Lorillard
Light Cigarettes Have Just As Much Nicotine
Fields
- Type
- NEWS, NEWSPAPER ARTICLE
- PHOT, PHOTOGRAPH
- Area
- LEGAL DEPT FILE ROOM
- Alias
- 03734692
- Site
- N14
- Request
- R1-004
- R1-037
- R1-127
- R1-129
- R1-037
- Named Person
- Benowitz, N.L.
- Heinen, K.
- Date Loaded
- 05 Jun 1998
- Document File
- 03734507/03735036/S and H Re Smoking and Health General Volume 9 820800.
- Named Organization
- Ftc, Federal Trade Commission
- New England Journal of Medicine
- Univ of Ca
- New England Journal of Medicine
- Litigation
- Stmn/Produced
- Author (Organization)
- Newsweek
- Master ID
- 03734507/5036
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Document Images
i
MEDICINE
+ imagine a healthy America if an increasing
~ number of its chihlren are growing up
chronically ill.
MATT:CLARK with M.hR1ANAGOSNRL:L.
inNrx.York.PAMELAABRAMSONlinSn Fn isco.
andCONNt E LESL IE in. Ralt'i.morc
Light Cigarettes Have
.
Just as Much Nicotine
The widely touted' notion that low-tar.
and-nicotine cigarettes are safer than
stronger, brands is,a pipe dream. A studyy
in last week's New Englandl Journal of
Medicine says smokers who switch to
"light"cigarettesabsorb asmuch nicotineas
before. The problem, according to Dr. Neal
L. Benowitzandcolleaguesat theUniversity
ofCalifornia, San Francisco, is that smoking
machi nes used to set federal tar and nicotine
ratings don't smokelikehumans.
Benowitz tested'awidevarietyofcigarette
brands on 272 volunteers. He found'that
blood concentrations ofcolinine, a nicotine
al anesthesia, Now a team of Califorr
physicians has developed an alternatis
nonsurgical treatment for infertility called
"ovum transfer" thati uses a "donor' egg
from aSertlle wotnan. Last week doctors at
Harbor-UCLA Medical Center announced
the first two pregnancies resultingfromihe
technique, which not only promises a high-
er success rate but is simple and safe enough
to be performed in a doctor's ol6tce..
Since the infertile woman's own eggs are
noUinvolved, ovum transfercould be help-
ful in the case of damaged Fallopian tubes
and for women whose ovaries are defective
orhave been surgically removed-as well as
those who carry genetic disorders they
donlt'want to pass on to their offspring.
Procedure: Because ovum transfer has
been used successfully in,animal breeding
for more than 90 years, "the basic research
hadibeen dbne before we got there," ex-
plains Dr. John Buster, the obstetrician
who~tieadedlthe UCLA team. The physi-
cians recruite,tJ a group of:healthy; fertile
donors and matched their ovulatory cycles
with those of the infertile women they were
treating. At the time of! ovulation, each
F'CCsmoking macb'ihe: ,tfeasuriirg tar, nicotine and carbon-maroride content
breakdown producti varied with the num-
ber of cigarettes scnoked, but~bore no~rela-
tionship to a& ertised tanandi nicotine rat-
ings..Moreover, tobacco from supposedlylow-yield cigarettes contained just as much
ni¢ot i ne as tobacco from heavier brands.
