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MARKER
This is not a textual record. This is used as an
administrative marker by the William J. Clinton
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Clinton Presidential Records
Subgroup/Office of Origin:
Speechwriting
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FolderlD:
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Radio - Liquor Industry - 6/15/96
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�PHOiOCOPY
-RESERVATION
EDA Can't Regulate Tobacco, Dole Says
Prisidential Hopeful Also Indicates Smoking Isn't Always Addictive
"I will say to all my friends in the son, Mo., the country music mecca
audience, pro-life or pro-choice, that in the Ozark Mountains, where he
the worst thing that President Clin- attended performances by Glen
Hishmgtoo Pent Sufl Writer
ton did was joining with the extrem- Campbell and Mel Tillis.
BXTON ROUGE, La. June 13— ists to veto the partial-birth abortion
This morning he flew to LouisFormer senator Robert J. Dole en- ban," Dole said. "That's the worst
tered the nation's war over tobacco thing that he's done since he's been ville, where he rode the paddleboat,
and ;sraoking today, asserting that president of the United States as far and later traveled here for a Cajun
cookout sponsored by the Louisiana
the Food and Drug Administration as I'm concerned."
lacks authority to regulate tobacco
Dole was in the second day of what GOP.
as audrug and suggesting that smok- has become known, as the "Citizen
ing not necessarily addictive.
Bob" campaign since his resignation
Floating down the Ohio River on a from the Senate. To underscore the
padclleboat near Louisville, in the theme that he is now just an ordinary
THE VASHINCTON POST
heart of tobacco country earlier to- citizen, Dole did some of the things
day,; Dole was asked about a state- that many ordinary Americans enjoy.
FRn>jtt.JiiNEl4.1996
ment last month by Rep. Harold
Wednesday night, he was in BranRogers (R-Ky.), his state campaign
rhanrman, who said that as president
Dolp would rescind any FDA measure^ to regulate tobacco. The FDA
hasjproposed regulating cigarettes i
and»«mokeless tobacco as a way of
curbing underage usage, with initiatives such as banning vending machines from areas that serve youngsters, and banning advertising aimed
1
at young people.
The presumptive Republican
turely disrupt"regulatoryaction. "Initiatives that
presidential nominee did not answer
ByCurtSuplee
are likely to increase litigation and the role of the
the question directly, and seemed to
Waahinnum Put Staff Writer
courts should not be undertaken."
support some of the FDA's goals. He
The federal government's approach to reguThe commission was also skeptical of legislasaiij he agreed with eliminating
son^ cigarette vending machines, lating health risks is "cumbersome" and "frag- tive proposals that wouldrequireregulatorsto
forjxample. But he declared that mented" and burdened by a "patchwork" of in- emphasize cost of compliance inframingrules.
the fDA does not have the authority consistent statutes, a congresskmaHy mandated Panel members supported economic analysis,
panel has found. As a result, agencies need to ' "but not as an overriding determinant of risk
"toflowhat they want to do now."
management decisions."
"gut I think the more serious adopt a "systematic comprehensive framework"
The commission's draftreportalso:
question is whether the FDA has the for evaluating and controlling exposure to hazjurisdiction," Dole said. "And, in fact, ardous substances—including maximum involve- m Urges agencies not to focus on individual
if tliey should claim jurisdiction and ment cf affected groups in nile-m?ldng—accord- substances, but to develop'risk estimates cn
determine that cigarettes are a ing to a report released yesterday by the chemical mixtures and combined "chemicahnidru|, then you in effect are banning Commission on Risk Assessment and Risk Man- crobial-radiatian" exposures "because people
are exposed to multiple hazards."
cigarettes and production of tobacco. agement
The 10-member commisskn, authorized by a Calls for scientists to "distinguish more
So it's going to affect a lot of peoCongress in 1990 to investigate the way the fed- clearly" between effects that cause cancer or
pled
"Is it addictive?" Dole added. "To eral government regulates environmental other illness only in rodents and other experisome people, smoking is addictive. threats to health, concluded that agencies need mental animals and those that also clearly afTo others they can take it or leave to coordinate their policies to eliminate confusion fect humans.
it. Most people don't smoke at all. I and inefficiency, and to "modify the traditional • Encourages standards based on "realistic
hope children never start. I wish the approaches . . . that have relied ca a chemical- high-exposure scenarios"—what normal popuFDA would spend a little more time by-chemical, medium-by-medium,risk-byrisk lations are likely to experience.
strategy."
