J Monday, November 7, 1983/The Battalion/Page 3 ■flip .: ^ v*ft 1 \ W ^ Dr. Jerome Loving Professor asked jto go to Paris for spring job by Tracie L. Holub )id Battalion Staff Dr. Jerome Loving won’t iend this spring semester aching at Texas A&M. Loving received an invitation to ch American literature for six onths at the U niversity of Paris Sorbonne. Loving will leave for Paris in anuary 1984. While he is there s will teach three courses in nierican literature. Loving said he received the nvitation to teach at the Univer ity from France’s minister of ligher education. K“There is about a five step irocess a person must go hrough before being selected,” ..oving said. “First, you have to >e nominated, and then you go hrough a series of screenings intil they come up with the ones hey will ask.” France won’t be the first :ountry Loving has visited as a professor. He spent the summer of 1978 in Russia as a Fullbright lecturer and was invited to The International Association of University Professors of English annual conference in Germany in 1983. Loving said his visit to Russia taught him much about the Un ited States. “While I was there I was able to see the states through a very objective light,” Loving said. “I came back thinking well of the states. It was a very good experi ence in all.” Loving said he will be paid by the University of Paris while teaching there. “I’ll probably just about break even while I’m living there,” Loving said. “The most impor tant thing to me will be the ex perience of living there. It’s a rare opportunity to live in France. I hope to bring back and share some of the experiences that I will have there.” school many voii ipport took p n uses/on id to the each case; Soviet sub given tow toward Cuba i United Press International WASHINGTON — A Soviet Jd ugboat began towing a disabled itales ov i e t attack submarine toward jr.^uba Saturday from the point 00 miles off the South Carolina '‘I 11 ' oast where the submarine had rginot ,een stranded, Navy officials lators. aid. vinanypu Lt. Cmdr. Art Humphries delegate aid it is a “safe assumption” that uld havfi 16 destination is Cuba, merican: Navy spokesman also said a J.S. frigate conducting “anti- , ubmarine warfare” lost a sonar I " u racking device and a portion of -Suits " he cable towing it Monday in t Demo he area where the Victor III Lite H mclear-powered submarine be- ; the Detame disabled, ig debt! The 6,000-ton Soviet sub- narine was spotted by a Navy >atrol plane Wednesday. It has )een under constant surveill- g ^ince since and a Soviet intelli- / jence trawler is on the scene, i slavy officials said. Humphries said the USS -‘eterson, a destroyer, and U.S. tr grades "econnaissance planes will “con- nework * nue monitoring” the sub- rested ‘ ne as towec t toward ui^j Cuba but will not enter Cuban ate tea® more op berthed would Police beat Pentagon officials said the continuous surveillance offered an intelligence bonanza. “Never before have we been provided with such access to one of their operating attack subs for such a long time, and we want to take every advantage of this oppor- official tumty, one said. Faculty study enhance programs designed to departmental value by Tracie L. Holub Battalion Staff The purpose of granting Fa culty Academic Study Programs is to increase a faculty member’s value to his department, his stu dents and his colleagues, says Dr. Clinton Phillips, dean of faculties. The Faculty Academic Study Program leaves are awarded to any tenured members of the Texas A&M faculty if they have been a full-time employee for at least 5 years and are involved in research, teaching, administra tion or the performance of pro fessional services. Phillips said that 19 faculty members were awarded study leaves this year, a large increase from the 4 or 5 that had been awarded in previous years. “We had 22 people apply for leaves this year and out of those 22 we were able to give 19 teachers leaves,” Phillips said. “The amount of money that we get from year to year varies. That money is the determing factor telling us how many peo ple get to go on leaves. “When I first came here, my first priority was to get the leave program expanded. The most that had ever been offered were eight. The increase to 19 this year is just great. We’d like to offer many more because there are so many deserving indi viduals here.” Phillips said the program re ceives