Page 4-Thursday, January 17, 1980-The Michigan Daily Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. XC, No. 87- News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Solve the econ. TT IS BA6 ENOUGH when introduc- fair plan tory courses are extremely over- out of c crowded and teachers are forced to simply b bear excessive burdens - the quality groups. of education in these courses Finall; necessarily plummets. But when class could uti sizes become bloated in intermediate alleviate and concentration-level courses, machine where student interaction with faculty ses (cot members is essential, the situation study) a must be corrected. Such a problem is from a unusually acute in the economics would sE department today; undoubtedly, student similar crises are confronting depar- already tments all across the University. ses, to In a recent memorandum to educatio colleagues in the economics depar- Frye's tment, Prof. William Shepherd pointed the best out the overcrowding and overbur- the hirin dening problems that are currently visiting plaguing the department. It is not sur- are not ' prising that the economics department qualificc should be experiencing a significant courses. rise in enrollments, considering the Unfort dismal fiscal picture of the country and very fea the desire that many students have to the mon understand what is happening to the teachers economy. What is surprising is the that mo University's apparent lack of response are unde to the department's increased needs. must pa LSA Dean Billy Frye has tuition f acknowledged the economics depar- classes tment's dilemma, but maintains that crowded there are few dollars available to The alleviate the problems. economy Int lieu of funds, Frye suggests and inde several solutions, each of which is far the Univ from ideal.. The department should consider take a longer-range look at itself and cutback its problems, Frye says. Well, it is dif- pleasant ficult to imagine that any department realize t at this University has not been taking be as di long-range looks at itself in this era of enrollm decreased funds. Frye's suggestion spreadin would do nothing to alleviate the too thinl current problem. and adi The economics department should those ar consider ceilings on enrollments, Frye wants to suggests. Certainly this is not a very monies t dilemma ; students should not be closed ourses on a wholesale basis ecause they register in the last .y, Frye thinks the department lize "pedagogical methods" to teaching burdens. He cites -assisted or Keller Plan cour- urses similar to independent as possible alternatives. Far desirable solution, such plans erve only to reduce teacher- contact - a contact that is quite infrequent in many cour- the detriment of students' ns. suggestions clearly are not answers. The best answer is ng of more teachers, such as professors or lecturers who on tenure tracks, but have the ations to teach upper-level unately, this solution is not sible, because there just isn't ey available to hire many new . However, this is not to say ney can't be found. Students erstandably outraged that they y eight to ten per cent more in each year only to enroll in that are impossibly over- t. ultimate solution to the ics department's problems, ed, the budgetary problems of ersity as a whole, is carefully- ed, but immediate,. program cs. Cutbacks will not be t, but the University must hat it just cannot continue to verse in a time of decreasing eits and revenue. Rather than g the University's resources y, students, faculty members, ministrators should choose eas in which the University excel and direct badly-needed oward those areas. AP Photo RUSSIAN TANKS TAKE up positions recently on the snow-covered clement of China, the quelling of domestic unrest within their own cou. road between Kabul and Jalalabad, Afghanistan. The Soviets seem to try, and the eventual acquisition of a warm water port. have several reasons for their invasion, including the gradual encir- Afghanistan: One more giant step for the big bear ! There are several reasons that the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan and that they may not have anticipated a strong international reaction to their invasion. Since the end of World War II, the Soviet Union has considered eastern Asia, the Mid- dle East, and Eastern Europe within its sphere of influence, and it has steadfastly maintained that stability in this region is vital to its security interests. This attitude is premised on the fact that the Soviets suffered immense casualties from the three wars in which they have been involved during the 20th century. In fact, the Soviet Union lost over 20 million people from World War II alone. No other country's losses from the war came