Lorillard
Fields
- Author
- Kornegay, H.R.
- Area
- LEGAL DEPT FILE ROOM
- Alias
- 03745023/03745029
- Type
- LETT, LETTER
- Site
- N14
- Named Person
- Kovar, M.G.
- Surgeon General
- Date Loaded
- 05 Jun 1998
- Document File
- 03745010/03745447/Hew's Anti Smoking Campaign Vol 1 2 790100 - 790523.
- Request
- R1-037
- R1-093
- R1-099
- R1-093
- Named Organization
- Clearinghouse on Smoking + Health
- Ftc, Federal Trade Commission
- Hew, Dept of Health Education and Welfare
- Inst of Medicine
- Nas, Natl Academy of Sciences
- Natl Center for Health Statistics
- Natl Inst on Drug Abuse
- Natl Interagency Council on Smoking
- Public Health Reports
- Ftc, Federal Trade Commission
- Characteristic
- DRFT, DRAFT
- MARG, MARGINALIA
- Litigation
- Stmn/Produced
- Master ID
- 03745010/5826
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Document Images
5-18'- 79 ~77
DRAFT
Dear Mr. Secretary:
My purpose in writing is to try to clarify the facts
about youthtob acco smoking and the role of cigarette brand~
advertising, topics which you have discussed publicly on a
number of occasionF, including last April 26 in a speech to
the National Interagency Council on Smoking and Health.
I would'l also like to inform you of a record of
restraint by the tobacco industry, self-imposed, which we
believe is second to none in support of its pblicy that
smoking is an adult custom to be considered only by mature and
informed individuals. It is my earnest hope that this may lead
you to a reassessment of your position and a possible
improvement in our mutual understanding of these
significant matters, in the public interest.
On October 31, 1977, you stated publicly that "someone
is spending billions of dollars each year to keep people from
making fully informed choices about smoking and~alcohol."
On April 26, 1979, you stated that the cigarette industry
is spending "staggering amounts ... just to persuade people --
including young people -- that smoking,is pleasurable and
attractive."
In the interim 18 months, your speeches, news conferences,
Congressional testimony and other public statements have on `A
numerous occasions contained'pejorative characterizations of_ ~
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cigarette brand advertising and dealt with the undesirability
of tobacco cigarette smoking by young persons. Unfortunately,
your statements have also contained confusing and unreliable
statistics about trends in youth smoking, and contradictory
claims about youth smoking motivation.
As a climax to these many statements, last month you
announced in a speech your intent to ask the cigarette industry
to devote ten percent of its brand advertising expenditures
for a campaign to discourage young persons from smoking
cigarettes.
Your statements about smoking among young persons and
the role of cigarette advertising are not supported by the facts.
You have incorrectly assumed that advertisements for competing
brands of cigarettes have an effect on the decision to begin
smoking.
Sixteen years ago, when relatively few of today's
teenagers had been born, and before publication of the 1964 Report
of the Advisory Committee to the Surgeon General on Smoking and
Health, all U. S. cigarette manufacturers voluntary discontinued
cigarette brand advertising~ in campus publications along with
brandsampling and other brand promotion on campuses.
Ttaao years later, in 1965, the same companies adopted an
administratively controlled advertising code which embraced
O
the 1963 actions and, in addition, forbade testimonials by ~
athletes or other celebrities who might have special appeal toCA
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youngsters;/depiction of smokers engaged in sports of other
activities requiring stamina or conditioning beyond those
rec{uired in normal recreation;/and use of models who were or
appeared to be under 25.
In 1967, in view of increasing cigarette brand competition
in broadcast media and-of the growing and captive youth audience
for those media, the cigarette companies began studying lawfully
permissable methods to decrease their broadcast advertising.
These deliberations ended with their joint request to Congress
in 1969 to enact legislation1which would make it lawful for them
to agree to discontinue all broadcast advertising. Congress
responded, effective early in 1971, with a statute prohibiting
such advertising.
Meanwhile, in 1970, the companies entered into a voluntary
agreement with the Federal Trade Commission,pursuant to which
they agreed:, to publish, in each advertisement, current yields
of "tar" and:nicotine as reported by the Federal Trade Commission
for the advertised brand.
In 1971, the companies volunteered, when cigarette
packages were depicted in advertisements, to display the
Congressionally enactedhealth warning notice on them. The
following year, each company entered into a consent agreement
with the Federal Trade Commission under which the notice was
included in each advertisement. a
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There are other, less-known elements of the cigarette 'A'
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industry's "adults only" policy. During the later years of N

