Philip Morris
Is Smoking in Public on Its Last Gasps?. Tempers Flare As Anti-Cigarette Forces Wage An All-Out War
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- Leichtman, A.
- Martin, J.
- Miller, M.E.
- Nields, B.
- Rosner, R.
- Shepherd, C.
- Castro, F.
- Master ID
- 2022875166/5504
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- Date Loaded
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- UCSF Legacy ID
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Document Images
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LEVEL 1- 40 OF 55 STORIES
Copyright (c) 1987 The Times Mirror Company;
Los Angeles Times
April 18, 1987, Saturday, Orange County Edition
SECTION: View; Part 5; Page 4; Column 1i; View Desk
LENGTH: 2620 words
HEADLINE: IS SMOKING IN'PUBLIC ON ITS LAST GASPS?;
TEMPERS FLARE AS ANTI-CIGARETTE FORCES WAGE AN ALL-OUT WAR
BYLINE: By CURT SUPLEE, Washington Post
PAGE - 134
BODY:
You glide into that reception like you're docking the OE2. Pause a moment to
peruse the murmuring throng. Your hand slips to the breast pocket . . but
wait. Can it be? Nobody's smoking? Oh, but there's. ... No, hell, it's a candy
dish. You notice a couple of heads swiveling anxiously. Nobody wants to be
first. You reach breastward'again, but it's no good. You're a law-abiding,
tax-paying citizen. This is nothing to be ashamed of. And yet you can't bringg
yourself to light that cigarette.
And pretty soon there you are In your best suit, skulking between the fire
exit and a dumpster full of fish parts, having your sullen smoke and wondering
when the fun went out of it. Wondering if you're really seeing the last gasp for
the habit that"s had America by the throat for 500 years -- ever since a puzzled
Chris Columbus, on Nov. 6, 1492, took note in his journal of "women and men,
with a fi'rebrand in the hand, and herbs to drink the smoke thereof, as they a re
accustomed."
'Victimless' Crime
And so we were for centuries, what with four out of five doctors concurring
and not a cough in a carload. Even the cancer reports -- scary, sure, but wha t
the heck, it wouldn't be you and besides, wasn't it a sort of victimless crime?
But then came the mid-'70s, the liberation movement boom, and people you'd
never heard of seemed to have rights you'd never imagined. "Back as early as
'79," says a former three-pack-a-day man, "I'd begun to feel myself to be part
of a tiny, embattled minority. Indeed, what with gay rights and women's 1ib inn
the mainstream, smokers had become the last social group whi~ch it was acceptable
to despise."
Overnight, it seemed, the nation developed an epidemic palsy of subnasal
hand-waggling; smoker-baiting became a nasty cocktail party amusement;
gust-engulfed restaurant patrons, coughing ostentatiously, pounced with
incendiary relish on hapless tobacconites five tables away. Monstrously Ironic
'Thank You for Not Smoking"'signs became ubiquitous as Kliban kitties. Puffers
retreated into a war zone mentality, their social lives the first casualties.
First Thing Noticed
"Smoking!" growls a 32-year-old Alexandria, Va., woman, an executive at a
national association and a hearty smoker. "It's the first thing men notice. I
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(cY 1987 Los Angeles Times, April 18, 1987
could look like Cybill Shepherd or a German shepherd -- it doesn't matter at
all!
"I kind of view myself as an easygoing person. But I still get ticke6off
when I go~into somebody's house and don't see ashtrays.So you ask, and they
make a big production of searching all over the place, rattling the cabinets.
And finally they hand you the lid to some old jar, an6say, 'Here -- I guess you
can use this.' "
Not that she's even safe at home. "I was having a dinner party one night,
eight, 10 people, and I light up a cigarette. This young woman next to me,
somebody's date, she says, 'Excuse me, but smoke bothers me.'
"I said, 'Well, excuse me, but this is my own house!' Can you believe it?"
