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The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • Page 747

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Los Angeles, California
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747
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B16 MARCH IW0 VC i.os i Researcher to Clarify Ties to Vaccine's Maker CHESS By JACK PETERS INTERNATIONAL MASTER 7 mm mm oil 5 mjumjm 4 OSOSO 3 ctB fcJ1MJ 2 S80 lap iHjQllMJ Dr. Edward A. Mortimer a co-author of the Vanderbilt paper, acknowledged Thursday that he, too, failed to disclose he is a paid consultant 'to Lederle. As with Cherry, he said Lederle pays his university, and the money goes back into research, not into his pocket. Mortimer, Whose case has not been brought before the JAMA editorial board, pointed out that most experts in the field have ties to companies.

He said the U.S. Food and Drug Administration had recommended that Lederle enlist academic researchers- as vaccine consultants. "It's well known that I have these connections," said Mortimer, a professor at Case Western Reserve University. "I may have made an error. I don't think so But Mortimer said it would not have hurt to have made the disclosure.

"I'll agree I should have. I wish to hell I had." nus-pertussis (DTP) vaccine. He has also received hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of research grants from Lederle and other firms. In the editorial, published Friday in the journal, Cherry endorsed the conclusions of a paper published elsewhere in the issue in which researchers at Vanderbilt University studied 38,000 vaccinated children and found no increased risk of seizures. One of the authors of that paper also failed to disclose his ties to Lederle.

Cherry said he chose not to mention his ties to Lederle in the disclosure statement he submitted to the journal. In an interview Thursday, he said he believed such a disclosure was not necessary since the editorial concerned DTP vaccines in general, not one in particular. "This particular editorial relates in no way to a specific manufacturer; it relates to pertussis vaccine," Cherry said. "Anybody who has done any research in fields like this has done contract studies with various companies. "When I signed this thing, I actually thought about it, and I read it sort of carefully because I know this is a sensitive area," he said.

"As it turns out, I did think about this. I thought this is generic, not really specific." The issue arose this week when a reporter for a Boston television station learned of Cherry's ties to Lederle and his failure to declare them. The reporter, with WHDH-TV, contacted Cherry, who says he then contacted the journal. Since October, the journal has required all authors to identify "any affiliation or financial involvement that may be considered a conflict of interest." The new policy was prompted by a growing national concern about ethics in biomedical research. Disclosed information may or may not be published along with the author's paper.

The journal's editors decide whether the information is important for readers. By JANNY SCOTT TIMES MEDICAL WRITER A prominent UCLA researcher, who wrote an editorial dismissing the likelihood of neurological illness from pertussis vaccines, will publish a clarification noting that he omitted mentioning he is a paid consultant to a vaccine manufacturer. Dr. James D. Cherry, a professor of pediatrics, agreed to the clarification after the Journal of the American Medical Assn.

learned that he failed to make the kind of financial disclosure required of journal authors since last October. "Dr. Cherry's financial disclosure was incomplete, and we will be publishing his statement of clarification in the next available issue of JAMA," John Hammarley, science news editor for the American Medical said Thursday. Cherry, a longtime vaccine researcher, is a consultant to Lederle Laboratories, one of two U.S. manufacturers of the diphtheria-teta Group Protests 'Highway' Through Porter Ranch BEDSPREAD KINGDOM DECLARES INDEPENDENCE Yesterday, At Greenjlbod, the Bedspread King, gave the United Nations and the Long Beach City Council notice that the Bedspread Kingdom was declaring HseHan independent nation.

That proclamation was received with relative calm by citizens and shoppers in the well-stocked aisles of the Bedspread Kingdom. There was a small uprising on the Bedspread Kingdom's parking lot but it turned out, that had nothing to do with the declaration of Independence. A coupie or guys were ngnung ior ine same panting space, imernauonai ou-servers noted that this was the strangest start of an independent nation. No troop movements no riots. It was all done by mail with a registered letter.