• Express exposure risks through the "use of
on medical devices, including new
Too often, commission Chairman Gilbert S. comparisons" to related substances^ rather
drugs, that would help."
Omenn told a news conference yesterday, that than using hard-to-understand statistics like "a
The Clinton campaign reacted approach has led to "paralysis by analysis" in one-in-100,000 lifetime threat".
quickly. "After collecting hundreds which action is delayed by uncertainty over the
The commission also made specific recomof thousands from tobacco interests precise effects of small levels of individual sub- mendations for several agencies, including the
Bob Dole today announces that ciga- stances. Instead, government should emphasize departments of Defense, Energy and Agriculrettes are not addictive," said cam- broad public health goals and "focus on where we ture.
paign press secretary Joe Lockhart. can get the biggest protection for the cost," said
The panel also proposed relaxing some statDole was drawn into the national Omenn, dean of the University of Washington's utory prohibitions on pesticide use (consistent
debate over smoking, a critical issue School of Public Health and Community Medi- with "reasonably certainty of no harm"), updatin tobacco-producing Kentucky, in cine.
ing enabling legislation "to reflect advances in
the middle of his first campaign
Although some of the panel'sfindingsecho toxicology and regulation" and managing water
swing since he resigned as Senate congressional critics of federalregulations,oth- pollution through a broad "watershed managemajority leader Tuesday to devote ers call for increased government involvement. ment approach" rather than concentrating on
full time to his quest for the White For example, thereportrecommendsthat the specific "point sources" of emissions.
House.
Environmental Protection Agency be given a
In a statement issued yesterday, EPA called
At a downtown rally in Louisville, greaterrolein addressing indoor air pollution, a the report "largely consistent with , environhe saw renewed signs of discontent "substantialriskto human health" that "receives mental decision-making by the agency under
in the GOP over his call for a state- little attention and remains largely unregulated." the Clinton administration, especially regardment in the party platform expressThe commission also proposed that the Food ing the important area of increasing the particing toleration for those who disagree and Drug Administration's ability to regulate ipation of the involved public."
with Republican support for a consti- health claims made for vitamins and other dieFor the FDA, the panel recommended modtutional amendment that would ban tary supplements "should be reaffirmed and ifying the Delaney clause of the Federal pood.
all abortions except to save the life strengthened." The grouprecommendedthat Drug and Cosmetic Act . (which prohibits apof the mother. In an unusual sight at both the Occupational Safety and Health Admin- proval of any additive found to cause cancer in
a GOP campaign rally, a small group- istration and the National Institute for Occupa- lab animals) to allow consideration of some
of protesters held antiabdVtion signs tional Safety and Health take expanded action to substances posing "reasonable certainty of no
aloft as Dole, who has a strong anti study the ''very imprecise" estimates of the harm." The 40-year-old language is "inconsisabortion record, spoke to a noontime scope and economic cost of work-related illness- tent with modem analytic detection methods
crowd.
and current scientific knowledge," the panel
es caused by hazardous substances.
The Kansas Republican took note
The panel oppo^ff 'measures—recently pro- found, and its requirements make a "disproporof them by turning to the subject of posed by some Republican lawmakers—that tionate claim on agency and petitioner resourcPresident Clinton's veto of a meas- would subject regulatory activity to increased ju- es." William B. Schultz, FDA deputy commisure that would have banned a late- dicial scrutiny. Courts "are not best equipped to sioner for policy, said the issue was not as
term abortion procedure.
assess in detail and delve deeply into the techni- urgent as the report language suggests and
cal science that supports much agency dedskjo- that the agency already "has sufficient flexibilimaking," the report states, and could "prema- ty to address" problems posed by the clause.
By Edward Walsh
Panel Criticizes Government's
Regulation of Health Risks
Report Urges 'Systematic "Approach to Handling Substan
1
�The iegislatkm would set voiuntary state-by-state spending limits
and offer a variety of incentives for
compliance, including reduced television costs and low-cost mailing. I :
would abolish political action committees (PACs), limit .out-ot-sta e
contributions and restrict the flow of
funds that currently escape federal
• regulation. It does not include provi'
sions for public funding, which is opposed by most Republicans.