close to equaling those of the U.S.S.R. Fur- thermore, the Cold War strengthened the Soviet desire to create friendly neighbor states with identical economic, political, and ideological philosophies. THE SOVIETS HAVE long enforced this policy, as seen in the invasion of Hungary in 1956, and of Czechoslovakia in 1968. In each case the international reaction was subdued in comparison to the reaction to the recent in- vasion of Afghanistan. To the Soviets, the Muslim threat is real if less dangerous than the Japanese, Western European and German threats earlier in the century. Furthermore, there is some dissent among the Kashek people who live in the southern U.S.S.R., in areas bordering, among other countries, Afghanistan and Iran. Many of these southern Soviet dissidents have cultural ties and similarities with the peoples of their neighboring states. The Soviet gover- By Lorenzo P. Benet nment is well aware of this. The turmoil in Afghanistan, Iran, and Pakistan is a thorn in the Soviet Union's side. Perhaps the Kremlin believes a strong show of force will quiet the insurgents in all the countries along its bor- der-insurgents who would oust Soviet economic and political policies if they could. In light of these considerations, one can see that a stable pro-Soviet Afghanistan regime is in the best interests of the Soviet Union. Perhaps the Soviet Union believed that this rationale was one the U.S. could sympathize with. After all, we see stable quasi- democratic systems in our hemisphere in our best interests, as evidence by the CIA- supported overthrow of democratically elec- ted Salvadore Allende, the former Marxist head of state in Chile. The same rationale got us involved in Vietnam. ANOTHER MOTIVE for the Afghanistan invasion is the Soviet policy of encircling and containing the People's Republic of China, which Afghanistan borders. Throughout the 60s and 7Qs, the Soviet Union and China have maintained a hostile relationship. In fact, the two powers almost went to war in 1969 over a territorial dispute. Each country has also been undermining the other's attempt to establish itself as the revolutionary leader of the third world. China's trade with the U.S.S.R. is minor compared to its exchanges with the U.S. and Japan. In recent years, the border dispute, the Chinese invasion of for- mer Soviet ally Vietnam, Vietnam's invasion of Cambodia, and finally the Afghanistan crisis have all strained Sino-Soviet relations. The. Soviet Union perceives China, not the U.S., as its most imminent threat and vice- versa. Soviet forces ,bordering China are almost twice as large as they were in the mid- 60s. They number approximately 35 divisions. The Soviet Union has also increased its naval presence in eastern Asia, and now has acces4 to Mongolian and Vietnamese airfields. The invasion of Afghanistan can then be perceived as just another step in the encirclement of China. Another objective of:the fU.S.S.R.'s in- trusion is its historical desire. for a warm water port. The Soviets arenow only 300 miles from this goal. But reaching that port will require the.Soviets to overcome not only Pakistani mountains, but Pakistani guerillas. The cost of invading Pakistan will be far greater than that of the Afghanistan incur* sion. Pakistan has nuclear capability, as well as a large supply of conventional arms whiich no doubt will be bolstered by the U.S. and China. Furthermore, the Soviets' inter- national reputation has suffered as a result of the current military action. That is probably a setback they would like to amend. The Soviets are propping up an unpopular Marxist regime that would not survive without their support. This fact is the case with most Soviet satellites. Their motives are clear and an international response is in or der. Lorenzo Benet is a Daily Assistant Night Editor and general assignment reporter. Nazi war criminals NSTEAD OF paying the price for their unprecedented acts of genocide, thousands of Nazi war criminals escaped from the burning Third Reich to seek new lives as respectable, ordinary citizens. Many of them, desperate to evade war tribunals, received safe refuge in the United States. That was 35 years ago; many of them have died, but at least 200 still remain here, free from prosecution' and harrassment, living in luxury. Some are doctors, dentists, lawyers, businessmen and even politicians. Their horrifying past remains a secret to most, buried in the annals of history. But owing to the effort of some - who can't forget the Holocaust and the destrttion of six million Jews - these ex-mass murderers are still being sought for trial and extradition to the scenes of their brutality. Since the end of the war, Nazi hunters have criss- crossed the nation to bring