In the past three months, the climate of opinion has grown even more
hazardous to smokers' mental health -- starting with Surgeon General C. Everett
Koop's December pronouncement about the dangers of secondhand or "sidestream"
smoke on nonsmokers.
Scarcely had the first wheeze of shock subsided when Chicago-based USG
Acoustical Products told Its 2,000 employees that where there's smoke, you're
fired: All workers would have to quit smoking (at the office and at home) and
would be given pulmonary-function tests to ensure compliance. Then in February
new restrictive regulations went into effect for 890,000 federal workers in
6,800 buildings owned or leased nationwide by the 6eneral Services
Administration. A few days later, talk show host Larry King -- who smoked
slightly more than Gary, lnd. -- had a heart attack at 53.
Then on March 9, Cambridge, Mass., joined a growing list of cities
(prominently including Beverly Hills, Calif.,, and Aspen, Colo.) that have banned
smoking in most public places.
And'mass consciousness is due to ratchet up another notch on May 7, when New
York State's new regulations go into effect, severely restricting smoking in
public places and requiring employers to provide a smoke-free environment for
workers requesting it.
..(Actually, even the most Draconian of the new ordinances seem outright timid
compared with 17th-Century New England's. in 1646, the General Court of N
Massachusetts passed a law forbidding settlers to smoke unless they were on a O
journey of five miles or more from any town, which makes walking a mile for a N
Camel look positively pedestrian. And the following year, a Connecticut statute N
limited tobacco use to once a day in the smoker's home -- "and then not in
Q~
company with any other.r) ~
"It's the No. I etiquette problem today," says Judith (Miss Manners) Martin,
~
and no one knows that better than the television industry, which has filtered so GJ
auch smoke from the airwaves that many barroom,or nightclub scenes now look ~
downright improbable (though fastidious watchers of the Johnny Carson show sa y
they have seen errant cloudlets just after commercial breaks).
Smokeless 'Sonny'
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PAGE 136
(c) 1987 Los Angeles Times, Apri'1 18, 1987
And now TV has lost the last high-tar star in prime time: Don Johnson of
"Miami Vice."' NBC was deluged with complaints that he was Setting a Bad Example
for Youth, and "we were very frustrated," says Ralph Daniels, NBC's vice
president for broadcast standards. Johnson was an off-screen smoker, and "we
just couldn't get him to quit. But eventually he agreed," and viewers will be
seeing a smokeless Sonny soon.
Not surprisingly, enthusiasm is growing among anti-smoking forces, from the
acronymic army -- CATS (Citizens Against Tobacco Smoke), ASK (Action on Sdoking
or Health), GASP (Group Against Smoking Pollution) and so forth -- to the
associations for your heart, lungs and other imperiled giblets.
"It's no longer an 'if' question," says Robert Rosner of the Seattle-base6
Smoking Policy Institute, "It's a when uestion." With public attitu es -
shifting, says Ahron Leichtman, pres en CATS, "we"re not perceived anymore
as these weirdo freaks."
Won't Date Ex-Smoker
Or particularly reticent. "I'd rathe,r date a man with herpes than one who
smokes," said a prominent Washington journalist. And Ben Nields, 32, a
Washington-area anti-smoking activist, has even more stringent standards. He
won't even date an ex-smoker for fear she might restart. In fact, "there have
been a couple of people I've gone out with -- they never smoked themselves, but
they had a parent who smoked. I got to thinking, I don't really want an in-law
who smokes." The relationship was doomed. "So I told this one lady, ':When your
mother dies, let me know.' That obviously broke it up."
And now across the country, the nation's remaining 55 million to 60 million
smokers are finding themselves beset with a new arsenal of insults from mere
irritables to outright humiliations. When Fidel Castra swore off his trademarkk
stogies last year as an example to Cuban men, he predicted that "there are going
to be many women who will fight with their husbands."' He didn't know the half of
it. The growing zeal of anti-fumatory partisans and the often desperate
Intransigence of smokers are now colliding everywhere, not sparing even those
intimate venues traditionally exempt from larger social forces:
A 30-year-o1d Virginia woman withsix brothers and sisters would love to look
foi'ward to seeing her family. But she's allergic to smoke and asthmatic to bo ot.