AL GREENWOOD. THE BEDSPREAD KING 1213) 498-9277 zau t. ritinc umii ww. at I empie AUCTION SALES Ltt bmci uklh i umys iu i aau EQUIPMENT ffliMiiiMai c6 7 Bb2 Qc7 The natural BdG permits 8 e4. as 8 dxe4 E) dxe4 Nxe4 10 Nll4 costs a piece 8 c4 Transposing to the Reti Opening.

White can also try 8 Nh1 Beli 9 n.l dxc4 9 bxc4 Rd8 10 Nc3 Be7 11Rb10 012Ba1Nc5Nol 12 a4 13 Nhl. but 12 Rle8 and 12 h6 are reasonable 13 Na4l Nxd37 Unsound Necessary is 13 Nfn7. Not 13 e4 because 14 Nh4 BgB 15 Nxc5 Bxcb 16 Bxl6 gxfB I Nxg6 hxgB 18 Bxe4 wins a pawn. 14 exd3 Bxd3 16 BxeB Qa5 16 Qb3 Bxf1 17 Kxf1 18 Bc3 Oh5 19 NeBI Ng4 Black cannot stand the passive 19 cb 20 NcG Rd 21 Rel. 20 Nxc6 Nxh2 21 Kg1 BdBOr 21 Rd 22 Nxe7 Rxc 23 Bb4 22 Nxd8 RxdB 23 Rdll Black has no compensation for the piece.

Qe2 24 Bb4 Ng4 2B Qf3l Qxd1 26 Oxdl Nxf2 27 QxdB. Black Resigns. GM Ivanchuk (U.S.S.R.) GM Kasparov IU.S.S.R.I. Linares 1990: 1 e4c5 2 Nf3 d6 3 d4 cxd4 4 Nxd4 Nf6 6 Nc3 a6 6 BgB e6 7 f4 Qb6 8 Qd2 Qxb2 The Poisoned Pawn variation, the sharpest line of the Naidorf Sicilian 9 Rb1 Qa3 10 fB Nc6 1 1 fxe6 xe6 12 Nxc6 bxc6 13 Be2 The older line goes 13 e5! dxeB 14 Bxl6 15Be2'h5 16 No4 Be Be7 140-00-0 15 Rb3 QcEh- Almost forced, as 15 Qa5 16 NdB! Qxd2 permits the breakthrough 1 7 Nxe Kf7 18 Bxd2 Kxe7 19 e5l dxeb 20 Bb4 16 Be3 Qe5 17 BI4 0x5 The greedy 17 Nxe4? 18 Nxe4 Qxe4 19 BxdG leaves Black in trouble on tho dark squares 18 KM Ng4l? Inviting 19 Bxg4 e5 Certainly not 18 19 Be3 Qa5 20 BbG 19 h3 e5 20 Na4 Qa7 21 Bc4 Kh8 22 hxg4 exf4 23 Nb6 Following Spraggett Sokolov 5. Saint John 1988, which continued 23 Rb8 24 Rxf4! Bd7 2b Nxd7 Qxd7 26 Rfb.

and White eventually won dBI7 A novelty. 24 exdB cxdB 25 BxdB Rb8 26 Nxc8 White cannot play 26 Rxf4. a la Spraggett, as 26 Rxb6 27 Rxf8 BxIS 28 012 is refuted by 28 Rh6. Rbxc8 27 Rh3 Aiming at h7. Alter 27 Rb7 Qe3 or 27 Rxl4 Bd6 28 Rxf8 Rxf8 29 RI3 Qe7.

Black has enough dark-square counterplay. Qb6 28 Rel BgB 29 Re6 QdB 30 c4 Rb8 31 Qd3 Bh4l Both defending and attacking. The careless 31.. hG 32 Qg6 gives White a chance lor Bdb o4 32 Be47! QgB 33 Bxh7? Rfd8 Black takes the initiative. 34 Oc2 As 34 Qf5 Rd 1 3b Kh2 Bg3 36 Rxg3 fxg3 costs the exchange f3l 3B Rxf3? Not 35 g3? Rd2 36 Qc 1 Rh2 37 Kxh2 Qxc 1 Ab Rxh4 Qd2.

but 35 Bd3" is still unclear. Then 35 Ixg2 3G Qxg2 and 35 Qxg4 36 Re4 favor White, and 35 KgB 36 Bh7 Kh8 37 Bd3 repeats Rd2 36 Qe4 Similar is 36 Qg6 Rd 1 37 Kh2 Qc I 38 Re8 Rxe8 39 Qxe8 Kxh 40 Qhb Qh6 41 QI5 g6. and Black keeps his extra Bishop. If 36 QI5. then 36 Rd1 37 Rf 1 (olse 37 Qcl malesl 0x15 wins a Rook.