Similar legislation is pending in
the House, where it has been caught
in an internal Republican fight between reformers who would ban
PACs and others who are reluctant
to forgo the contributions that are
By Helen Dewar
flowing their way as the new governWashington Port Staff Wnter
ing party.
In one of his first official acts, new McCain contended that current
Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott laws favor fund'raising by incum(R-Miss.) scheduled a showdown lat- bents and argued that his bill would
er this month on a bipartisan propos- help 'level the playingfield"and enal for overhaul of congressional cam- courage more young challengers to
paignfinancelaws, which faces a seek office. McConnell, in an interfilibuster that will be difficult to view, cited opposition to the bili
; break.
from groups as varied as the RepubSen. John McCain (Ariz.), the licar. National Committee, American
' measure's chief Republican sponsor, Civil Liberties Union, broadcasters
said Lott—who opposes the bill— and direct marketers and said it
agreed to bring it to the floor for de- "threatens the rights of all Ameribate June 24 and to schedule a vote cans tc participate in the political
to limit debate on it the following process."
day. Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.),
McCain said that "as a last resort"
a keyfigurein the demise of earlier he would favor a proposal endorsed
campaign finance bills, has vowed to Tuesday by Doie; to create a com"use all available parliamentary tac- mission, patterned after the panel
tics" to block the bill.
that selected military bases for closWith 60 votes required to end a ing, that would make campaign fi-.
filibuster, McCain faces an uphill \ nance proposals for adoption by Confight, and the outcome may hinge on gress on a take-it-or-leave-it basis.
"what kind of outside pressures are But both Lott and McConnell said
brought on senators" before the they opposed that approach.
vote, he said during a luncheon with
Washington Post editors and reporters. "I probably think it will fail this
time, but I also think we're a heck of
Debate Set
On Campaign
Reform Bill
,
THE W S I G O P C
A HN T N O T
RUDAY,JIINE14,1996
Bipartisan Measure
Faces Filibuster
CORRECTIONS
New Senate
Majority Leader
Trent Lott agreed to
bring the bill to the
floor for debate
June 24.
a lot closer to some kind of reform
than we've ever been," McCain added. :'
Lott, who succeeded prospective
GOP presidential nominee Robert J.
Dole as majority leader Wednesday,
later told a reporter he opposes the
bill but might favor creation of some
type of bipartisan panel to suggest
changes in campaignfinancelaws.
Even though McCain may not succeed this year, his effort marks another milestone in nearly two decades of efforts to rein in campaign
spending and curtail the influence of
special interests that give to campaigns in hopes of influencing legislation. Previous efforts were led by
Democrats, leading to Republican
charges that the legislation was tilt-,
ed to benefit its drafters. This time
McCain and Sen. Russell Fejngold
(D-Wis.) opted for abipartisan'strategy in hopes of avoiding any partisan
taint and have 18 cosponsors for
their" bill.
A chart yesterday referred incorrectly to the tenure of Senate
Majority Leader Trent Lott (RMiss.) as a lawyer for thefirmof
Bryan & Gordon. He worked for
tbefirmin 1967 and 1968.
status of Sean Castorina at the
time, according to his guilty plea,
that he committed a sex crime.
Castorina met the victim while
working as a wrestling coach at a
church school in Prince George's
County but had left the job by
the time the incident occurred.
An aitide in Sunday's edition
of TV Week incorrectly ideniiA May 30 article on Virginia
fied the high school attended by
wines should have said that the
actor Andrew Shue. He was
graduated from Columbia High Wine Spectator magazine once
awarded a wine made in the
. School in Maplewood, N J.
state a score of 90 or above on
its 100-point scale. A Piedmont
A Crime and Justice item in Vineyards 1993 spedal Reserve
some editions yesterday incor- Chardonnay received a 91 last
rectly reported the employment year.
PHOTOCOPY
PRESERVATION
�benefits under federal law
PageB7.
Technology: Intel, MCI to create
Internet products for small firms
Page B8.
Liquor Industry Is Divided Over Use of TV Ads
the members didn't abide by it," the
spokesman said.
