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Show Page 22 - THE HERALD, Provo, Utah, Friday, January 1, Arms inspectors would be few Soviets allowed in A comparable American con SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -ISoviet verification inspectors are stationed outside Hercules, they will be among few Soviets allowed into Salt Lake County, a foreign service officer said. Salt Lake, Weber and Tooele counties are closed to official Soviet visitors. "The United States has set aside roughly 20 percent of the country as closed to travel for Soviet officials diplomats, journalists or businessmen who are here. That matches the amount the Soviets have blocked to travel in the Soviet f arms-contr- tingent will be stationed in the Soviet city of Votkinsk, outside 0 missiles a plant where have been assembled. Votkinsk is in an area of the Soviet Union that has been closed to foreign visitors. Why is Salt Lake County closed to Soviet visitors? ol SS-2- "I don't know why," Cavan-aug- h said. "For general reasons. Just to have 20 percent closed territory." The system of closed areas has been in place since 1955, the State Department official said. For years after World Union," said Carey Cavan-auga foreign service officer on the State Department's So- h, War II, the U.S. unsuccessfully attempted to persuade the Soviets to allow open access in their country. "We've always pushed to have these areas open, but since they didn't abandon their system, we put in a similar viet desk. The Intermediate Nuclear Forces treaty, which soon will be considered for ratification by the U.S. Senate, would allow up to 30 Soviet inspectors to establish a compound near the Hercules Bacchus West plant in western Salt Lake system," Cavanaugh County. The inspectors would be there to verify that Hercules does not build any more motors for Pershing 2 rockets, which are to be destroyed under the treaty. aerial view of Hercules shows where rocket motors for the Pershing II missile were produced until last June. Soviet inspectors would be stationed here. NEW YORK (AP) Swedish men who reported using marijuana on more than 50 not surprise him. berg of Karolinska Hospital in Stockholm and their col- "Many psychiatric clinicians have noted over the years that a patient's illness starts with marijuana use or cites numerous previous studies that have found that marijuana aggravates schizophrenia or trigleagues occasions were six times as to develop likely as schizophrenia, according to a study published late this week. The authors of the study of more than 45,000 Swedish solrs ar overuse," Schulz said. Marijuana might cause latent schizophrenia to become apparent, he said. Researchers also have noted that the hallucinogenic drug LSD can gers psychotic episodes. The researchers noted that most of the cases of schizophrenia reported among the soldiers were not linked to marijuana use. "Cannabis should thus be viewed as an additional clue to the still elusive etiology (cause) of schizophrenia," the researchers wrote. diers emphasized that the statistical link between schizophrenia and marijuana, or cannabis, does not necessarily mean that the drug causes schizophrenia. consumption might, on the contrary, be caused by an emerging schizophrenia," the researchers wrote in The Lancet, a British medical journal. The study conducted by Sven Andreasson of the Karo-linsInstitute and Ulf Ryd- - American trigger persistent mental illness, Schulz said. Furthermore, there is a chemical link that might explain why marijuana and schizophrenia would be related, Schulz said. researchers asked about the report were not familiar with it, but Dr. Charles Schulz, chief of pharmacology research for the schizophrenia branch at the National Institute of Mental Health, said the findings did ka Schizophrenia is thought by some to be related to a disorder in the brain's production or use of dopamine, one of neurothe many transmitters that brain cells use to communicate with. so-call- ed WASHINGTON Environmental in i i n i i Protection out- Agency won't completely law what little lead still remains in gasoline because it says the industry itself is phasing out the environmentally hazardous substance. mi YI01EAYIIR1E If OJNDVEIKSDiry ClNEPLEX ODEON MADQ DNEMA to2 Richard Kozlowski, fuels specialist in EPA's air pollution office, said Thursday, "Leaded gasoline will be an anachronism (by the end of 1988) in urban areas, and it will be almost impossible to find." But Ellen Silbergeld, a for the Environmental Defense Fund, remained untoxi-cologi- the market to "Invoking take care of lead in gasoline has been a constant refrain for a decade," she said. "History does not bear this out." Lead is a poison, causing brain damage to which children are particularly vulnerable. EPA scientists also belive it causes kidney damage and accounts for a small fraction of high blood pressure in adult males. And it disables air pollution control equipment in auto exhaust systems. EPA proposed in 1985 to ban the remaining lead in gasoline on schedules it said could begin anywhere from Jan. 1, 1988, to Jan. 1, 1995. EPA ordered lead in gasoline reduced from a maximum of 1.1 gram per gallon starting Jan. 1, 1986, and reaching 0.1 gram Jan. on 1, 1988. The agency had estimated that dropping the remaining lead in 1988 would avoid 7,000 - sands of separate processors running simultaneously. International Business Machines Corp. had expressed little interest in the commercial t parallel possibilities processing until recently, viewing it as too expensive and too risky, The New York Times said today. Now, as the Reagan administration prepares a new initiative to encourage development of the technology, IBM shifted gears and expressed a renewed interest in parallel processing. IBM said Tuesday it was allying itself with one of the world's leading supercomputer designers, Steve S. Chen, and hoped to market a machine in the 1990s, the Times reported. Chen said the partnership would attempt to set new stan- dards for ce ft interiors with marble X Richird Corlim. TIME MAGAZINE "THE MOST STAGGERING - Hn Rrti. AT THE MOVIES FfyS STfHU DIANE ACHIEVEMENT! ABSOLUTELY SUPERB." 