Lorillard
Statement of Horace R Kornegay President the Tobacco Institute Inc Before the Subcommittee on Health and the Enviroment of the House Comm on Interstate and Foreign Commerce 780215
Fields
- Author
- Kornegay, H.R.
- Area
- LEGAL DEPT FILE ROOM
- Alias
- 03745143/03745146
- Type
- SPCH, SPEECH/PRESENTATION
- Site
- N14
- Named Person
- Califano
- Carter
- Kornegay, H.R.
- Carter
- Date Loaded
- 05 Jun 1998
- Document File
- 03745010/03745447/Hew's Anti Smoking Campaign Vol 1 2 790100 - 790523.
- Request
- R1-004
- Named Organization
- Harvard Medical School
- House Commerce Comm
- House Comm on Interstate + Foreign
- Senate Commerce Comm
- Senate Subcomm on Health
- Subcomm on Health + the Environment
- TI, Tobacco Inst
- Ucla School of Medicine
- Wa Univ
- White House
- House Commerce Comm
- Characteristic
- MARG, MARGINALIA
- Litigation
- Stmn/Produced
- Master ID
- 03745010/5826
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Document Images
C
STATEMENT OF HORACE R. KORNEGAY
,gRESIDENT, THE TOBACCO INSTITUTE, INC.
Before the Subcommittee on Health and the Environment
of the House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce
February 15, 1978
My name is Horace R. Kornegay. Since June 1970, I have
served as President of The Tobacco Institute, an association of
tobacco manufacturers in the United States.
I appreciate your invitation, Mr. Chairman, to tPs t= fy
at this hearing to review the "Anti-Smoking Initiative" proposed
by Secretary Califano. I thank you for this opportunity to exprdss
views on behalf of The Tobacco Institute. However, I regret that
I did not have adequate time to prepare for this hearing. A call
to my staff about this hearing was made last Wednesday afternoon.
But it was only this Monday morning at 11:25 a.m. that I received
a letter from you, Mr. Chairman, officially advising me of these
hearings and of the details of the matters to be considered. W~th
the time constraints under which I was'working, it was not
possible to prepare a comprehensive presentation of our concerns
as to "the general issues surrounding" the extremely broad Anti-
Smoking Initiative proposed by Secretary Califano. Let me assure
you, Mr. Chairman, The Tobacco Institute is deeply concerned by
Secretary Califano's proposed'Initiative, and believes that his
03745143
program is unjustified both scientifically and as a matter of
public policy. -

14-
-2-
At the outset, let me further assure you that the
tobacco industry has been and remains concerned about the
critical questions relating to smoking and health. During
the past quarter century, the industry has supported inde-
pendent scientific research with completely non-restrictive
funding. The total has now reached more than 65 million
dollars, including 619 grants and contracts in 243 medical
schools, hospitals and institutions. The industry has funded
multi-million dollar projects at Washington University in
St. Louis, the Harvard Medical School and the UCLA School
of Medicine.
To turn to Secretary Califano's Initiative, I must
first emphasize that it is based on a series of factual in-
accuracies and scientifically unsupportable figures and
estimates. Let me illustrate: Secretary Califano in his
January llth speech said that virtually all physicians accept
the evidence that smoking is harmful to health. On this, basic
issue of smoking and health, Congressional hearings were held
in the House Commerce Committee in 1964, 1965 and 1969, in the
Senate Commerce Committee in 1965, 1969 and 1972, and in the
Senate Subcommittee on Health as late as 1976. Indeed, some
members of this Subcommittee were present and participated
in several of those hearings. At those hearings, many eminent
scientists stated that, in their opinions, smoking had not been
scientifically established as a cause of human disease. These
03745144
statements demonstrate the inaccuracy of Secretary Califano's

We bel ieve that the Amer ican publ ic ha s been and
continues to-be adequately warned about the claimed health
risks associated with smoking. As President Carter said
May 1976 at a press conference -- and I quote:
"I think that the American people have
in
been adequately warned. You know we've
had a constant series of warnings both in
television, radio, newspaper advertisements.
We've got strict limitations on the kind
of advertisement that cigarettes can present
to the public; we've got a printed warning
on every package of cigarettes about the
danger to one's health and I personally
believe that that is an adequate degree
of warning to be instituted by the government."
Indeed, even the non-smoking youth of our nation are
aware, as demonstrated by the fact that Secretary Califano's
own decision to quit smoking was made at the insistence of
his then eleven-year-old son.
Yet, many Americans have chosen to continue to smoke.
We believe their choice should be respected. So does President
Carter. When he was asked at a news conference on January 12th
of this year what he intended to do about White House staff
members who smoke, he said it -was not the responsibility of
03'745145
government to "tell a particular American citizen whether they
can or cannot snoke."

e
.
C
-7-
We 'have serious reservations about Secretary .
Califano's so-called education effort. First, we question
the need to spend Federal funds and involve the Federal
bureaucracy in an increased public education program, since
the American public has been adequately warned on the smoking
and health issue. In addition, we question the Secretary's
priorities. We are concerned that the Secretary's excessive
zeal regarding smoking education will distort and deemphasize
the information provided to the American public and to school
children in~ such areas as drug and alcohol abuse, proper
nutrition and the like. F inally, it is unclear how the
Secretary proposes to assure the effectiveness of his pro-
posed education program. Are Federal off icials going to
withhold Federal funds from a school district because they
think its smoking education efforts fail to conform to federal
guidelines?
The Washington Star commented in an editorial,
"What Mr. Califano is doing with his anti-smoking hoohah
is illustrating further the tilted concept of the feds as
parents and the citizenry as recalicitrant and contrary
children, to be coerced if they will not heed.
Secretary Caiifano's coercive progra.~n~, which pur-
portedly protects non-smokers from exposure to tobacco smoke,
cannot be Justified on the premise that smoking is ha~ar45146
to non-smokers. It has not been scientif ically established