And Grand Metropolitan, the biggest
S t a f f Reportera of T H E W A L L S T R E E T J O U R N A L
•. liquor marketer in the U.S.; is also worried
Seagram's move to end the liquor
Spending oil Spirits Ads
that Seagram acted rashly. "We continue
industry's long practice of not advertising
to urge that the public and all interested
on television has set off a controversy
; Top advertisers in selected cat
sgwiw during: i l ^ f l •>? • ' • ^ I l i i l l i l i
parties, such as legislators and consumer
among government officials, health advointerest groups, be approached first oh
cates and. even some rival liquor marWHISKEY
|3ffvODKA, RUM, GIN
their views." said Jack Shea, vice presiketers,
j
* AOVERTISIHO^UH 1 A0VERTISIN6*dent of public relations for Grand MetroMeanwhile,: all three major TV net, . , • ; (miltions) ? :8RAN0 "'•" • ;. :
'
V:^
politan's Heublein unit, whose brands in(miiliofls)
works said they would, continue to refuse . ': BRAND '. 1
liquor ads, but the commercials may be
Mekm WwtMiiim;;-:(:'
$11.0 ^ff-MsolotVodka ^ >' '
si 7.6 y. . elude Smirnoff vodka and Jose Cuervo
tequila. Although the company supports
coming to TV anyway. The networks
•^ack Daniels , *|,'' ^
87 K
9 5 l / i ^-Absolul Flavored Vodka ;
eventually lifting the ban. "we continue to
quickly fiointed out thaVthey can't control
want to be seen as a responsible industry,"
Jim Beam Bourbon ;
j
82 )
Puerto Rican Rums
8.6 ;
the practices of affiliate stations that they
he said.
don't own - such as the NBCstation in - Seagrams Crown Royal Canadian
7 7 ^ y ^Bacarti Light Rum
8.3 i f
Selling air time to an entirely new
Corpus Christ!, Texas, which is already
'M
6 7 :*.; Tanqueray London Gin
8.0
category of big-spending advertisers
.Running commercials for Seagram's
would be a boon to TV networks. But amid
, Q w n Royal Canadian Whisky.
<*PublisherstaformjtionBiireau •
' "
•Print ads only
. rising concerns about underage drinking;, Jfc At a time-when spirits sales are slump:.-. ipg. several oth^r, big marketers of hard.. is pushing a law that would severely -tions with a youth readership of at least and a slew of high stakes lobbying battles
on Capitol Hill - officials at ABC, CBS and
• lifjuor, such as ifnited Distillers, rushed to"'; restrict beer, wine and other alcohol ads on , 157,.
support Seagram's position. They conTV and elsewhere, yesterday denounced
Meanwhile, the liquor industry was NBC yesterday vowed to maintain their
tended that liquor makers should have the
Seagram's action. "Our youth are already sharply split over Seagram's move. One prohibition on liquor ads.
"CBS has careful guidelines in place in
,, samejaccess to the airwaves as makers of • constantly bombarded with images from . commonly voiced worry: Seagram made
' wine and beer.-— which spend millions of
alcohol-beverage commercials that tell its move before the industry had time to an effort to make sure the. ads are
dollars each year on TV ads.
. them if they drink a beer, they can get the reach a coordinated stand on the sensitive in keeping with the notion of moderate
consumption. Hard-liriuor ails would be
. • yj " For now. li(|uor companies hoping to air ;prettiest girl or the best looking guy, climb subject of TV ads.
,TV commercials don't face any serious
the highest mountain and win the bicycle
A spokesman for Brown-Forman, inconsistent with that notion," said Matgovernment obstacles. Officials at the Fed-" race,*' the Massachusetts Democrat said.
maker of Jack Daniel's whiskey, said that thew Margo, vice president of program
eral Trade Commission, which oversees
Rep. Kennedy's bill, introduced in
the company had lodged a complaint with practices at CBS.
Another problem for the networks: how
advertising, and the Bureau of Alcohol,
May, would ban most alcohol ads on TV the industry's trade group, the Distilled
Tobacco and Firearms, which regulates
from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. It would also Spirits Council, about a Seagram commer- to avoid giving politicians a reason to
the spirits; industry, say that federal law eliminate the tax-deductibility of alcohol cial on cable TV earlier this year. The propose legislation that might also end up
doesn't give either agency the authority to
ads and promotions, require health warn- Seagram commercial showed that the curtailing the large number of ads they sell
ban liquor ads on TV.
ings on ads, and limit print ads to black- council's longstanding practice of not ad- to the beer industry. "To take hard-liquor
Please Turn to Page B5, Column 1
and-white text with no pictures in publica- vertising on TV "was pretty worthless if
However, Rep. Joseph Kennedy II, who
;
.y
By SALLY G014. BEATTY
And YUMIKO ONO
ADVERTISING
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TERPRISE
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Weak Poultry Sales Hurt Small Growers Superstores Aim
�MARKETS
ADVERTISING
Liquor Makers Are Divided Over TV Ad<
Continued From Pcige Bl
adycrtisinf,' cuuld trigger restrictions on
beer and wine advertising as well. Because
hard liquor generally has much higher
levels of alcohol than beer or wine, we feel
that hard liquor is inconsistent with the
• notion of moderate consumption," Mr.