And "two out of seven children are chain smokers." So when the siblings convene
at their parents' home in Pennsylvania for Christmas or Thanksgiving, cigaret tes
"just spoil the vacation," she says.
If there is one institution in contemporary life wherein smoking is no t
simply accepted but virtually cherished, it Is Alcoholics Anonymous. For those
who have painfully squeezed the liquor from their lives, "you can"t just kick
away their last addictive crutch," says an AA veteran. So by immemorial
tradition, meetings are conducted amid the squeaking of styrofoam cups and thick
blue clots of smoke. Yet one Washington-area group, which has kept the same core
participants for eight years, finally broke up recently -- over smoking.
Smoking Policies
Smokers may be burned, if current trends in the workplace hold. Smoke
containment is now so urgent an issue that it "has become a design criterion"
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PAGE - 137
(c1 1987 Los Angeles Times, April 18, 1987
for new offices, says Frank Hammerstrom, senior principal at the Helimuth, Obata
& Kassabaum architectural firm in New York. Some companies are installing
filters and reorganizing their space to accommodate smokers. (As of last year,
the Wall Street Journal reports, 36% of employers had smoking policies in
effect, and another 21% were considering them.)
But that's a stopgap solution, as more and more outfits opt for open workk
spaces and modular "systems" furniture. "What I expect to see," Hammerstrom
said, 'is that in the open-plan areas they will simply eliminate smoking
entirely. The snowball is now at the top of the hi'1l."
And it's rolling toward federal employees, too. The GSA's new smoking
restrictions were timed to coincide withia push to consolidate agency offices
from numerous leased spaces into fewer central locales and open-design areas
using less floor space. uWith systems furniture," GSA administrator Terence
Golden said last fall, "we can save 40 square feet per person on average.' Whichh
means, in an office with nine-foot ceilings, more than 350 cubic feet less air
space per person.
Hiring Nonsmokers
So woe, nowadays, to the job applicant who is puffing something besides
hi'mself. In a recent national survey of 1,000 executives, 73% said that if an
applicant smoked during an interview, it reduced his chances of getting hired.
"There's a clear trend toward people who definitely feel real strongly about"
hiring nonsmokers, says a spokesman for Thomas, Whelan Associates, a Washington!
executive placement firm.
Within the past two years, said Chuck Cherel, president of Professional
Search Personnel, "all of a sudden we're getting requests for nonsmokers. And
we're getting applicants who say they will only accept a smoke-free
environment."
That's the subject of a pack of bills before Congress. In the House, there Is
legislation proposed to restrict smoking to designated areas in all U.S.
government buildings; to prohibit smoking on domestic commercial flights, and to
amend the IRS code to disallow tax deductions for advertising or promotion of
to4acco products.
In the Senate, pending legislation would prohibit smoking in public
conveyances and in the Senate wing of the Capitol; another bill would dump the
tax deduction, increase the cost of tobacco products at military bases and
double the tax on cigarettes.
(According to a 1985 staff memo from the Office of Technology Assessment, the
federal cost of treating smoking-related diseases "amount to about $4.2 billion
In 1985 or about 14 cents for each pack of cigarettes.")
The Federal Aviation Administration has yet to take action on smoking in t he
air, despite a study by the National Academy of Sciences, released last August,
that found that separate seating sections do not protect nonsmokers f rom
cigarette smoke. Now the Joint Council of Flight Attendant Unions is backing
federal legislation to ban smoking on many flights.