broadcast advertising, tobacco companies searchedaudience
ratings for schedules and times likely to capture audiences
with the smallest number of young persons. Persons who
distribute promotional cigarette samples have been meticulously
instructed to avoid distribution to any individual who does not
appear to b e an adult. The companies also have ruled out
transmission of cigarette samples through the mail, unless they
are specifically requested by adults in accord with a company's
particular promotional program.
Since 1971, cigarette brand advertising has appeared
principally in newspapers and~magazines where youth readership
is minimal. The absence of such advertising in electronic
media has eliminated the great preponderance of youth exposure
to it.
I
Last January, the new report of the Surgeon General on
smoking and heal th , which you personal ly publicized, dealt'-with
teenage smoking motivation. It stated that "by the time
children reach junior high school, almost all of them believe
smoking is dangerous." As to their smoking motivation, the
report suggested the influence of peers, smoking parents, and
older siblings. But with regard to advertising, it declared that
"the influence of the mass media in the initiation of smoking
is somewhat more difficult to establish."
I believe it is reasonable to assume that the Surgeon
General was saying that the influence of advertising has not
been established. Nonetheless, in your foreword to the same
document, you stated that smoking is "a powerful habit often

1
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of cigarette brand advertising resources. 1 respectfully
suggest that the same is true.regarding your pronouncements
about the rates and numbers of teenage tobacco smokers, and
taken up by unsuspecting children, lured by seductive multi-
million dollar cigarette-advertising campaigns."
It would appear, therefore, that you have been ill
informed or badly advised regarding the present applications
their trends.
For example, we learned nearly a year ago that your
Department's National Institute on Drug Abuse-had data showingg
that increases in drinking and tobacco cigarette smoking among
adolescents had ceased~ as long ago as 1974, well before you
took office. These data were reported by Mary Grace Kovar,
of HEW's National Center for Health Statistics, in a paper
read to-the Institute of Medicine at the National Academy of
Sciences here in Washington, and discussed by her at a news
conference, on June 26, 1978. (Unfortunately, Ms. Kovar
reported at the same time that marijuana and~hashish use
appeared to be increasing in the same age group. The NIDA data,
for instance, showed 29 percent of 16-17-year-olds using,
marijuana or hashish in 1977, and 35 percent smoking tobacco.)
This report that the rise in the rate of teen smoking
had ceased was most interesting, in view of the report in 1977
by the director of HEW's Clearinghouse on Smoking and Health, ~
. ~
that "each year from now on we are going to have fewer teenagert
than the year before," referring, of course, to a decline in ~
birth rates which began around 1960. A stable smoking rate

1
-6-
appliedito a smaller number, obviously, meant a decrease in
teen smoking-
Thus we were puzzled last January, when, in the fore-
word to the new Surgeon General's report, you wrote of
an
increase in teenage smoking, six months after the contrary
data appeared fromiyour Department. This was followed by your
statement on February 16, 1979, that "the rate of teenage
smoking is apparently on the rise."
In March, as you must be aware, the NIDA data were
published in your Department's magazine, PubLic HealthiReports,
and were characterizedas showing that "adolescents of any age
were less likely to be smokers in 1977 than in 1974."
It was not until April 26 that you mentioned what you
called "good news" about the decline in teenage smoking. Yet, .
having done so, you continued your attack on cigarette brand
advertising. _
It seems, Mr. Secretary, that you wish to curtail the
advertisement of legal products -- tobacco cigarette brands --
through a misguided and unsupportable rhetorical campaign.
On the one hand, you have emphasized, on many occasions, your claim
that all cigarette brand advertising is designed to persuade
and succeeds in persuading children to smoke tobacco. On the
other hand~, when you feel that it is important to seek public
funds for research, you are able, as you did~last January 11, ~
W
to state unequivocally that "we do not know why approximately ~
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one-third of our young people are smokers by the time they
are 18 and the other two-thirds are not."
We have no disagreement about the latter statement.
What the tobacco industry does know, however, is that cigarette
brand advertising is not the reason. Close to one-third of
America's teenagers are users of marijuana and hashish by the
time they are 18.- Nobody.advertises marijuana or hashish.
You stated on April 26 that the failure of the cigarette
manufacturers to accept your suggestions would permit the
conclusion that their managements "care more about the health
of their corporate :treasuries than the health of this nation'.s
children."
I hope that the foregoing will indicate the urgent
,
necessity for your reconsideration of that most unfortunate
observation.
Sincerely,
/s[ Horace R. Kornegay