Margo said.
CBS already requires that all actors
in alcohol ads appear to he ^1 years of age
or older. The network says it also donated
SI 1.5 million of air time for public-service
announcements on alcohol abuse last
year.
.The return of TV liquor ads comes
at a time when youth drinking - on the
decline for several years - has shown increases in the past two years. A University
of Michigan study last year found that
2!).87(. of I2lh-grader.s had five or more
drinks in a row in the prior two weeks,
compared with 2S.2';v the previous year.
One health-advocacy group, the Center for Science in the Public Interest,
yesterday called Seagram's action "a
cynical, profiteering attempt to exploit a
new generation of young people by attracting them to drink hard liquor."
But on Madison Avenue. Seagram's
move had a<t executives anticipating new
business from the liquor industry.'United
Distillers, which markets Tanqueray gin
and Johnnie Walker scotch, and Allied
Doniecq, whose brands include Kahlua and
Canadian Club Whisky, have already said
they support Seagram's move.
"The brandies are looking at A&K
Networks. Crown Royal and the mass
brown goods are looking at ESPN, all the
scotches are looking at golf on broadcast
and cable. And premium white spirits,
gins and vodkas will look at tennis and the
Academy Awards," said a media executive
[/.S. to File WTO Complaint ior Kodak,
Handing Fuji a Procedural Victory
By HKLKNK COOI'KK
And WKNDY HOUNDS
Stuff HcpMrlcm of T m :
W A I . I . STIII.:!.:T J M U I I N A I .
WASHINGTON - The U.S. is about to
file its most high-profile case yet with the
new World Trade Organization: Eastman
Kodak Co.'s complaint that archrival Fuji
Photo Film Co. conspired with the Japanese government to keep Kodak film off
store shelves in Japan.
After a year of investigating Kodak's
complaint, the U.S. Trade Representative's office is expected this week to pitch
the case to the WTO in Geneva. However,
the decision to send the matter to the WTO
.is a first-round victory for Fuji, which has
lobbied hard to take the dispute to Geneva,
where it hopes impartial jurors from other
countries will look favorably, at Fuji's
side.
What Kodak had wanted initially was
direct U.S.-Japan talks to open the Japanese photographic market. However, yesterday, Kodak spokesman Charles Smith
'said, "Our goal is the removal of trade
barriers . . . and we would continue to
work with the U.S. government if the case
goes to the WTO."
Fuji called the expected WTO move "a
positive development."
Clinton administration officials initially planned to make an announcement
earlier this week, but the flurry of lastminute negotiations over whether acting
U.S. Trade Rep. Charlene Barshefsky
• will make one more trip to China to try to
settle the copyright piracy Issue has put
Kodak on the back burner, officials said.
Earlier this week, senior White House
officials met and signed off on the Kodak
strategy: Part of the complaint will go to
the WTO, where American officials willargue that Japan and Fuji have contributed to a business climate that impaired
Kodak's ability to sell film. Other parts of
the complaint will win official sympathy
but no immediate threat of trade retaliation against Fuji.
While the U.S. has taken other trade
cases to the WTO (such as bananas and
beef hormones), Kodak's complaint would
be the first time America has asked the
fledgling trade forum to settle a.high-pro:
file case. Last year's auto dispute with
Japan was physically settled around WTO
environs in Geneva, but the organization
itself never weighed in with an opinion.
Early on in the case, Kodak officials
balked at talk of going to Geneva. " I doubt
going to the WTO would be in the best
interest of the U.S. government," Kodak
Chief Executive George Fisher said in a
February interview.
Recently, however, Mr. Fisher has softened that stance, in part to avoid appearing as a loser in this high-stakes trade
match. Last month he said some parts of
the case "might be WTO-relevant."
Time Warner's Warner Bros. Reaches
at an agency that already handles a lot of
liquor business.