money from a variety of sources. “The former students associa tion has been a tremendous help in funding,” Phillips said. “Next year we hope to get funding from the former students asso ciation and the university de velopment fund.” Phillips said faculty members go on leaves for many different reasons. “Some might go to use a parti cular library that is particularly special for their type of re search,” Phillips said. “Others might go and study with other experts in a certain field. Where they go and what they do is a function of their research. “Many times you have a per son who has been in a field and the field just isn’t as important as it used to be. This is when he needs to redirect himself and this is when the leaves help. It might help if they go to a lab and get involved in a whole new line of research. “These leaves are invaluable. People come back with renewed vigor and their horizons ex panded. You r re Needed All Over the World. Ask Peoce Corps volunreers why their ingenuity ond flexibility ore os virol os their degrees. They'll tell you they ore helping the world's pooresr peoples attain self sufficiency in the oreos of food production, energy conservation, education, economic development and health services. And they'll tell you about the rewards of hands on career experience overseas. They'll tell you it's the toughest job you'll ever love. SENIORS/GRADS: Sign up for inter view and pick up an application now: CAREER PLACEMENT'OFF!CE Rep. on Campus: Wed. § Thurs., Nov. 9 § 10. Visit the INFO BOOTH in the STUDENT UNION PEACE CORPS territorial waters 12 miles out to sea, officials said. Humphries said the USS McCloy, a frigate based in Nor folk, Va., lost its submarine tracking device and portion of its cable in the “general vicinity” of the stranded submarine Monday. He said the McCloy was con ducting “anti-submarine war fare” at the time. Asked whether the McCloy was tracking the Vic tor III submarine, he said, “That’s what anti-submarine warfare is all about.” Biomedical Science Association The Soviet sub bobbed in the heaving Atlantic 470 miles east of Charleston, S.C., and 280 miles west of Bermuda all week. A U.S. P-3 Orion reconnaiss ance plane on routine patrol first spotted the sub Wednesday, and cameras abord other P-3s have been snapping photos of the craft ever since. >®H W Pm) date November 8, 1983 topic. DISEASES OF PET BIRDS Dr. Dustan Clark, Vet. Micro & Parasit. The following incidents were reported to the University Police Department on Friday: THEFTS: • A blue Sears 10-speed bicy cle from the Zachry Engineering Center bike rack. • A blue Vista 10-speed bicy- C * e ^ rom l ^ e Krueger Hall bike rn"w • A wallet from the third l ""' floor gym of East Kyle. The wal let contained $30 in cash and a Texas driver’s license. cy ‘xceed ?^" 1 BUROLARYi i irthc^fl • A purse from a room in ,i to cdn 11 Underwood Hall. The purse vcflo | i | ^ 1 contained a wallet, $23 in cash, , alsou ^ Texas driver’s license, Texas 111,11 A&M I.D. card and other per- j,, : sonal property. s < >‘ ,rc " CYT J-T VW • oiisirait'M mdcraf ,l \ • A railroad crossing arm was [I, Texas AJ found lying on the ground next orphoiiTto Puryear Hall. University Police took the arm to the police department and contacted rail- ihrui'R road officials. The arm original- ciS' w iC P’ ly was from the railroad crossing il sul,strl| ’j( at Wellborn Road and Old Main Drive. li Reed ^ * University Police found a ,’,11^ Student asleep in a 1983 Ford parked in the student lot east of the John H. Lindsey Building tii |ccl ^‘(University Press). The person < |is t ,a " ) ' l was arrested for public intoxica- ,,hci " don and taken to the police de- ollcgc S 1 *" partment. 1st Anniversary Sale 2 1 Two monthly memberships for the price of one •Classes seven days a week ■Morning, afternoon and evening classes •Beginner through advanced levels •Exercise as often as you like, Whenever you like •No contracts, no initiation fees BODY DYNAMICS Exercise Studio 900 Harvey Rd. in the Post Oak Village Call 696-7180 for brochure & class schedule Presented By MSC OPAS 11.1 V| \ November 17, 19«h 8:00 p. m . Rudder Auditorium Texas A&M University Tickets available at MSC Box Office 5 TONY AWARDS INCLUDING BEST PLAY ‘STUNNING! EXCITING!... A Grand And GUrrious Evening In The Theatre’.’— UPI > Note: Latecomers wMj not be seated during the first 15 minutes of the performance