Page 4 Arms limitations talks THE BATTALION FRIDAY, JAN. 23, 1976 Progressing but no agreement Associated Press MOSCOW — Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger ended his talks with Soviet leaders today and flew to Brussels after reporting “significant progress” in nuclear arms negotia tions but no breakthrough to an agreement. Congressional hearing to he held on campus Dr. John C. Calhoun, Texas A&M vice president for academic affairs, heads a list of witnesses scheduled to appear at 10 a.m. Monday at a con gressional public hearing on a bill proposing establishment of regional environmental research centers. The hearing, postponed on cam pus last fall, will be conducted in Rudder Conference Center 301 by the House Science and Technology Subcommittee on Environment and Atmosphere. The bill was authored by U. S. Rep. Olin Teague (D-Tex.), committee chairman. Chairing the subcommittee hear ing will be Rep. George E. Brown Jr. (D-Calif.). Also in attendance will be Reps. Larry Winn (R-Kan.) and Charles Mosher (R-Ohio). Appearing with Calhoun at 10 a.m. will be Dr. John Neuhold of Utah State University. At a 2 p.m. session. Dr. George W. Reid of Oklahoma University and Dr. Carl Marienfeld of the University of Missouri-Columbia will testify. “Some very interesting new Soviet ideas have been introduced, Kissinger said as he went into a final session on the Middle East, Angola and other trouble spots with Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko. “I think good progress has been made. ’ Gromyko also told reporters that there was “movement forward on several matters.” Kissinger emphasized that he was talking about progress toward a new arms limitation treaty and not about Angola, which Soviet Communist party chief Leonid I. Brezhnev brushed aside in his sessions with Kissinger. But the secretary of state said a report by John Scali, the former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, that Kissinger might resign because he couldn’t The Texas Instruments SR-50 and SR-51 . . . standards of at prices you can afford. •3 / v / 5 9