Philip Morris
Transcript News
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- Site
- N922
- Area
- PURCELL,CLARE/CARLSTADT
- Characteristic
- MISS, MISSING PAGES
- Named Organization
- Citizens for a Tobacco Free Society
- Coalition on Smoking + Health
- FDA, Food and Drug Administration
- Megadeath
- Msnbc Tv
- Nbc
- Nbc News
- News
- Nsa, Natl Smokers Alliance
- Video Monitoring Services of America
- White House
- Coalition on Smoking + Health
- Author (Organization)
- Video Monitoring Services of America
- Master ID
- 2077409565/9739
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- Named Person
- Althaus, W.
- Ballin, S.
- Clinton
- Gibson, J.
- Kennedy, T.
- Kim, L.
- Landers, A.
- Rogers, R.
- Williams, P.
- Ballin, S.
- Litigation
- Mile/Produced
- Date Loaded
- 18 Feb 2003
- UCSF Legacy ID
- rox60c00
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. Tianscript
DATE August 22, 1996
TIME 3:00-4:00 PM (ET)
NETWORK
PRO(iRAAS MSNBC-TV
News
Lisa Kim, reader:
s
Cigarette manufacturers are fighting a high
stakes battle in an Indiana courtroom. Fifty-two year
old Richard Rogers, an Indianapolis attorney, died of
lung cancer in 1987. His relatives are now suing four
tobacco companies, arguing that smoking caused Rogers'
cancer and that nicotine is addictive. The jury hears
final arguments today.
Earlier this month, a Florida jury awarded three
quarters of a million dollars to an ex-smoker, with
lung cancer.
Also, today, Oklahoma joins the list of states
demanding that the tobacco industry repay the cost of
treating smokers who become ill.
Tobacco has become a smoking hot issue this
election year. Aides say President Clinton is going
to approve new rules, regulating tobacco and
classifying it as an addictive drug. That would allow
the FDA to crack down on teen smoking by controlling
cigarette advertising. The long-awaited move is
expected as early as tomorrow, which would give the
president a boost with those who support tougher
rules, as he heads to the democratic convention next
week.
But the tobacco industry is expected to challenge
any changes in court. We'll have more on tobacco
regulations later in this hour.
(Unrelated Material Omitted.)
John Gibson, anchor:
Welcome back to MSNBC. I'm John Gibson.
President Clinton is expected to approve the toughest
crackdown yet on the tobacco industry by allowing the FDA
to regulate nicotine in tobacco as a drug. This will mark
the first time that the FDA exercises such power over
tobacco.
For now, regulation attempts will concentrate on kids
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and smoking. More from NBC's Pete Williams.
Pete Williams reporting:
Senior administration officials tell NBC News the FDA
will use its unprecedented new power cautiously -- at
first, limiting only the sale and advertising of tobacco
to children.
Here's what the FDA's new power will mean.
A federal minimum age of eighteen to buy cigarettes
and chewing tobacco, proof of age required. A ban on
cigarette billboards within a thousand feet of schools. A
ban on tee-shirts and hats with tobacco company brands on
them. And, restrictions on print advertising young people
might see -- black and white text only; no pictures.
Tobacco companies would also be required to pay for a
national public education campaign, warning young people
of the dangers of smoking.
Anti-smoking groups say the rules are long overdue.
Scott Ballin (Coalition On Smoking And Health): We think
it's fair to ensure that retailers are not selling to
children and we've never been able to do that on a
national basis because of the power and clout of the
tobacco industry.
Williams: No comment from the president himself but at
the White House it's considered smart politics, with polls
showing strong support for the idea among women. One
supporter of the president said it's good for young
people.
Sen. Ted Kennedy (Democrat, Massachusetts): If we're
going to be serious about dealing with the increase in
substance abuse in, among the young people of this
country, we ought to get it at the place where we can be
most ef£ective and that's starting with children.
Williams: Tobacco companies say they want to stop youth
smoking too but they say they'll fight the rules, arguing
the FDA has no power to regulate tobacco and a pro-smokers
group, backed by the tobacco companies, say the rules go
too far.
Bill Althaus (National Smokers Alliance): There would be
no mail-order sale whatsoever, so the home-bound, disabled
veteran couldn't get cigarettes that way. There would be
no coupons by mail. There would be no vending machines at
all.
Williams: Administration officials tell NBC News the
president decided to take this step because tobacco
companies refused to impose restrictions voluntarily.
Steps like banning cigarette sales in vending machines.
All this will face an immediate challenge in court,
0

partly over whether the FDA has the power to regulate
tobacco at all and partly over the restrictions on
advertising, on free speech grounds.
Pete Williams, NBC News, Washington.
Gibson: We're going to talk more about that. Joining us
now is Alan Landers, spokesman for Citizens For A
Tobacco-Free Society. Alan, hang on. We're going to take
a break and when we come from that break, more on the new
cigarette rules. This is MSNBC. Stay with us.
(Unrelated Material Omitted.)
Gibson: we're talking now about the new rules that will
be imposed by the federal government over the sale of
cigarettes, particularly the sale of cigarettes to anyone
considered a young person.
Joining us now is Alan Landers, spokesman from
Citizens For A Tobacco-Free Society.
Hi Alan. Thanks for coming.
Alan Landers (Citizens For A Tobacco-Free Society): Thank
you for having me on.
Gibson: Alan is in Miami. Alan, what kind of impact do
these commercials, these cigarette commercials, really have
on kids? I mean, really.
Landers: They have a tremendous impact on kids because
first of all you have six billion dollars worth of
advertising that's, what I call, in-your-face advertising
and they're constantly confronted with it. They're
confronted with it in all the magazines, the billboards, in
the movies -- they see everybody smoking, so they think
it's coo]. to smoke and this starts when they're like the
age I was, which was about nine years old, when I started
smoking. That's what I was confronted with.
Even now, today, I think it might even be equal or
worse.
Gibson; Alan, you know, I suppose the cigarettes could be
packaged in a package that just had a skull and crossbones
on it, but we see kids interested in bands called Megadeath
and so forth, I mean, how much difference is it really
going to make?
Landers: Oh, I think it makes a big difference. If you
had the proper labels on it, like, let's say, you had it
where it said 'addictive poison' or listed the carcinogens
-- first of all, the government doesn't regulate what goes
into the tobacco, which, I think, would be great if they
did -- at least, list what goes into the tobacco so people
knew that there were -- a kid would know when he picked"it
up that number one, it's addictive; number two, that it
i