these criminals to justice, but their gallant attempts have been thwarted by a number of circumstances. Many of the witnesses, the survivors of Nazi Ger- many, have dibd in the past three decades. For those who are still alive, the memories are so scanty and old that they serve as easy prey for talen- ted defense attorneys. Those difficulties are understan- American diplomats and strategists viewed these mass murderers as valuable, contributors to the U.S. propaganda and military confron- tation with the Soviet Union. The Russians suddenly became the new world threat to peace and American security - the Red Scare was con- tagious. To eliminate some of those fears, the ex-Nazis were utilized. In the ensuing decades, the- new respected elements of society were protected by the CIA and other gover- nment agencies. The Immigration and Naturalization Service proceeded at a snail-like pace. Of the 250 cases currently being investigated, only 16 are now in litigation. Many trials have been suspended without any verdict, others have been delayed for years. Meanwhile, the criminals remain free in their safe homes. The recent transfer of jurisdictional responsibilities from that agency to the Justice Department offers some hope that the U.S. will make an effort to prosecute and extradite resident war criminals. The department's announ- cement Tuesday that it vows to take action on the outstanding cases within a year is encouraging. Perhaps the government will finally do its job. The shift must be credited to President Carter, who by recommen- ding a national memorial to the vic- Letters to the Daily 5 Cambridge House has problems To the Daily: Fall term, 1979, at Cambridge House, West Quad, was the worst living experience I have ever en- countered in my four years in Ann Arbor-and I have experien- ced some pretty bad situations. I would like to bring to your at- tention the following list of my personal grievances as in- criminating evidence of incom- petence and neglect on the part of Mr. Leon west, director of West Quad: " My so called "small double room" was too small to accom- modate two persons. Drawer space and closet space in the room could be considered insuf- ficient even for one person. Two beds and two desks filled the room to such a point that any ex- tra living space was non existent. The small double room should not be a double room at all, yet oc- cupants of the small double pay an exact same amount as oc- cunants of other, larger letter to tend to the matter. " Because I received no reply whatsoever to the aforemen- tioned letter of complaint, I should suppose Mr. West com- pletely ignored the problem. * The Cambridge House elevator, use of which I needed because I was using crutched most of the term, never missed a weekly operational failure. * During at least the first one and a half months of the term (no one knows exactly the actual time period,) all my mail was returned to sender marked, "Moved; no forwarding ad- dress,"- because my name had not been posted on my mailbox by the West Quad mail staff. I do not know the total amount of mail I did not receive because of this completely negligent, and utterly illogical, error by the mail staff. Furthermore, I was never infor- med of the error, and when I discovered the negligence-only because a persistent correspon- times. day and night. My room- mate and I were forced to cover the vents of the radiator and keep open the windows to avoid un- bearable overheating in our room. Finally, a sign outside the South Quad cafeteria, where West Quad residents are forced to take their weekend meals, notified the students food is ser- ved during posted meal hours only. This notice is a gross misrepresentation of actual prac- tice. Food service in the South Quad cafeteria is terminated sometimes a full half hour before scheduled closing time. -Matthew Lyons Thanks to dog rescuer happened to be driving by out apartment building and noticed what was happening. He stopped and asked a fireman about ou dog, Data. As no one seemed too know what had happened to the mutt, Bob took the situation into his own hands and broke into our apartment to free our dog. It is true that Bob didn't have to jump through a wall of fire, or dodge falling walls as might be expec- ted in a movie. It is also true that Data is not an international ballet star or vital diplomat on the SALT XVI conference. Data is mutt, 3/ months old, mostly pest and an addition to our minute family that we would find almost impossible to live without. When Bob saved him from the smoke, noise, and fright, he per- formed an act of heroism that is often overlooked. After all, Bobe wasn't in fatal danger, and Data is only a mutt, but we are ex- tremelv grateful just the same. It