2A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, Cctober IA, 1999 N ATI0N/WORLD W , M. plo -4*4 l 7, i l T ; w . 3 ,... M .+ +z. ... Ab di e The XWashngton IPost Philip Morris Cos., the holding company that includes the nation's largest tobacco firm, i launch- ing a new television ad vertising campaign aimed at broadening its image to ensure the publihc thms of it as producing something besides eigarettcs. At the same time, the company has eated a We bsin cwn phdi/>nrrixn con, on whih the com- pany concedes that "tere is no safe cEiar ett ihe stUe goes on to saV igarette smokingis :addctive ashat ternI is mostly commonly used toda.v T hose sta t 1ements ma.rk a de pa rtu re f r the com pa- ny, which had long disputed research that ln k ed smok ing and diseases including cancer, heart prob- le ms a n d e mphy se ma. T he new ads ome on the heels oI a not her print and I vision campign hy L.oril ird Tobaco (, the nation's ffh1-largest cigarette maker, designed to enc loura ge parenti s to tte ill tlhelir chil d re1n 1t's ,n " un co' to smoke. iThe ad caipaigns mark some o f the first rays bv the big ioba ce o ompa niles to get back on ithe air- wsaves since they ag reed to abandon television adver- tising in the early 1970s. Bot1h Philip Morris and Lorillard erphasied that the new campaigns are not pIrt of the 1998 tobacco settlement requiring the companies to contribute about S z5 billion to a nationwide anti-smoking edu- cat~~~~ ioIarp'r InsteadP p Morris intends to spend 00 mil- lion per scar imdependently on the program, an industry spokesperson said, while Loril lard will spend a smaller but still signi ficant amount of nun l "it's part of a mnuch bigger effort that we're under- tak ing to be more a cc'ssi bL to 1 he publc and media', and to talk about issues, like tobacco, and drinking and dri ni," said Steve Parrish, Philip Morris Cos. senior v ice president for corporate affairs. At the sanmi tinmi, Parrish added, the corporation wants "t. II people about our 4U0-year commitment"' to fight suciad ills such as hun cer and domestic vio- lence, both featured ini the Iielev isiwn ads, along with Philip Morris' disaster re ief efforts and support for a pirugram that tries to diseorirage shopkeepers from selling e igaret es to underage smo kers. An ti-smoking ad ocates greetcd the new cam- paigns with skepticism: "it's clearly an effort to gain nnocence by association,'" said attorney Cliff Douglas. of To bacco Connrol L aw an d Policy C onsulting in Ann Arbor '"And indeed, Phi lip Morris has a long pattern of success in buy ing the support and acquiescence of good people and organizations by contributing to worthy cautses."' Douglas also suggested there seems to be "a coordinated effort'' by the conmpanics to fill a void "It's clearly an effort to gin innocence by association," -- Cliff Douglas Ann Arbor attorney until a new round of settlement-funded advertising appears. Douglas dismissed the Philip Morris ads as "a diversionary tactic to redirect the public's attention away from the addictive and lethal nature of the com pany's products," but he also criticized the Lorillar campaign-more directly aimed at discouraging tobacco use-as "ambiguous." One Lorillard television ad shows a teenager pick- ing his way through a dingy alley to where an appro priately sleazy older man is waiting to pierce his tongue. Shot in grainy black-and-white, the ad conveys this impromptu surgical procedure as a painful, low life experience. When it's over, the "surgeon" shakes out a pack of cigarettes and offers one to the boy. "Do you think I'm crazy?" the boy sneers, and walks off with his new pierced tongue. m ,_ V__ _ . .. P._ ., ^ 15% OFF THROUGH OCTOBER 31ST!!!- 1r estani general debtes -next move ANNE TARITAS S ecializing In: Skin Care Full Body Waxing Arbor Hills Hair & Bod y Salon 2295 5. Sate St Ann Arbor, Ml (734) 913-5557 EARN $1O.OO"$2 I J ! Do you have a car?- Te wont t e est cna ve wJ3f e es r Apply at 600 Packard St. Call 741-9200 Ask for Todd or Brad! Or 929 E. Ann St. Call 913-9200 As for Dan or ike! KAA( ', Pa kist an - Fresh from toppn he counrs civilian govern- ment Pasn troops arrested another top ece of yesterdav and ran- sacked te oces of others, even as calm pre aled across the nation. A da aler Pakistan's army ousted Prne Minister Nawai Sharif, the gen- eral who orchestrated the coup showed no signs y erday that he intended to return poer to the ele ted civilians any time son. I .oop:, loyal to Gen. Pcrvez M usharra coniinued Itheir occupation of key instituiions and appeared to be debating their next move as Pakistan's new rulrs. Mltary sources said yesterday that Sharif, arrested a da earlier when he tried to fre Musharraf had been taken to an undisclosed "safe house" about 12 miles from the prime minister's official residence in Islamabad. the capital. Sroops detained another Sharif