studying the Russians:
‘More emphasis needed’
By SHERI FOX
Krd and Black Contributing Writer
They may know more
about us than we know
about them
The Soviet Union has
7,400 specialists on
American government,
politics, economics and
culture, while the United
States has only about 1,100
specialists studying the
Soviet Union and Eastern
Europe, a ratio of 7 to 1, as
reported in the Chronicle
of Higher Education.
Gary K. Bertsch,
University professor of
political science, is among
the 1,100 American
scholars doing research in
this field.
"I think there should be
more emphasis in this
country on studying the
Soviet Union,” Bertsch
says. "They consider that
a high priority in their
country and they send
more scientists and in
telligence agents than we
do."
Bertsch said the lack of
research in the area of
Soviet politics, economics
and culture is definitely a
problem because
"American policy is
improved through an
understanding of the
country that is our major
competitor.”
Bertsch says although
his research deals with a
sensitive area of in
formation, he has never
done any classified
research for the govern
ment. He has had op
portunities to do such
research, he said, but
chose not to because the
government keeps a close
watch on professors who
deal with classified in
formation. Bertsch says
he feared such scrutiny
could interfere with his
duties as a University
professor.
“You have to be careful
what you lecture about,
and once you do classified
work, they have the right
to review everything you
write," he said.
Bertsch does research
into trade and technology
transfer between the
United States and the
Soviet Union.
"My research,” he says,
“tries to examine ways we
could allow and facilitate
trade between the two
countries and at the same
time protect U S. national
security.”
Bertsch says the United
States "has to be con
cerned that it’s a two-way
street” because some
American-made products
have found their way into
the Soviet military
establishment.
"There are some cases
where they have bought
machine tools that have
been used to make
miniature ball bearings
that have gone into missile
guidance systems,” he
says.
The solution, Bertsch
says, is “to control the
sale of strategic goods and
technologies such as
advanced computers and
electronics with military
applications.”
“We have laws that
control the sale of these
things," Bertsch says,
“but we don’t always
carry out our rules and
responsibilities very
successfully.”
Bertsch also points out
the United States “ac
tually does buy some
technology that is used in
the U S defense sector.”
"I think that sometimes
in the United States we
just assume that we’re
losing all our technology,"
he says.
Bertsch says the nature
of the communist system
of government could be
one reason for the lack of
Soviet studies by
Americans.
“We ought to keep in
mind,” he says, "that,
generally, their academic
institutions, research
facilities and govern
mental bodies are not as
open to outside research
as ours are.”
“I would say that our
understanding of the
U.S.S.R. is affected and
retarded by their closed
system,” Bertsch says.
Another reason the
Soviets can boast more
specialists in American
studies is because we have
more to offer them than
they have to offer us.
“They are much more
interested in our ideas and
buy much more of our
sciences and
technologies," Bertsch
says.
FBI
Front Page 1
“After all, we have to be sensitive to people from other
countries who might have ulterior motives," Snyder
said.
In addition, a favorite tactic of federal agents, the use
of library reading lists, is not possible at the University.
Both the main and science libraries maintain all files of
checked-out materials by call number, rather than by
patron. David Bishop, the main library’s director for ad
ministration, said that for anyone to discover what a
foreign scholar or lecturer was reading, he would have
to wade through the files card by card.
Perhaps because of this, no requests have ever been
made at the libraries. “With over 300 employees, you
can't be absolutely sure, but I am confident that I would
have heard if anyone had (requested such lists). I've
never heard in any way, shape or form of anything deal
ing with that,” Bishop said.
"If I did, I would be extremely upset and I would not
comply and I would try to find out where the request
came from,” he added.
Material from the College Press Service was used in
preparing this story.
»
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STUDENT AFFAIRS
SCHOLARSHIPS
For
GRADUATE STUDY ABROAD
1983-1984
Information is now available on the following
Scholarship Programs for graduate study
abroad in 1983-1984
KHODES-University of Oxford, England-2
years of graduate study
FULBRIGHT-over 50 countries-1 year of
graduate study
MARSHALL-any British University-2 years of
graduate study
DAAD-Germany-1 year of graduate study-
proficiency in German required
ERLANGEN STUDENT EXCHANGE-
University of Erlangen, Germany — 1 year
of graduate study — proficiency in German
required
ST.ANDREW’S - Any university in Scotland-l
year of graduate study - must be of Scottish
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( ompetition is keen for these Scholarships,
Your plans for study abroad in 1983-1984
should begin now .
For Details Contact:
Lee Albright, Honors Program ,
301 Academic Building,
542-3240 <9a.m. -1 p.m. Daily)
This information has been prepared an submitted
by the office of Student Affairs