"H1T)Tplll I Track team No. 2 The UNC track team finished second in the ACC tournament Sunday behind favored .Maryland. See page 5 for details. Milder Tomorrow will be partly cloudy and mild with a high in the mid to upper 60s. mm Volume No. 84, Issue No. 102 Udall urges flexibility in By JEFF COHEN Starf Writer Saying that America's foreign policy is no longer one of simple Communist containment. Rep. Morris K. Udall, D-Ariz., in a speech here Monday night, stressed the importance of common sense and flexibility in future U.S. policy making. Speaking to a crowd of approximately 500 persons at Memorial Hall, Udall said that America was entering a new period of foreign policy, ending the chapter of an imperialistic president and a simple cold-war policy. Udall's speech, "Effects of Domestic Structure on Foreign Policy," was part of the 1 977 UNC Colloquium on International Affairs. "If we contiitue to plunge ourselves into an arms race with the Soviets, we run the risk of very serious consequences." he warned. Udall said that mankind must move quickly on nuclear arms proliferation. ""Someone, if we are not careful, in a tense situation, with nuclear capabilities, could be disastrous," he said. "Imagine Id't Amin with a nuclear bomb." He also said defense spending should be limited, adding that the Democratic platform called for a defense budget cut of $5 billion to $7 billion. "Today we have 9,000 nuclear warheads aimed at the USSR. They only have 4.000 nuclear bombs. Tomorrow we will have 9,003, as currently we are producing three every 24 hours. "We now have enough of a margin to show some restraint, and see if it is reciprocated," Udall said. arter budget may cut student loan By RUSSELL GARDNER Staff Writer National Student (N DSL) .program, trom tudents borrow $2 million , annually, may be abolished if Congress approves Geer budget recommendations for the next fiscal year submitted today by President Carter. Rep. Carl D. Perkins, D-Ky. chairperson of the House Education and Labor Committee, said requests for the loans come largely from working class families. He said abolishing the $332-million loan program would mean "hundreds and thousands of working class families would have to terminate Direct I r- v about Record industry experiments List price of albums By JACK GREENSPAN Staff Writer Downtown Chapel Hill is heaven for record buyers. Competition between record stores has kept prices low. It would seem ridiculous to a Franklin Street consumer to spend more than $4 for a single album. In the past few weeks, however, a number of newly released single albums have appeared in the record racks displaying price stickers of $4.57 or $4.99 depending on the store. Fleetwood Mac Rumours, George Benson? Flight, Queen A Day At The Races, David Bowie Low, Marshall Tucker Band Carolina Dreams, Pink Floyd Animals. The list is growing. ERA proponents speak as Senate begins hearings By TONI GILBERT and CHARLENE HAVNAER Staff Writers RALEIGH Proponents of the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA), including Secretary of Commerce Juanita Kreps, spoke before the Senate Constitutional Amendments Committee Monday in a final attempt to secure passage of the bill. Kreps, former Duke University vice president, said she brought to the committee President Carter's strong endorsement for the amendment and his assurances that it will create no new administrative burdens. A favorable report on the bill would send it to the Senate floor for debate. ERA opponents will present their arguments at a public hearing today. According to Sen. Cecil Hill, D Transylvania, chairperson of the committee, if the committee acts on the bill at its regular meeting Feb. 24, it could be reported to the floor the next day. But efforts by Sen. Julian R. Allsbrook, D-Halifax, may delay committee action, on the amendment. Allsbrook indicated in a common sense, U.S. foreign policy Udall also detailed several problems in the U.S. military. He said that w hile the Soviets only have one aircraft carrier, the U.S. Navy has 14 and wants to build more at a cost of about $1 billion per ship. "The Air Force also wants a turkey called the Bl bomber, when the B52 is more than enough." Udall explained. He said that the Sov iets have very accurate missiles which can easily sink an aircraft carrier. "Their missiles can send our boats to the bottom of the ocean, and that is not a very good place to have our ships in case of war." Udall also reflected on his unsuccessful bid for the 1976 Democratic presidential nomination. Udall said that when he spoke at a function in Manhattan. Bill Bradley, a professional basketball player, introduced him saying, "What we need is a ' president who can stuff it." The 6-foot-5 Udall is a former professional basketball player. He said that by running for president he was trying to disprove the myth that a member of the House of Representatives could not capture the presidency. Udall said that any senator became a possible presidential candidate upon his arrival in Washington, assuming "he was under 65. not under indictment and not living in sin." "Jimmy Carter asked me to bring a message to those of you living in sin," Udall said. "He said to , knock it off." Udall also will speak at N.C. State University today as part of their "Human Survival" Colloquium. the education of their children." UNC Director of Student Aid William Geer said Monday that loss of NDSL loans would affect more than 2,000 UNC students. "This is the largest single financial program which the University has for the benefit of students," Geer said. "I would hope that the Carter administration wOUld change its mind and reinslate NDSL for the benefit of our students. I encourage students to write to the President and to every North Carolina federal legislator to