loyalist, parliament Speaker (huadhari Pervaiz llihi a solers seaiched the offices of the depomed prime minister's friends. Members of Shanrif' Cabinet were arrested the night of the coup. laI an say is Mr. Sharif has been gix en proper treatment, and no physical harm has come to him:' said a Pakistani ofmicial who requested anonymity. As Pakistanis and world leaders wait- ed, Musharraf and his commanders uttered few public statements, which seemed to cause confusion. Musharraf met with Pakistani President Mohammed Rafiq Tarar, and the army's top commanders reportedly held lengthy talks. The army postponed what was expect- ed to be an announcement of where the general intended to take the country. Many people in Pakistan had expected Musharraf to announce the formation of an unelected civilian government of technocrats and economists to lead until fresh elections could be held. The general's other options include martial law, already imposed by the Pakistani army three times in the 52 years since independence from Britain. Such a move would require dissolving the elected parliament and suspending Pakistan's constitution. "No one knows what this situation is, who is in charge," said one govern- ment worker who refused to identify himself. Mirza Aslam Beg, a former Pakistan army chief, said that Musharraf planned to set up an interim govern- ment to rule for about two years. "It will examine the accountability of many of the leaders who are known to be corrupt and who must be called to account," Beg said. TAUBMAN Continued from Page 1A Clinton's Presidential Library in Little Rock, Ark. The donation is the largest of its kind to a school of architecture and urban planning anywhere. Kelbaugh said the gift will increase the college's endowment five fold. "We expect to have seven figure funds every year for the next millen- nium," he said. At the University Board of Regents' June meeting, the eight- member board unanimously approved an administrative recom- mendation to rename the College of Architecture and Urban Planning in Taubman's honor. The regents' approval made the A. Alfred Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning the second University school named in honor of an individual. The regents established the Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies in 1935 when the trustees of the Horace H. Rackham and Mary A. Rackham Fund of Detroit gave the University $6.5 mil- lion to construct a building for grad- uate studies and establish an endow- ment to support graduate research and other scholarly activities. University President Lee Bollinger said yesterday that Taubman has not only become one of his personal friends but also is a close ally of the University. Prior to his recent donation, Taubman contributed gifts during the 1980s for the construction of the A. Alfred Taubman Health Care Center and the Taubman Medical Library on the University's Medical Campus. Taubman is founder and chair of The Taubman Company Inc., a Bloomfield Hills, Mich.-based corpo- ration that operates some of the nation's premiere shopping facilities. Taubman also is chair of Sotheby's, the world's oldest auction SAROUND THE NATION Rhode Island sues 8 lead paint makers In the latest courtroom assault on corporations selling legal but controversial products, Rhode Island's attorney general yesterday sued eight companies that manufactured lead paint, which was banned for residences in 1978 but continues to be a major health problem for children living in older buildings. h The lawsuit is expected to be the first of many against the industry by state att* neys general and Sen. Jack Reid (D-R.I.) is drafting legislation that would facili- tate a federal suit against the industry. g Rhode Island's suit seeks -damages for tax money expended treating persost made ill by lead and funds for an abatement program to "get the lead out of Rhode, a Island's children, homes and buildings." n Attorney General Sheldon Whitehouse alleges that the companies suppressed - information about the hazards of their products for decades and engaged in mislead- d ing marketing campaigns in an attempt to convince people that lead paint was safe. g "We are doing this for the health of Rhode Island's children," Whitehouse said, cit-. ing reports this year one in five kindergartners in the state and 28 percent of children in Providence have dangerous levels of lead in their blood. Nationally, 4.4 percent x - all children six or under have blood lead levels higher than the acceptable level est k s lished by the federal Centers for Disease Control, according to Dan Ryan, executive director of the Washington-based Alliance to End Childhood Lead Poisoning. s s W orld Trade Center bars for the four convicted of playing a role in the Feb. 26, 1993, bombig, bombers resentenced which killed six people and injure& more than 1,000 others. NEW