W halimakes a cigarette light has nothingg
to do with the kind of tobacco used, but
rather with factors suchias filter construc-
tion and papertexture: Whilethesepermit a
cigarette to aehieve a low: nicotine rating on the Federal Trade Commission's smoking
machines, Benowitz argues that a humani
smoker tends to get the same satisfying levell
of nicotine he would from a stronger ciga-
rette by smoking more, inhaling more deep,
ly or puffing more frequently:, _
Endin Infertility
I
g
With `Ovum Transfer'
The birth of the world's first test-tube
baby in 1979 delivered hope to thousands of
infertile women. ButYhe success rate of in
vitro fertilization retnainsa disappointingly
low 20percent and the procedure carries the
risks ofany surgery performed under gener-
48'
donor was artificially inseminated with
sperm from the husband of an infertile
woman. Five days later the donor s uterus
was flushed out with a newly, developed
instrument designed specifically to retrieve
the fertilized egg. From a group of 74'do-
nors, the UCLA doctors harvested five fer-
tilizedleggs and placed them in the uteri of
infertile recipients, using a catheter with a
plunger attached to it. No anesthesia was
required. Two pregnancies resulted: one
woman is in her fifth month and the other,
in her seventh week. Because the fertilized
egg is implanted at a more advanced stage
of development' than~ in the "test tube"
technique, and because it develdps "natur-
ally" in the uterus,instead'of ini a plastic
dishthe leam hopes for sturdier embryos
and higher pregnancy rates:
For some couples, the fact that the wom-
an's genes.are not passed to their baby might
be a drawback. Butiunlike infertile women
who allow "surrogate mothers" to bear
their children, those who choose ovum
transfer do eaperie.nce pregnancy and deliv;
ery. "They will nurture and shape that babyy
for nine months," says Buster. "If that's not
motherhood, what is?"
NEWS MEDIA
Unhappy Days
W hen "World NewsTonighll'slipped:
into third'placebehihd CBS and NBC
three months ago, it caused a minor panic at
ABC head'quarters- Most network execu-
tives assumed that Frank Reynolds's sick
leave was the main reason for the drop and
they were unusually candid about the day-
to-day difficulties caused by his absence.
ABC Newsvice president David Burke told
The New York Times,in~June that Reyn-
olds's absence had I"hurt us badly,"' and
network news and sportspresidentRoone
Arledge worried that "ifwe havesubstitutes
for too long, people maylook elsewhere and
som e of those may not come back:"
Out of respect for Reynolds and uncer-
tainty about whether he might eventuallyy
return, Arledge did nothing whilt his recov-
ery remained in doubt. Now, the unhappyy
choice is no lbnger avoidable: "One of the
things people look for in a news broadcast is
a sense of continuity," says Arledge. "We
want to restore that as soon as possible."
Energy: Fi ve years ago Arledgeoriginated
the three-anchor, format with Reynolds in
Washington, Max Robinson in Chicago and
Peter Jennings in iLondon, Interesting as it
has sometimes been for viewers, manv ABC
News correspondents feel h he cl uttered look
it'; gives the broadcast has rfbw become a
liability. Arledgesay'sone reasonheinitiated
the th'rcc-anchonapproach was that "if we
had said, `Here is Mr. X who is ouranswer to
Cronkite, CHancellor and Brinkley:'.' tfie
people who were writingabout ABC News
at that time would havejust eaten him alive
before he got t wo words ou t'."
Beyond the format, the money and'ener
L
r
t
~
1':
t
F
l
~
G
gy Arledge injectedlinto.the news divisionr"
paid off. By the en& of 1979, ABC. th
traditional also-ran, was running virtuall
neck and neck for second in the ratings wi
NBC and, in July of 1981, even bested C
at one point, holding the No.~ I position f '
the first time in its history. Ptestige soar~4,;._
_
and both Jennings and Ted Koppeli of t(*,_
late-night program "Nightline," are no
considered respectable anchors by rii'als~-' -'
the other networks. Not surprisingly, d
ledge says they are the two leading cand =-
d'ates to succeed Reynolds.
~'
A decision seems likely withinfhe next
two weeks, but the central question is
whether or not the network will jettisonthe ~
three-anchor format. Either way, Jennings probably has the inside track. He took over f1
from substituting David Brihkley as the
principall anchor on "World News To-
nigNt" on July 4-the same day his former
producer in London: Robert E. Frye, sue-
eeed'ed Jpff Gralnick as the program's new
ezeeuti L-e. producer in New York. Jenntngs,
aetually started his first stint as the ABC
anchor (1964 to 1968):when he wasjust 26;,
then;,therombination ofhis youth and his
NEw'SwEEK/AUGCSTI. 1963
r
