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Philip Morris

Show: World News Tonight with Peter Jennings

Date: 22 Jun 1993
Length: 1 page
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DARAGAN,KAREN/OFFICE
Type
TRAN, TRANSCRIPT
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2024014000/2024014283/Abc Lawsuit
2024014018/2024014282a/Abc Lawsuit
Litigation
Stmn/Produced
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Abc
Abc News
Epa, Environmental Protection Agency
World News Tonight
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N344
Master ID
2024014068/4244
Related Documents:
Named Person
Browner, C.
Gregory, B.
Jennings, P.
Parrish, S.
Reilly, W.
Author (Organization)
American Broadcasting
Request
Stmn/R1-004
Stmn/R1-079
Date Loaded
05 Jun 1998
UCSF Legacy ID
snh85e00

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Copyrnght 1993' American Biroideasting Companies, Inc:, All rights reserved.. ABC NEWS SHOW: WORLD NEWS TONIGHT WITH PETER' JENNINGS JUNE 22, 1993 LENGTH: 3887 words BODY: ANNOUNCER: From ABC, this is World News Tonight with Peter Jennings, reporting tonight from i WashingtonL PETER' JENNINGS: Our second story is also from Washington. The tobacco industry is on the counterattack here. Six months after the Environmental Protection Agency issued a devastating report on secondhand! smoke - just breathing in someone else's smoke, said the EPA, causes thousands of cases of lung cancer in nonsmokers every year - the tobacco industry has gone to court. As ABC's Bettina: Gregory reports, a coalitiion of tobacco farmers and cigarette makers claim that the EPA report is based onifaulty science and should be ignored. HOSTESS: Smoking or nonsmokiing?' CUSTOMER: Nonsmoking, BETTINA GREGORY: The trend toward bans on srnoking has been accelerating ever since January when, former EPA administrator William Reilly declared secondhand smoke a human carcinogen. Smoking has been banned"in the state capital of' California and at some universities, restaurants, and airports. Today the tobacco industry fought back. It sued'the EPA, claiming the government ignored scientific evidence and manipulated data to concliude environmentall tobacco smoke, known, as ETS, causes cancer. STEWE PARRISH', PHILIP IVPORRIS; USA: For this substance the science does not support the claim that environmental tobacco smoke is harmful to: nonsmokers. BETTINA GREGORY: The industry claims the EPA did not consider two major 1992 studies which showed nonsmoking spouses of smokers did not increase their ris of lung cancer. Despite those: studies, the current, EPA administrator agrees with her predecessor that secondhand smoke is dangerous. CAROL BROWNER, EPA ADMIh10(STRATO'R: Well, it's the agency's view that secondhand smoke can cause health problems. The agency undertook a study. We stand by that study, BETTINA GREGORY: The EPA says secondhand smoke causes 3,000 cases of lung cancer in nonsmokers every year. Nevertheless, the tobacco industry claims the EPA's position on secondhand smoke, is based on politics, not science. [ISU] But sources at the:EPA say the tobacco industry's lawsuit is a tactic to stop domestic cigarette sales from declining,as smoking is banned in more and more places. Bettina Gregory, ABC' News, Washingtom

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