Rd1 37 Kh2 Re1 38 Of5 RxeB 39 O.XB6 Kxh7 40 Qe4 g6 41 Rh3 Kg7 42 Qd4 Kg8 43 Qe4 Qf6. White Resigns. GM Yusupov IU.S.S.R.I GM Kasparov (U.S.S.R.). Linares 1990: 1 Nf3 Nf6 2 C4 g6 3 g3 Bg7 4 Bg2 0-0 5 d4 d6 6 0-0 Nbd7 7 Nc3 e5 The Classical Fian-chetto variation of the King's Indian Defense 8 h3 c6 9 e4 Qb6 10 cBI? Usual are 10 dS and 10 Na4. dxcB 1 1 dxeB Ne8 12 Na4 A new move.

The older 12 Bg5 Nxeb 13 Be7 Qxb2 gives Black enough for the exchange Qa6 13 Bf4 Nc7 14 Qc2 Ne6 16 Rfdl While takes the d-file and clears 1 1 lor his KB. Re8 16 Rd6 QaB 17 Radl Nb6 18 Nxb67 After 19 Nc3 Nc4 20 R6d3 Nd4l' 2 1 Nxd4 cxd4 22 Rxd4 Nxeb, chances are about even. axb6 19 a3 Qa4l As 20 Qxa4 Rxa4 21 Rel Nd4 undermines the pawn at eb 20 Qe2 b5l 21 Qe3 b4 22 axb4 Qxb4 23 R6d2 Ra2 24 Rbl c4 Black has an undeniable initiative. His next goal is to create a Queensidc passer. 26 Rc2 b5 26 Bh6 Qc5 27 Qc1 Nd4 28 Bxg7 Kxg7 29 Nxd4 Qxd4 Apparently winning the pawn at eb, but Whito finds counterplay 30 b3l Rxc2 31 Oxc2 c3 32 Rd1 1 Neither 32 Rc 1 b4 nor 32 cb! saves White Qo6INot32.

QxebP because 33 b4 and 34 Rd3 regains the pawn. 33 b4 Qxb4 34 Rd3 c6l 36 Rxc3 c4 36 f4 White keeps his e-pawns. but Black will win with his connected passers Qc6 37 Kh2 Qd4 38 Rf3 b4l This looks like a blunder, but Kasparov has seen further 39Qa4c3 40 Rxc3 In time pressure. Kasparov calculated 40 Qxo8 Qd7! 41 Qxd7 Bxd7 42 Rf 1 b3, queening Bd71 41 Rc4 As 4 1 Qxc4 42 Qxd7 Qe6 43 Qbb b3 44 Bf 1 Rc8 4b lb gives White some swindling chances. Bxa4 42 Rxd4 Rb8 43 Bf 1 Or 43 Rd2 b3 44 Rb2 Rc8 4b g4 Rc2 46 Rbl b2 47 Kg3 Bb3 48 BI3 Ba2 Bc2 44 Bc4 After 44 Bd3 b3l 4b Bxc2 bxc2 46 Rc4 Rb2l.

White must lose his Rook for tho pawn. b3 46 Bxb3 Rxb3 White is lost Black will pick off the pawns at e4 and h3. 46 g4 Re3 47 16 gxf6 48 exf6 RxeB 49 Rd2 Ba4 50 Kg3 Else bO Re3 and Kg7-f6-g5-h4 wins. Re3 61 Kh4 BbS 62 RdBI Setting the trap 52 Bf 1 53 f6! Kg6? 54 Rgb! KhG 55 Rh5 Kg6 66 Rg5, drawing, as 56 RIB snares the Bishop. Bd3 63 RcB h6 64 Rc3 Rf3 56 Rb3 Be2 66 Rb2 Bf1 57 Rh2 Kf6 68 Rh1 KeB 59 Rh2 f6 60 Rh1 Ke4l Planning Zugzwang.

