The Tar Heel Thursday, July 6, 1978 11
Be a friend
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Th Daily Tar Heel is published by the Daily Tar
Heel Board of Directors of the University of North
Carolina daily Monday through Friday during the
regular academic year except during exam period,
vacations and summer sessions. The Summer Tar
Heel is published weekly on Thursdays during the
summer sessions.
Offices are at the Frank Porter Graham Student
Union Building, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514. Telephone numbers:
News Sports 933-0245, 933-0246, 933-0252,
933-0372; Business, Circulation, Advertising
933-1163.
Subscription rates: $30 per year; $15.00 per
semester.
The Campus Governing Council shall have
powers to determine the Student Activities Fee and
to appropriate all revenue derived from the
Student Activities Fee (1.1.14 of the Student
Constitution). The Daily Tar Heel is a student
organization.
The Daily Tar Heel reserves the right to regulate
the typographical tone of all advertisements and to
revise or turn away copy it considers objectionable.
The Daily Tar Heel will not consider
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errors or erroneous insertion unless notice is given
to the Business Manager within (1) one day after
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receiving the tear sheets or subscription of the
paper. The Daily Tar Keel will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect insertion of an
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Notice for such correction must be given before the
next insertion.
Claire Bagley Business Manager
Dan Collins Advertising Manager
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Once upon a time, French
bikes were IT. If you wanted a
serious ten-speed, you got a
Peugeot. For lots of us Ameri
cans, it was love at first ride.
Then the Japanese started
selling good bikes. Better than
the French bikes.
Now, something new and
wonderful has happened. The
French are selling good bikes
again. Beautiful bikes. So it's
-the only authorized Peugeot dealer in Chapel Hill
theCLEAN MACHINE
1 10 W. Main St. Carrboro 967-5104
time to steal on back to bur same
old used-to-be, the Peugeot.
The new Peugeot is a fleet
of super bikes. They're lighter,
they shift better, they ride
better, they're stronger, they
use better-researched materials,
and they have a forged cotter
less crank.
So acquaint yourself with
an old lover. Ride a new
Peugeot at the Clean Machine.
by Bernard Cook
Staff Writer
For foreign students arriving in the
United States, UNC isia "culture
shock." To ease the shock, the Campus
Friends program aims to give them
someone to contact on a one-on-one basis.
For the first two to four weeks of classes,
UNC students give them advice .
Students from non-English speaking
countries face new situations. They
have to deal with American banks,
telephones, buses and mail'and'tosurvive
registration.
"This is the most difficult period of
readjustment for foreign students," said
Peter Topper, program assistant. "They
need someone they can turn to to get
questions answered."
Many UNC undergraduates have
volunteered for the program, but more
graduate students are needed since most
of the incoming students are graduates.
Once in the program, each Friend is
matched with an incoming student. "We
urge Friends to write and introduce
themselves," Topper said. After an
orientation meeting, the Friends are
asked to spend the first Monday of
registration with the new student.
"That is when new students are the most
compulsive," Topper said. "They want to
register, open a bank account, and plug in
the phone. After that, it's up to the Friend.
"It's a chance for an American to get to
know someone from a different culture.
It's very low risk. At worst, you've helped
someone, and at best, you've made a new
friend."
There are approximately 250 foreign
students on campus during the fall and
spring semesters. Between 50 and 100
new students come in each year. Many of
them are from Western Europe although
an increasing number are coming from
Far Eastern and African countries.
Interested students can sign up at the
International Center in Bynum Hall by
August 1.
NEW!
Locally Designed
Carolina and
Chapel Hill
Regular and
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T-Shirts.
V
Many colors to
choose from...
For Men & Women,
4M and 500
129 E. Franklin St.
929-9553
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