GO ahead Talk to this man about your financial future. If you're a senior or graduate student, this man can put together a sound financial plan that can go as far as you go. As fast as you go. Appropriately, it’s called the GO Plan ... the Growth Opportunity Plan from United Fidelity Life. The GO Plan gives you a big head start on tomorrow’s financial needs. With the GO Plan, you can have a solid investment and insurance program now and defer payment until after graduation. Your GO man on campus has all the facts. See him soon, and GO on to bigger and better things. man, SCONA XVII chairman, Dallas. “SCONA needs them for ability to communicate, viewpoints, expertise and rapf with students,” Thurman ad Eight SCONA XVII round'll bles will provide 140 delegated sounding board for facts, Ida and concepts from major speafe and student participants on “T« Impact of the University." Co-chairmen invest the roiml tables with ideas and direcfe assist students to reach ds statements of ideas and usual serve as catalysts to discussion Byers receives NSF granl -ymm. BUTCH HAS AN EDGE on the other dogs in the neighborhood when he appears in a full suit of clothes, including shoes and hat. He romped in the 11-degree weather in Louisville, Ky., last week with his owner Melanie Keltner. (AP Wirephoto) Dr. Horace R. Byers, distin- guished professor of meteorology at A&M, has been awarded a $31,000 National Science Founda tion grant for a project entitled “Microdynamics of Warm Cumu lus Congestoe.” Dr. Byers has an International reputation for his research on thunderstorms and the physics of rainclouds. The 12-month grant is effective Feb. 15. Assisting Dr. Byers Phanindramohan Das of the It teorology Department. This project complements tt rent work on natural processes) rain production in clouds and Ij artificial inducement of rah Dr. Byers Is a former deant academic vice president at A4! Nixon disappointed in foreign aid act Growth Opportunity Division UNITED FIDELITY LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY 1025 Elm Street • Dallas, Texas 75202 VIC ULMER 3902 E.29th St. Bryan, Texas 77801 846-0362 WASHINGTON (^—President Nixon signed a $2.75-billion for eign-aid authorization act Mon day but described it as a great disappointment which hampers his conduct of foreign affairs. The measure, Nixon said in a statement, severely cuts the amounts he requested for de- TONiT€TH^ ILLGROOV€S HrfliMdRK Mil Of fAm Pk&ms »1MG BR6/1D mm r€ddv mcms TOhliTE ON NBC-Tl/i velopment and security assist ance and “is below minimum ac ceptable levels.” Nor does it include, the Presi dent said, major reform proposals which he sent Congress last April. “Viewed against the vital na tional objectives which our foreign assistance programs are designed to pursue, this act is a great dis appointment,” Nixon said. Nixon’s action on the author ization bill nearly completed the revival, in modified form, of the program which the Senate briefly appeared to have killed last Oct. 29. The only thing left is House- Senate compromise of a $3-bil- lion bill approved by the Senate last Friday actually appropriat ing money for foreign aid and for related programs. The chief executive complained that “the bill reaches my desk more than halfway through the fiscal year, delayed by legislative entanglements resulting from the attachment in committee of an unprecedented number of restric tive and nongermane amendments, some of which raise grave consti tutional questions.” “While many were modified or removed in the long months of debate,” Nixon continued, “the fi nal product adds significant re strictions and limitations to those already in law which have ham pered the efficient administration of foreign aid and the effective conduct of foreign affairs.” He did not elaborate on the restrictions, but he urged the Congress this year “to restore a comprehensive security and de velopment assistance program through legislation equal to the challenges and the opportunities for peace which lie before us.” The bill Nixon signed takes a step toward sharing the U.S. for eign-aid load with other rich na tions and calls for reducing the 31.5 per cent U.S. share of United Nations operating expenses to 25 per cent. College administrators to meet Friday at A&M Gulf Coast college and univer sity personnel administrators will meet Feb. 11 at A&M. Discussion at the ope-day meet ing will feature Douglas G. Mac- Lean, president of the College and University Personnel Association (CUPA). H. Ray Smith, TAMU system personnel director, said officials representing 15 colleges and uni versities in the CUPA Gulf Coast chapter are expected for the first such meeting at A&M. Sessions at the Memorial Stu dent Center will cover unemploy ment compensation, the Fair La bor Standards Act, employe train ing, equal opportunity, optional retirement programs and other subjects of interest to personnel administrators. MacLean will address the meet ing on CUPA current events. He was personnel director at the Uni versity of Houston before being named vice president of staff services there. Smith said MacLean is a na tionally recognized authority on college and university personnel management. TAMU President Jack Williams will open the Friday meeting at 1:30 p.m. A dinner at the Ramada Inn will follow the sessions. Speakers on the program also include Jack C. Parker, Sam Houston State business manager; James R. Jannasch, University of Texas Medical Branch at Galves ton personnel director, and, from A&M’s personnel department, training coordinator, James A. Wiley, assistant director Kenneth B. Livingston and personnel rep resentative Sam Byer. Report proposes American, Soviet spacecraft link-up SPACE CENTER, Houston hP) —A space agency report proposes that American and Russian space craft link up in space and orbit together for two days while space men of the two countries exchange visits. The report, prepared by North American Rockwell for the space agency at a cost of $300,000, calls for an Apollo command and serv ice module with an attached dock ing module to link up with a So viet craft during a 14-day earth orbit mission. The Russian space ship would include a salyut, or orbiting lab oratory, and an attached soyuz, a Soviet command ship. This com bination of spacecraft set the world endurance record of 24 days, but the three cosmonauts were killed during their return to earth. “A mid-1975 launch date can be met readily with some options accommodated,” the report states. “A mid-1974 launch date requires a straightforward minimum flex ibility program.” During the two days of the in ternational docking exercise, there would be three two-man visits between the craft of the two countries. The report states that two Soviets could visit in the Apollo command ship at a time, while two Americans are in the Russian craft. After the docking exercise, the Apollo spacecraft would separate, descend to a lower circular orbit and remain aloft for 11 more days. During this time the astro nauts would perform surveys of resources in the United States using sensitive cameras and in struments. 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