61 Rh2 Kf4 62 Rh1 Bg2 63 Rh2 Rg3. White Resigns. CARNATION Los Angeles, CA 1620 N. Spring Street (Main St. Plant) near Civic Center area FRIDAY, APRIL 6 at 1 1 am -ICE CREAM abcdefgh March 25.

1990 Position "6055: Whito to play and win From Iho gnniR Lnnrjlois Mishkm, Mns.n:husolls m)0 Solution to Position H60B4: Blnck wins Willi I Rb3l 2 Qc2 c4 3 KM Rb2 INTERNATIONAL NEWS Former world champion Anatoly Kar-pov edged closer to victory in his Candidates final match in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, against Jan Timman of Holland. Karpov won the adjourned fourth game, then drew the sixth and seventh games to take a 4V4-2V4 lead in the best-of-12-games series. Timman, the world's third-ranked player, has not come close to defeating Karpov, while Karpov has squandered several opportunities to stretch his lead. The winner will challenge Gary Kasparov in the 1990 world championship. The 1990 world championship match will begin in New York City on Oct.

7. New York Mayor David Dinkins announced Wednesday that the World Chess Federation (FIDE) had agreed to stage the first 12 games of the 24-game match in New York, and the final 12 in Lyons, France. The Soviet Union won the Summit match, a double round-robin team tournament on 10 boards in Reykjavik, Iceland. After losing to England, 4-6, in the fifth round, the Soviet team had a lead of only a half-point over England and VA points over the United States. In the final round, the Soviets barely drew the U.S., while England was held to a draw by the Nordic all-stars.

Final standings: U.S.S.R., 31W-28V4: England, 31-29; U.S.. 30-30; and Nordic all-stars, 27V4-32V4. The Soviet team, which lacked Kasparov and Karpov, won three matches and drew two. The U.S. team lost four matches but registered the most onesided match victory, 7V4-2V5, over the Nordic team.

Top-scoring Americans were Alexander Ivanov, 5-1 on 10th board, and Walter Browne, 4W-1Vi on sixth board. NATIONAL NEWS The 1990 U.S. Masters, held last weekend in Oakbrook, attracted a strong field of 120 players, including 14 rated over 2500. Tony Miles, the British grandmaster who now represents the U.S., defeated GM Maxim Dlugy in the final round to take first prize of $5,000 with a score of 6V4-VS. Stuart Rachels was second at 6-1 GM's Sergey Kudrin, Michael Rohde and Leonid Shamkovich and IM Michael Brooks finished with 5'2-1Vi.

LOCAL NEWS Michael Lamon of San Diego won the high school section of the 73-player Southern California Scholastic Championships in Westminster last weekend. Lamon scored He qualifies for the playoff for the Southern California adult championship, and he will represent Southern California in the Denker Tournament of High School Champions in Jacksonville, in August. Igor Frayman was second with 6-1. Harvard High School of North Hollywood won the team prize. Nemanja Isailovic and William Surlow topped the Junior High section with scores.

Jonathan Goldfarb swept the Elementary championship with a perfect 5-0. The Southern California Junior Open, a tournament for students in grades K-9, will be held March 31 at Pearblossom Elementary School, 12828 East Ave. in Pearblossom. There are sections for junior high, elementary, and primary students. For more information, call Jonathan Goetze at 1805) 944-0881.

TODAY'S GAMES Lamon R. Phillips, Southern California Scholastic Championships, Westminster 1990: 1 Nf3 Nf6 2 g3 d5 3 Bg2 Bf5 A now! response to the King's Indi.in Attack 4 0-0 Nbd7 5 b3 e5 6 d3 (1 1 lc Cream Fraazera: '85 Crepaco'300 GPHMod. W108G; (2) '85 Hoyer 240 GPH Mod KF-1 1 50XC; 1 ,200 GPH 3-Barrel. (2) Crepaco M55 2-Barrel; CB. VS500S: (3) CB.