YORK - Four Islamic mili- He also ordered the defendants to pay tants convicted of bombing the World a $250,000 fine and $250 million' Trade Center were each resentenced restitution should they ever sell book yesterday to more than 108 years in movie rights to their stories. prison, a reduction from the original terms of 240 years. Senate rje s treay A federal appeals court had ruled that" " ' the original sentences were calculated to ban nuclear tests incorrectly. One of the defendants, Mohammed WASHINGTON - The Senate Salameh, who allegedly played key roles rejected a landmark treaty to ban nuclear F in building the bomb used in the attack, testing yesterday, handing President was sentenced to 116 years, II months Clinton a humiliating foreign policy in prison. defeat. He also got a lecture from U.S. The votewas48to51,farshortof - District Judge Kevin Duffy when he 67 votes needed for ratification. As criticized the United States and said it expected, the final vote closely followed may someday splinter like the Soviet party lines, with only four Republicans Union. voting for it and Sen. Robert Byrd (D- "If you had been convicted of this WVa.) voting present. F crime under those foreign govern- Democrats vowed to make the rejec- f ments, there would be no resentenc- tion a prime 2000 campaign issue, ing," Duffy said. "You don't resentence claiming polls show most Americans a dead person." favor such a ban - first proposed by Duffy guaranteed a lifetime behind President Dwight Eisenhower in 1954 AROUND THE WORLD Nations fighting for ments. In the United States and other . . countries, labor unions and envirnn, W orld Trade position mental groups are speaking up, sayin" the WTO must pay more attentiol F With seven weeks to go before the labor rights and the environmemf, start of new global negotiations aimed costs of trade and development. at lowering trade barriers, representa- Companies speak up too, lobbying for F tives from the big economic powers are new freedoms for themselves. feuding about what will and won't be on the table. U.N. observers held The United States, Japan and the European Union all sing the praises of hostage in Abkhazia free trade. But at the World Trade Organization's offices in Geneva this SUKHUMI, Georgia - Gunman week, where delegates are meeting to seized six United Nations milit write the agenda for the talks that start observers and their translator yester r in Seattle late next month, the often- as they were delivering aid in Georgia's conflicting economic interests of the breakaway territory of Abkhazia. various parties come out in detail. Negotiators are in radio contact witi The United States wants better the abductors, and officials said they access to foreign agricultural markets; would do whatever they could to ensure. Europe and Japan tend to counter that the observers' safety. the Americans are moving too fast. "There are talks," said U.N Europe wants to go slow on approving spokesperson Manoel de Almeida e genetically engineered products, citing Silva. "At this time, the hostages potential health concerns; the United appear to be in good condition." States views this as a trade barrier. It is not just a debate among govern- - Compiled from Daily wire report J The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday 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 $100. Winter term (January through April) is $105, yearlong (September through April) is $180. On-campus subscriptions 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. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 734): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379: Sports 647-3336; opinion 764055W Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 7640550. E-mail letters to the editor to daily.letters@umich.edu. World Wide Web: http://wwwmichigandaily.com NEWS Jennifer Yachnin, Managing Editor, f EDITORS:WNiita EasleyKatie Plona. Mike Spahn, Jaimie Winkler. STAFF: Lindsey Alpert, Jeannie Baumann, Risa Berrin. Marta Brit, Nick Sunkley Anna Clark, Adam Brian Cohen. Gerard Cohen-vrignaud Shabnam Daneshvar Sana Danish, Dave Enders. Anand Giridharadas, Robert Gold, Jewel Gopwani. Michael Grass. Jodie Kaufman, Jody Simone Kay. Yael Kohen. Lisa Koivu. Dan Krauth, Sarah Lewis, Hanna LoPatin, Kevin Magnuson, Caitin Nish.Kelly O'Connor, Jeremy W. Peters. Asma Rafeeq, Nika Schulte, Callie Scott, Emina Sendijarevic, Jennifer Sterling, Samantha Walsh. CALENDAR: Adam Zuwerink. EDITORIAL Jeffrey Kosseff, David Wallace, Editors ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Emily Achenbaum. Nick Woomer. EDITORIAL ASSISTANT: Ryan DePietro. STAFF: Chip Cullen, Seth Fisher. Lea Frost. Jenna Greditor. Scott Hunter, Kyle Goodridge. Molly Kennedy. Thomas Kuljurgis. Mike Lopes George Malik, Steve Rosenberg Branden Sanz. Kily Scheer. 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