emphasize the benefits NDSL is providing for students here." Last year 2,255 UNC students borrowed from NDSL funds a total of $2,018,273. The average loan was $895. This year UNC requested about S2.5 million in new NDSL funds for 1977-78 and has been approved' for only $903,494. Perkins said the total national request was $800 million, but only $500 Has the record price war of 1975-76 ended? Are the stores succumbing to the economic pressures of 1977? Is the $4 album following the 15-cent cup of coffee? Not yet. according to the managers of two record shops downtown, although each admits he doesn't know what will happen in the next six months. The reason for the higher prices lies with the record companies. Several major labels have increased the suggested manufacturer's list price of single albums from $6.98 to $7.98, forcing the stores to raise the sale price. "They're feeling out the market," said Richard Carter, manager of Schoolkids Records on Franklin Street. "The $7.98 list price is not coming in on every release, just a notice to Hill that he will attempt to persuade the committee to extend the debate period. While many of the arguments presented by the speakers were similar to those voiced in a public hearing last month before the House Constitutional Amendments Committee, several new voices appealed to the Senate committee in support of the amendment. Kreps addressed an anti-ERA argument that working class women would be hurt by ERA: "Most authorities agree that those laws which extend genuine protection, particularly in the area of working conditions, will be extended to protect men. However, those laws which have existed only to restrict women's options in the name of protection will be eliminated." Emphasizing that North Carolina could be the pivotal state in deciding the future of ERA, Dr. William Van Alstyne, Duke University constitutional law professor, rejected the suggestion of a state-wide referendum on ERA. He said that the legislators would be dodging their responsibilities as leaders if they decided to hold a referendum. Serving the students and the University community since 1 893 Tuesday, February 22, 1977, Chapel Hill, North Carolina million has been approved by the U.S. Office of Education. UNC lends both new money and collected funds to students every year. Last year UNC reloaned $1 million in paybacks to the NDSL fund by former students. "Our collection record is very good." Cieer said. "For the last 1 5 years, the rate of loss has been less than two-tenths of one per cent annually." Geer outlined the process by which educational funds are approved by the federal government. The first step is for the House Education Committee to authorize into law federal programs for the next fiscal year. In October 1876. the committee approved NDSL programs lor the 1978 fiscal year, which begins July 1. That law provided $400 million lor the NDSL program, S200 million for Supplemental Educational Opportunities Grants (SEOG). $450 million for the Campus Work Studies Program (CWSP). $50 million for state on the rise select few." "It all began around the end of December." said Joe Deese, manager of the Record Bar on Henderson Street. "The Queen album marked the first in a new wave of record prices." Deese said that by the end of the summer, $7.98 may be the record industry base price. Carter wouldn't speculate. And record company executives are not talking. Spokespersons for Warner-Elektra-Atlantic and Columbia refused to comment on an across-the-board increase. All they said was that the new price is an experiment on a select group of new releases. A spokesperson at CBS Records, in Atlanta said that tHe new list prices are in response to industry trends. "Everyone else is raising the list to $7.98." (CBS is a subsidiary of Columbia Records, the first label to raise the list price.) Billboard, the record-industry trade publication, has been filled with articles about the $7.98 list price, although most are announcements by various record labels that they are raising prices. To date. Warner-Elektra-Atlantic, Columbia, CBS, Epic, Capital and CTI have released or will soon release albums with a , $7.98 list price. According to Billboard, Mercury. Fantasy, MCA and Motown are watching the sales of the new albums, before they make a decision. Billboard quoted Don Zimmermann, executive vice president of Capitol as saying that $7.98 list price is inevitable for the record industry because "everyone is faced with pressures of inflation and shrinking margins. Eventually the rise has to go across the board, assuming the current inflationary trends continue." CBS Records President Bruce Lundvall, according to Billboard, said that the business climate is right for a price rise on superstar type acts. - "The most amazing thing about the new prices," said Charley Dobbins, manager of the Record Bar at South Square Mall, "is that I've yet to hear any complaints from the customers." "I don't know if people are paying attention," Deese said. Staff photo by Charles Hardy Morris Udall student-incentive grants and a maximum of $1,800 per student for the Basic Educational Opportunities (i rants program. However, before President Ford left office in January he recommended to Congress a budget which cut funding in all student-aid categories and ended funding of the NDSL program. Carter has revised the Ford education budget by increasing funds for SEOG and the CWSP. but there are still no funds in the Carter budget for the NDSL program. Cieer. w ho attended a conference w ith Perkins last week, said Perkins told him, "We know who produced these (the Carter administration's) budget figures and why they are so low. They were produced by officials who have been in office for eight years and have not been removed yet. Those people never were in