VS400R; CB. VID Ice Cream Freezer; Many New Spare Parts; Additional (6) Ingredient Feeders: (2) Crepaco S-420; (3) Crepaco FF: Cherry Burrell Mod. FH; Anderson 456 Round Ice Cream Filler, NEW 12-Wide Gram Wrapper Complete Line Line wWrapper, Hydraulic Pump, More. Never Installed! 1987 BLENDER, (13) TANKS 1 987 Breddo 200 Gal. SS Jacketed Liquilier, Mod.

LDTW; (7) FlavorMix Tanks incl. (3) 2-Comparlmenl 500 (2) 500 Gal. Single Compartment; 2-Comparlment 300 Gal. 3 1 00 Gal. Mix Tanks; (2) Heil 5,000 Gal.

Reel SS Tanks; (4) McHale 1.250 Gal. SS Tanks. SS PUMPS, VALVES MORE (20) Pumps incl. (8) Tri-Clover to 7'Ahp; Crepaco Other Positive Pumps; Very Large Assortment SS Valves Manifolds. SS Pipe Fillings; Large NEW Spare Parts Inventory.

Over 30,000 Galvanized Wire Baskets. SHRINK WRAP, LINES (1987 Other) A MORE 1987 Weldotron Tamper Evident Wrap System, Mod. 1664, SN TX58416. wShrink Tunnel; Tampco Poly-Pack A8000 Aulo SS Wrappers; (2) Greal Lakes SS Wrappers; (2) Convocan Other Conveyor Systems: SS Fruit Strainer; Fitzmill. Additional SS Processing GENERAL PLANT: Vert-I-Pack Hydr Trash Compaclor; Assorted Plant Fixtures More! Uajor Items New In 1987-85 Call lor Illustrated Brochure! (41 2) 765-1 1 70 or Fax (41 2) 765-091 0 Martin I.

Davis Auctioneer CA A1903 Company license C1887 By GABE FUENTES TIMES STAFF WRITER The map handed out Tuesday by a residents' group opposed to the huge Porter Ranch development proposal showed a dotted line slashing through the Santa Susana Mountains between Santa Clarita and the west San Fernando Valley, bearing the caption: "Is this where Bernson's 'secret highway' will be?" But whether Los Angeles City Councilman Hal Bernson or anyone else has plans' for an actual road was far less clear than the thick, black, dotted line. Bernson, other sources cited by the protesters and county highway officials said either that they knew of no such plan or that it was raised as a vague possibility and dismissed a decade ago. The residents group, known as PRIDE, raised the issue during a news conference held in Chats-worth to reiterate its opposition to a proposal for nearly 6 million square feet of commercial space in Porter Ranch, a hilly area north of the Simi Valley Freeway above Chatsworth. The highway as shown by PRIDE'S map would cut through the development. Paul Chipello, PRIDE'S executive director, said his group has "heard from a couple of reliable sources" that "there are some plans to get a major highway through." PRIDE already is asking that a supplemental environmental study of the Porter Ranch proposal, rfffaHMIUhMM Jill Ml rr.

i.ikLi, i.u which is pending before the City Council, consider the benefits of a less intensive project and address the "secret highway." Bernson spokeswoman Margaree Klein said the councilman "knows of nothing in his office or anybody else's office" regarding such a highway. Chipello would not identify his sources, other than to say one had seen the highway on a map in Bernson's office and another had heard of it from the Rev. Jess Moody, pastor of a Van Nuys Baptist church that is moving to Porter Ranch. Moody said in an interview that he indeed had heard of such a highway, although he wasn't sure when. He thought it might have been last year in a speech by former Councilman Robert Wilkinson.

