' TuesdayJanuary 17, 1934 Paqa 2 Daily Ncbraskan "OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o 27th & Cornhusker Welcomes You Back With 3 Great Bands 'and just ONE cover! mm o i Tomorrow Night Only! Jchnny E lnm G YI13 Trcucling Fun OIiouj o o o o o o o o o Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. LZzn oc!iin 0000000000000000000c 1 & Ii3 Hc'jurn of Ugh t:c2l ' G Th3GncI:c?3 Tues. thru Sat. 00000000000000000000 o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o E0)(D) I Sa r 1 TTilQ) . If tikiliiiiikMii.ii id .1 i 1 i (0)1 p or I in National and international news from the Renter News Report Rcncm ernes Covieto to resume anno tallio WASHINGTON President Reagan Monday asked the Soviet Union to resume efforts for arms control and peace, and the White House denied that the appeal was election-year pro paganda. In his most conciliatory speech about the Kremlin to date, Reagan said he wanted """constructive cooperation" with Moscow and called for new moves to rid the world of the threat of nuclear war. "We haw a long way to go, but we are determined to try and try aain," he said in his address from the White House. White House spokesman Larry Speakes dis puted allegations in the Soviet press that Rea gan's remarks were purely political and were designed to enable him to shed a warlike imae if he decided, as expected, to seek re-election. "The president has made a serious speech and he would hope to have a serious response," Speakes said. "We propose to wait and hear what the Soviet government has to say, rather than listen to some of the statements made in the Soviet press." ' Shultz, Gromylio pledge efTorto STOCKHOLM Secretary of State George Shultz and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko pledged Monday to work for the suc cess of a new disarmament forum on which hopes for a resumption of the superpower dia logue are pinned. The two ministers arrived in Stockholm to attend today's opening of the 35-nation European disarmament conference. On Wednesday they will hold their first meet ing in four months of deepening East-West . tension over nuclear weapons. In a statement to reporters at Arlanda Airport, Shultz said the United States hoped the conference would produce "measures to reduce the dangers of surprise attack and miscalculation in Europe by rendering military activity more open, more observable, more predictable and more subject to verification." Gromyko said the Soviet Union would do everything to ensure a successful outcome in Stockholm but added that that did not depend on Moscow alone. UNSecretary opens commit CASABLANCA, Morocco United Nations Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar, in a speech at the opening of the fourth Islamic summit, warned Monday that the world was moving toward catastrophe. Deploring the fact that the United Nations had been inhi bited from playing a peacemaking and peace keeping role in the Middle East, Perez de Cuel lar said he was anxious to see the world body used more fully in the conflicts. More aid to Latin America C0115M WASHINGTON The Reagan administra tion said Monday it would seek aid for Central America at near the five-year level of $8.4 bil lion proposed last week by the Kissinger Com mission. Peter McPherson, administrator for the Agency for International Development, told reporters President Reagan supported the basic elements of the report on the region from the panel headed by former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. "The program to be sent to Congress will be in the range of $8.4 billion which the report has recommended," McPher son said. The Kissinger Commission recom mended an increase in 1984 aid of $400 million on top of the $477 million already requested for Central American nations. Press ruling allowed to etand WASHINGTON the Supreme Court Mon day let stand a lower court ruling that freedom of the press does not entitle members of the press to violate the law while pursuing the news. The justices without comment refused to review a 2-1 opinion by the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals upholding the convictions of nine television and newspaper photo graphers. The photographers had been fined $25 each for trespassing while covering a nuclear protest demonstration in 1979 at the now defunct Black Fox Nuclear Plant near Inola, Okla. The power plant, since abandoned, was being built by the Public Service Company of Oklahoma,