- The Michigan Daily - Thursday, April 17, 1997 NATION/WORLD Tobacco companies may cut back on ads The Associated Press Leaders of two big cigarette compa- iies are ready to make a deal. Abandoning their all-out defense of cigarettes, the nation's two biggest tobacco companies now seem willing to cut their legal losses for up to $300 bil- lion and retire Joe Camel and the yarlboro Man if the government backs off its threat to regulate nicotine. RJR Nabisco and Philip Morris exec- dfives are in early talks with the attor- neys general of eight states in hopes of winning blanket protection from law- suits over smoking-related health prob- lems, it was disclosed yesterday. In return, the cigarette companies would pay hundreds of billions of dol- lars and agree to cut back on ads, espe- cially ones like Joe Camel that appeal to children and those that depict people, such as the Marlboro Man. The cigarette companies' willingness to even consider such concessions marks a startling turnaround. For decades, the tobacco industry has fought a no-retreat battle on all fronts. In the past few years, however, the industry has been barraged with law- suits filed by 22 states and countless individuals, and the litigation is hurting stock prices and taking management attention away from the business of selling cigarettes. "I think the tobacco industry is in big trouble and they know it, so they are finally beginning to come to the table," Minnesota Attorney General Hubert Humphrey III said. "I think their pro- posals still fall short of what we'd be interested in." A sticking point is whether the Food and Drug Administration would get the right to regulate the nicotine levels in cigarettes to make them less addictive. The tobacco companies adamantly oppose such regulation for fear that once the FDA gets the power to regulate tobacco, it will try to ban it. Reports of negotiations between the tobacco companies, attorneys general and anti-tobacco lawyers aimed at set- tling health-related lawsuits began a few months ago. Bloomberg News reported in February that such talks were taking place and the White House was monitoring them. But news that the top executives of RJR Nabisco and Philip Morris were personally attending such talks, report- ed yesterday by The Wall Street Journal, sparked a 10 percent rally in cigarette company stocks and boosted investor hopes of a settlement, which would lift a cloud hanging over the tobacco com- panies. Industry analysts have said that tobacco companies, which had revenue of about $45 billion last year, could finance a big settlement simply by rais- ing cigarette prices. "A resolution of this issue is impor- tant to our shareholders, our customers and our country," RJR Nabisco Chair Steven Goldstone told a stockholder meeting yesterday in Winston-Salem, N.C. "But it has to be fair and it has to be reasonable." The amount of a settlement is also among the sticking points. "The industry is in the low 2's and the plaintiffs are in the upper 3's. There is no consensus on the money," said a source close to the negotiations, who spoke on condition of anonymity. Also under discussion is the estab- lishment of a fund from which smokers could seek payments. They would be banned from suing the cigarette compa- nies. Protection from lawsuits would require an act of Congress, and that's another one of the unresolved issues that could still sink the talks. "It's extraordinarily unlikely that any agreement could escape contentious congressional hearings," the source said. Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, a longtime tobacco opponent, said he is skeptical of the industry's pro- posals and will review them carefully if they land on Capitol Hill. "The great wall of tobacco is coming down," Durbin said. "Tobacco compa- nies are in a hurry to get out of court, off the front pages of newspapers and back to the business of making billions of dollars in profit." AROUND THE NATIj7 GOP House chair to return donations WASHINGTON - Rep. Dan Burton, chair of the House panel investigating alleged fund-raising abuses by the White House and Democratic Party, announced' yesterday he would return two questionable donations to his own campaign coffers, prompting renewed concerns among Democrats about the Indiana Republican's fit- ness to lead the congressional probe. Burton, who already faces an FBI investigation into his alleged "shakedown" contributions from a lobbyist for the government of Pakistan, said he will return small donations he received in 1992 and 1993 from two Sikh temples. Religious groups are forbidden by law from donating to political campaigns. Burton aides called the $646 in returned contributions insignificant - not in the same league with the roughly $3 million that the Democratic National Committee has been forced to return in the growing scandal over foreign-linked money in the 1996 presidential campaign. "This is less than minuscule," Burton's attorney, Joseph DiGenova, said of the returned checks. "In comparison with the kinds of problems (President Clinton) has, this is not even on the radar screen." Nonetheless, some Democrats said the questions swirling around Burton' money-raising practices make him the wrong person to lead the HousW inquiry. fr ;' Write for the summer Daily. Call 76-Daily, :011 re II FATTI'NTfION.. Gingrich may take loan to pay penalty WASHINGTON - House Speaker Newt Gingrich told fellow Republicans yesterday he was near a decision on a method for paying his $300,000 ethics penalty. GOP sources said a six-figure personal loan was a leading option. Aides said Gingrich wanted to put the controversial issue behind him within a day or two at most. Officials suggested he might formally announce his intentions in a speech on the House floor - scene of last winter's historic vote to reprimand him. Several Republicans said Gingrich appeared to be leaning in favor of paying the entire $300,000 himself, with the help of a loan. These offi- cials added, though, that a second option under consideration included soliciting supporters for donations to a legal defense fund to cover part of the costs. Several sources said Gingrich also was contemplating establishment of an account akin to a legal defense fund that his personal funds would flow into. The .fund would then make the payment to the House. These sources said this arrangement was under dis. cussion because Gingrich, prodded by some lawmakers, wanted to avoid establishment of a precedent und which individual members o Congress are put in a position of directly paying the House. Cities learn ways to avoid terrorist attack WASHINGTON - As the anniver- sary of the Oklahoma City bombing nears, the Pentagon has begun a traib- ing program designed to help 120 citi deal with the potential terrorist use of chemical, biological or even nuclear weapons. Local police, firefighters, medics and other emergency workers will learn to identify such deadly weapons, deal with victims and carry out any decont- amination that might be required, offi- cials said yesterday at a Pentagon briefing. 4i, I] Personalized, Highly trahied, Proven computerized study expert teachers who guar plans, tailored to your know the tests raisey hidlvkiual needs. inside and out. Classes starting NOW for the June 16 exam! in methods, anteed to your score. the leader in test prep and admissions counseling 1-800-KAP-TEST www.kaplan.com J - t6 J roaataaeaww Bedause all.-nighters Netanhu may be indicted in scandal JERUSALEM - Police investigators have formally called for indictment of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Israel's mushrooming political corrup- tion scandal, senior legal authorities said last night. Police Commissioner Assaf Hefetz said a three-month probe of influence- trading charges turned up sufficent "evi- dence to indict the prime minister on charges of fraud and breach of trust.' He did not specify which alleged acts formed the basis for those charges and cautioned that "problems with this evi- dence" raise questions whether it "will stand up to a legal critique.' Investigators have centered their inquiry on the appointment last January of Roni Bar-On, a little-known criminal lawyer, as attorney general. Shas Party leader Arye Deri, who con- trols 10 of 66 votes in Netanyahu's gov- erning coalition, is alleged to have demanded Bar-On's appointment in expectation of lenience in his own ongoing felony trial. Several members of the cabinet, which was required to confirm Bar-On's appointment, com- plained that Netanyahu rushed the decision and that Justice Minister Tsa Hanegby misrepresented Bar-Ons qualifications. Actor to beg ambassador position TOKYO - Sidney Poitier, the Academy Award-winning actor, for- mally became the Bahamas. Ambassador to Japan during a ceremn ny yesterday presenting his credenti to Emperor Akihito. Poitier, 70, wore a tuxedo and smiled broadly during the ceremony. Born in the United States but a citizen of the Bahamas, Poitier was appointed as the Caribbean island's Japanese ambassador in November 1995.'A Japanese official said the lengthy delay between his appointment and yester- day's ceremony was caused by the lack of a Bahamian embassy in Tokyo. * - Compiled from Daily wire reports. arent aiways0 . ; , spent in the libry i r .> , .. « The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Fnday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $85. Winter term (January through April) is $95, yearlong (September through April) is $165. On-campus sub- scriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St.. Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109.1327. 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STAFF: Emily Achenbaum, Kristin Arola, Ellen Friedman, Samuel Goodstein, Heather Gordon, Scott Hunter, Yuki Kuniyuki, Jim Lasser, Sara Lockyer, James Miller, Partha Mukhopadhyay, Zachary M. Raimi, Jack Schillaci, Megan Schimpf, Ron Steiger, Ellerie Weber. SPORTS Nicholas J. Cotsonika, Managing Editor EDITORS: Alan Goldenbach, John Leroi, Will McCahill, Danielle Rumore. STAFF: TJ. Berka, Evan Braunstein, Chris Farah, Jordan Field, John Friedberg, Alan Gomez, Kim Hart, Kevin Kasiborski, Josh Kleinbaum, Andy Knudsen, Chad Kujala, Andy Latack, Fred Link, BJ. Luria. Sharat Raju, Pranay Reddy, Sara Rontal, Jim Rose, Tracy Sandler, Richard Shin, Mark Snyder, Barry Sollenberger, Nita Srivastava, Dan Stillman, Jacob Wheeler. ARTS Brian A. Gnatt, Jennifer Petlinski, Editor" WEEKEND, ETC. EDITORS: Greg Parker, Elan A. Stavros. SUB-EDITORS: Use Harwin (Music), Christopher Tkaczyk (Campus Arts), Bryan Lark (Film), Elizabeth Lucas (Books), Kelly Xintaris (TV/New Media). STAFF: Dean Bakopoulos, Colin Bartos, Eugene Bowen, Neal C. Carruth, Anitha Chalam, Kari Jones, Emily Lambert, Kristin Long, Stephanie Love, James Miller, Aaron Rennie, Julia Shih, Anders Smith-Undall, Philip Son, Prashant Tamaskar, Michael Zilberman. PHOTO Mark Friedman, Sara Stillman, Editors STAFF: Josh Biggs, Jennifer Bradley-Swift, Aja Dekleva Cohen, Rob Gilmore, John Kraft, Margaret Myers, Kristen Schaefer, Jeannie Serv Addie Smith, Jonathan Summer, Joe Westrate, Warren Zinn. COPY DESK STAFF: Lydia Alspach, Jason Hoyer, Elizabeth Lucas, Elizabeth Mills, Emily O'Neill, Jen Woodward. ONLINE STAFF: Carlos Castillo, Elizabeth Lucas, Seneca Sutter, Scott Wilcox. GRAPHICS STAFF: Elissa Bowes, Seder Burns, Sumako Kawai, Marcy McCormick, Erin Rager, Jordan Young. Rebecca Berkun, Editor Adam Pollock, Editor Tracey Harris, Editor I: 013 ICr IC a* C - A. 1C -- Iii* t naain f r i n . r.-rrr