favor of adequate funding for student financial aid and are not now." Staff photo by Charles Hardy The Chapel Hill record buyer may soon find that his favorite new releases have jumped in price to either $4.57 or $4.99. The increase is due to a hike in the list price by industries' testing the market to determine the music lover's reaction to higher prices. ove c student seen as By JEFF C OHEN Staff Write A move to hold new elections for two county commission seats is an attempt to fill the positions with two of the losers from the August 1976 election, said Richard Whitted, who holds one of the contested, positions. The Orange Committee, a group of conservative Orange County. Democrats, is seeking the new election on the grounds that students were illegally registered to vote in the county. Whitted said Monday that the call for a new election was an attempt to place Charles Johnston and Billy Ray, losers in the primary election in August 1976, on the commission. The Orange Committee supported Johnston and Ray for seats on the commission in that election. Whitted said the committee thinks it can change the outcome of the primary by not allowing students to vote. "That is ridiculous, because the underlying thing is, even without the student vote, they would not win," said Donald Willho.it. the other program The revised Carter budget will be reviewed by the House Ways and Means Committee and the Senate Finance Committee. Carter can then either approve or veto their budget. Cieer said the last three presidents hav e recommended the discontinuation ' of NDSL in their recommendations. " This is nothing new. But the friends of student aid in Congress have maintained the programs and the appropriations. "The best friends of student aid in recent years have been the members of Congress who have repeatedly increased funds for students over and above the recommendations of the White Hosue in the last three administrations! We are . disappointed that the Carter administration has not moved more quickly in the direction of more funds I or students, and we hope for the sake of University students that the present recommendations will be augmented." i -mm. X? 1 X V X'. Sv. '.V mrnnriiiiirrtirffW&l: vS&x I Please call us: 933-0245 hallenging balloti commissioner holding a contested position. He cited voting returns from the Country Club precinct, in which few students were registered. In that precinct, Willhoit said he received 125 votes to 50 votes for Ray. Lucius Cheshire, chairperson of the Orange Committee, supported Willhoit's position with figures from the Country Club precinct. He told the county commissioners last week that 396 of the 528 votes cast in the last election were student votes, and that of these 396 students only 21 listed property for tax purposes as of January 1976. "It appears as though they are trying to make it as difficult for students to vote as possible," Whitted said. Cheshire said his committee's request is based on a 1972 N.C. Supreme Court decision. The court ruled that a college student is a resident of the town where his parents live, but added that the student may establish a new residence. Willhoit said that the court ruling would only affect students living in dorms and would not affect those living in houses or apartments. Democratic party voter registration chairperson Gerry Cohen said only 10 per cent of UNC students are registered to vote in Orange County. He said that few of these approximately 2,000 students would be affected by the court ruling, . because most are married graduate students who have settled in the county and own land. "It seems to me that the Orange County Board of Elections, which monitors these elections, should have been asking the proper questions when registering students," Willhoit said. "If a person presents himself to the board, indicates that this will be his home and presents proper evidence, I don't know how much more proof the board could require," Whitted said. "It is more political than anything else," he said. Cheshire agreed, that the action was politically motivated, saying that the group would not care who voted if it did not have a political interest. CGC to hold special runoff By ELIZABETH SWARINGEN Staff Writer A special runoff election between Diane Schafer and Bryan Wirwicz for the District 7 Campus Governing Council (CGC) seat will be held Wednesday. Elections Board Chairperson Craig Brown called for the special election because 1 1 Granville residents voted in the wrong district in the elections Feb. 9 due to confusion over registration sheets. One District 7 resident voted in District 8. and 10 District 8 residents voted in District 7. Granville East is in District 7, and Granville West and Granville South are in District 8. In the first election, Schafer defeated Wirwicz by 10 votes, 201 to 191. After the voting mistakes were discovered, Brown said the irregularities could have affected the election outcome, and he called for a special runoff. Three days before the general election, Schafer had charged that Wirwicz misrepresented her in his campaign' on five counts, ranging from attendance at past CGC meetings to her stand on academic reform. The Elections Board ruled that Wirwicz accidentally misrepresented Schafer on the grounds of "poor wording and insufficient research." Wirwicz did not retract his statements but apologized for them, saying they were the result of errors in research. Schafer said the misrepresentation issue was no longer important in the election. "The crucial wording (in Wirwicz's campaign literature) was clarified because the previous campaign atmosphere still existed," she said. "I wish we could have had one election and settled it all," Wirwicz said. "I know the kids in Granville are getting tired of elections." ng political