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PAGE 138
(c) 1987 Los Angeles Times, April 18, 1987
"People have probably noticed that they're falling asleep more on airplanes,"
says Mary Ellen Miller, health and safety director for the Independent
Federation of Flight Attendants, "and they figure they're just more tired or
getting older. Actually, the air is putting them to sleep." Drained of normal
oxygen content and saturated with carbon di- and monoxides, the recycled cabin
air can get so bad, Miller says, "that pilots tell us If we're feeling:
extraordinarily tired, to come and let them know and they'll turn up the power
packs" -- that is, the fresh-air intake system.
The anti-smoking furor continues despite the tobacco companies' considerable
efforts to encourage smoker self-assertion -- redolent in, its bluff futility of
the last Ptolemaic sniping against the encroaching Copernican universe. As R. J.
Reynolds puts i't on the insi'de of its cartons: "If you have decided to smoke,
you have the right to enjoy smoking without being harassed." RJR (which, at the
tour desk of its Winston-Salem, N.C., plant, has a sign that reads: "Thank You
for Smoking"') calls this a "fact." The Tobacco Institute, the Washington-based
trade association that represents tobacco manufacturers, is somewhat more
ecumenical: "The smoker has a right to enjoy something that gives him pleasure,
and the nonsmoker has a right to avoid being annoyed by cigarette smoke ,..
neither group has 100% of the rights."
In fact, there are precious few "rights" to go around. In some circumstances,
collective-bargaining agreements may contain provisions allowing smoking in the
workplace; in many jurisdictions, while such agreements are in effect, an
employer cannot unilaterally impose a smoking ban. But aside from that, the
current state of the law apparently does not recognize a"right to smoke."
In the past 10 years, smokers have declined from 37% of the adult population
(42% of males and 32% of females in 1976)' to 30% today. Per-capita annual
consumption of cigarettes hit an all-time high in 1963 (4,345 units, about 12 a
day) though the total number sold did not peak until 1981 at 634 bilii'on. Since
then, sales have dropped below 600 billion and per-capita intake is down to
3,378 (around nine a day, roughly the 1949 figure). In fiscal 1984, federal,
state and local taxes on that wad amounted to more than $10 billion.
More Money, Less Smoke
Though tobacco pervades every demographic niche, it is generally true that
the~more money and education you have, the less likely you are to smoke. (With
one conspicuous exception: women who work outside the home, including a N
disproportionately large number of professional women.) Widows and the unmarried O
constitute the lowest percentage of users, separated or divorced persons the N
highest by a substantial margin. High school girls smoke more than boys, blacks IV
more than whites -- not surprising, perhaps, given the amount of its $2-billion
C~
yearly ad expenditure the industry aims at young women and minorities. (And ~
raising the nightmare query: If a company refused to hire smokers, would it G11
constitute de facto d'iscrimination?) GJ
w
Various subgroups choose to smoke for a bewildering variety of reasons -- not ~
all of them amenable to logic or social pressure. For example, in Utah only
about 16% of the total adult populace smokes, "yet the rate of smoking for
non-Mormon women," says Rosner of the Smoking Policy Institute, "is 40X." T he
reason? "It's the easiest way," Rosner believes, "to prove you°re not a Mormon."
Similarly he has found that nurses have a surprisingly high smoking rate.
"They're In the high.20s," said Rosner, "whereas doctors are at 6% -to 10X."
~
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(c) 1987 Los Angeles Times, April 18 1987
After asking around a bit, he found out why: "If they're off having a cigarette,
they won't be disturbed. One nurse told me, 'I don't really like srooking,-but
it's the only way I can get people off my back.' "
Meanwhile, as the national clamor continues, even some of the hard core is
sof tening. A Washington journalist recently jumped i'nto a Windsor cab. The
interior was festooned with the familiar "No Smoking" signs. Yet there was the
driver smoking away like a Weber grill full of cheap pork chops. The signs, it
turned out, were for the passengers only. "In the winter time," the sheepish
cabbie explained between lung-loads, "the windows are closed, and four or five
of 'em get In here and they all start puffin' at once. I just can't stand it."
Uj
'
LEXISktXIS " LE)1SF!EXES