0 0 II batteries inc luded not ... ,,. 1 30 i rf m L i.Di mi ii M II I IM Ssl KEATON in ) ' obour us " igtillf II M3I.30 ovi.m.oAi.n Daily 12:30 2:45 disappearance of leaded gaso- line in urban areas, Kozlowski said. The agency's gasoline decision became known as it was revealed that planned new regulations on lead in water have run into problems. EPA has decided it cannot make drinking water suppliers legally responsible for lead contamination caused by a homeowner's plumbing, spokesman Lead has been used in gasoline since the 1920s as the cheapest way to boost octane ratings. computing, "leading system performance 100 times faster than today's machines." Supercomputers are used to quickly solve a wide variety of engineering and mathematical problems that would take ordinary computers weeks, months or years to work out. The government uses the machines to make and break codes, identify images and targets from satellite photographs and solve major structural problems for programs like the space shuttle. Experts told the Times that IBM's entry would likely legitimatize the technology in the eyes of investors and IBM competitors, and many now expect a flood of research and development activity. INDELIBLE, AWESOME IMAGES." - Dirid Antra, NEWSWEEK "STEVEN SPIELRERf?S MOST POWERFUL FILM." GANNETT VEWS SERVICE Fim WARNER BROS.p.cn STEVEN SPIELBERG "EMPIRE OF THE SUN" sumn, JOHN MALKOVICH MIRANDA RICHARDSON NIGEL HAVERS m CHRISTIAN BALE mm. JOHN WILLIAMS ALLEN DAVIAU.a sr Mr.ui.vr ROBERT SHAPIRO ph.,. ft.,!. STEVEN SPIELBERG KATHLEEN KENNEDY FRANK MARSHALL strmipu t. TOM STOPPARD iwdoMt n.HM J. G. BALLARD D.m,rdh STEVEN SPIELBERG S:15 7:30 9:45 r PLAYS AT 'J GOING TO THE MOVIES WILL NEVER BE THE SAME AGAIN! Dave Cohen said. Empimsun i 1 fat these harmful effects will be avoided anyway because of the Joel Sirfrl COOP MORNING AMERICA. ABC TV a STEVEN SPIELBERG 1 123,-00- "STEVEN SPIELBERG IS A GREAT, MASTERFUL FILMMAKER." "A TOWERING 1300 SOU1M cases or lead poisoimng in 0 children, 387 deaths and cases of high blood pressure in the first year. Many of - Jack (,arnr. FILM OF 1987!" cinemas Daily 1:00 3:00 5:00 7:15 Despite the policy, Cavanaugh said, Soviets may enter closed counties under conditions of reciprocity. "If a Soviet official wanted to visit a closed area like Salt Lake, he would have to submit a special request for permission to the State Department," Cavanaugh said. "A U.S. official in Moscow then would request to visit a similar closed area in the Soviet Union ... This is what applies here, but it's brand new with this arms agreement so details still have to be worked out." HOLLYWOOD'S GREATEST VIRTUOSO. HE CREATES l.n. 2:20 4:45 7:10 1:40 bases do not add up to 20 percent of the U.S. territory, so more counties around the country were added just to match the Soviet total. STEVEN SPIELBERG IS Mulin. THE NEW YORK TIMES Jcffri' SVEVM'RKVIEW.VWI BS RAIIIO Dally 12:00 defe- industries and nse-related "A STUNNING EPIC! "SWEEPING STORY OF OVERWHELMING POWER." - Luxurious plush seating throughout Advance ticket purchases (or same day film presentations Plentiful FREE parking, and ... Real butter served on fresh hot popcorn I De- in supercomputer design changesA direction to overall radiof "STEVEN SPIELBERG AGAIN PROVES THAT HE IS OUR TOP PICTUREMAKER." WIDE SCREENED in all st convinced. - Jnf II All I IS floored lobby Dolby Stereo Sound are But environmentalists skeptical. cal computer design once considered too expensive and ultimately unworkable is getting a second look by the world's largest computer company and may gain broad acceptance, according to a report published today. The Reagan administration has expressed a special interest in the technology, known as parallel processing. Parallel processing increases the speed of computers by going to work on complex problems with scores and sometimes thou- :ILIEANT ElrgAntly-riesigne- The (AP) NEW YORK (AP) fOUR CINEMAS Ground, Hercules, Defense pot Ogden. But the counties with let refiners phase out leaded gas; others remain wary - IBM n ie the closed counties contain military bases or industries considered vital to national defense such as Tooele Army Depot, Dugway Proving EPA to of marijuana use told Consequences - "Cannabis Consequently, every state has counties that official Soviet visitors cannot enter unless special permission is granted or there is a reciprocal agreement whereby an American A 1985 Risk of schizophrenia non-use- said. the impetus for our system is their's, we've matched them in the way they have done it." "Since official can go into a closed Soviet area. Most of southern Nevada, southwestern Idaho and northern Arizona also are closed to Soviet visitors. Cavananaugh said many of OQ tfN'Vftlltl ACADEMV 373 44701 1 1:00 4:00 7:00 9:45 NO PASSES |