Wilkinson, who is project coordinator for Porter Ranch developer Nathan Shapell, said he remembered the speech but that no such road was mentioned. Wilkinson also remembered that shortly after the 1971 Sylmar earthquake damaged a Golden State Freeway interchange just north of the San Fernando Valley, there was indeed a suggestion by state planners that such a highway was needed. "It was brought up that maybe someday, and they used the word maybe, there ought to be another highway on the west side of Oat Mountain" to provide an alternative route to the Golden State Freeway after another quake, Wilkinson said. 1 IV. iu u.

ilk i i ri eaa ivin-iu-ii $5000 TO $25,000 LiMlHiHf.Un mmm DUE TO PLANT CONSOLIDATION THURSDAY, MARCH 29th, 10 PM 10 AM 12 INDUSTR1IS, IMC. HUNTINGTON PARK PLANT 3040 E. Slauson Ave. Noon Gardens Plant 15805 S. Main St.

MAJOR MACHINERY IN BOTH PLANTS! '80 clncl, 20XC-1800 vert. mach. canter. 8n 49457 Okuma CNC angular wheelslde cyl. grinder, model QRE7-2NF7X1001SO, an 47918 340-T 4" H.B.M.

9n 7277 2-Leblond gun bore machines, 3" S.B. Mazak MS NC Lathe, FANUC 8T control 7 engine lathee, to 26" 78" turret lathes 9 grinders saws 4 compressors 3 forkllftsepressese drills Nitridlng furnaces Speed-D-Burr Furnaces Almo hyd. pump, pw 6-30 HP motors Threaders Welders Wine, racking General machinery Office equip. (Gardena) Incl. 68 filing cabinets, 2, 3, 4 5 lateral, legal, letter Desks Chairs Etc.

Cat. Lie. No. C-231 1 Terms: Cash, Cashier's Check ASSIONU'S SALE DAVID BLONDER, Assignee lor Benefit of Creditors, will, on Thursday, March 29. 1980, at 2PM, at 4001 South Main Street, Los Angeles, offer the following assets for public sale, as a whole: MCI QOOOIYARDAGE ADDrox.

3S.000 Yds. ol linens, nolvesters. col- mm so Beautiful Women Do Plot Go To Singles Bars! The truly beautiful woman who tipds herself single does not go to singles bars. Nor. will you find he'r on singles weekends, but she is out there, and being the woman that she is.

she would love to tons, cotton shotting, knits, satins, rycras, heavy gauze, georgette, rayons, at Debtor's estimated cost FMSHtO GOODS-Approx. 3,545 units ol Isdles' blouses, jackals, tops, haltars, skkts, dresses, at Debtor's telling price TWMStaaiai aumiCS-At Debtor's estimated cost HO KQUtaeMNT, consisting of sewing machines, cloth spreadere, speed rails, cunlng tables, steel shelving, Isbellng machine, pressing equipment, at estimated replacement omci EQUSPtetNT, consisting of typewriters, desks, chairs, Royal copy macnine, meisi niing CSDinvil, sale, eic ai CHARLES B. FUSE has been lecturing on and Investing In Bank Kepo's and other real estate for the past seven years. Inspection of the above assets may be made on Wednesday, March 28, 1990 from 10 AM to 4 PM and on Thursday. March 29.

1990 from 10 AM to the time MAKE more from every Learning our method our available cash small down payment), 50 of the Resale of buying Bank Repo's. you'll use for the whole purchase (not Just a cash for repairs, and you'll make net profit from OSOOO to $25,000 or i resioenuai tiepos including lownnomes ana conaos ana other distressed DroDertles for your own account, no 42,092.35 2,150.00 42,110.00 5,11500 niimniea replacement mil mmn South Mail at Uw, (21J) SJ2-13M. APRII 4th it 11 ill (Ml) Assets formerly the property ol QUALITY METALS, INC. Hudson, New Hampshire AMADA CNC TURRET PUNCH PRESS BRAKES CNC TURRET NMCIi: Amada Vela II 30-50-50 NCT 33-Ton Rotary I9I4 TAPE PREP Digital Resources I I9BS. UliriH itl?) For CNC Turrets HTO.

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