Most ad executives said they expected
to see a lot of ads on cable TV, where
guidelines are often looser and ad sales
executives are hungrier. " I think we'll see
more and more of it in cable because it
gives you more of an opportunity to do
narrow targeting," said Donny Deutsch.
chief executive of New York ad agency
Deutsch Inc., which created the Mr. Jenkins print and outdoor campaign for Tanqueray gin. "Responsible targeted television makes a lot of sense."
TV ads could be bad news for the
magazine industry, currently a big beneficiary of liquor-ad budgets. "Newsweeklies
would be hurt because they're reaching the
same kind of audience that you would hope
the broadcasters would reach," said
Claude Kromm. New York media director
of TBWA Chiat/Day. the ad agency behind
the Absolut vodka campaign. General-interest mass-market magazines are "going
to he very nervous" if broadcasters decide
to accept spirits ads, he added.
The industry's voluntary ban on advertising on the .airwa>.es dates back to
19.'i8, when liquor makers were sensitive
about their public image in the wake of the
recent lifting of Prohibition. In 19-18, the
industry adopted language to extend the
ban to the new medium of television.
Seagram officials this week dismissed
the ban as "obsolete." Its decision to move
into TV ads is "just a logical progression in
how we market our products." said.Arthur
Shapiro, executive vice president in
charge of marketing and strategy for Seagram in the U.S. He added that Seagram is
addressing concerns about alcohol abuse
with a tagline in its TV ad: "Those who
appreciate quality enjoy it responsibly."
The NCR Scalabl
�Page 23
66TH STORY o f Level 1 p r i n t e d i n FULL f o r m a t .
C o p y r i g h t 1996 The New York Times Company: A b s t r a c t s
I n f o r m a t i o n Bank A b s t r a c t s
WALL STREET JOURNAL
June 12, 1996,
Wednesday
SECTION: S e c t i o n B; Page 1, Column 3
LENGTH: 62 words
HEADLINE: LIQUOR INDUSTRY IS. DIVIDED OVER USE OF TV ADS
BYLINE: BY SALLY GOLL BEATTY and YUMIKO ONO
JOURNAL-CODE:
WSJ
ABSTRACT:
A d v e r t i s i n g column d i s c u s s e s c o n t r o v e r s y over Seagram's move t o end t h e l i q u o r
i n d u s t r y ' s l o n g s t a n d i n g p r a c t i c e o f not a d v e r t i s i n g on t e l e v i s i o n ; a l l t h r e e
major TV networks say t h e y w i l l c o n t i n u e r e f u s i n g l i q u o r ads; t h e l i q u o r
i n d u s t r y i s s h a r p l y d i v i d e d , w i t h some c o m p l a i n i n g t h a t Seagram moved b e f o r e t h e
i n d u s t r y c o u l d reach a c o o r d i n a t e d s t a n d ; c h a r t s (M)
GRAPHIC: Graph
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH
LOAD-DATE: June 12, 1996
�'suoipunj
«.»„iian .isuinsuoo 3Uiv«uu4 _j ^,,^^^5
it
LL STREET JOURNAL THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1996
MARKETING &
ics Publications Multiply,
me Invade Sponsor's Turf
i From Page Bl
y had no iiffreemcnt in
it and marketed as if they
the daily magazine sold out. swiftly last
fall. As part of its sponsorship rights.
Sports Illustrated also is the only publisher
that can sell magazines in Olympic Games
venues.
But the sports weekly will face plenty of
competition from rivals who didn't need to
pay for the privilege of making a splash in.
Atlanta. The hometown paper, Cox Enterprises Inc.'s Atlanta Journal-Constitution,
has spent five years planning its coverage.
Among its plans: a daily photo magazine
called Click, and a six-page daily section to
transmit to other Cox papers around the
country. "We-aren't trying to act like a
sponsor," says editor Ron Martin. "Our
allegiance is to the readers who have been
here and will be here after it's done."
USA Today, meanwhile, plans a blitz of
its own, including a daily "bonus" Olympic
section and a special weekend edition for
the Atlanta market. (The paper, normally
publishes only on weekdays.) A USA Today
spokesman says advertising space in the
bonus sections is already sold out.
The competition and sponsorship costs
have Sports Illustrated officials questioning whether to bid once again for the
Games in Sydney, Australia, in 2000. "We
•y of competing coverage
Sports Illustrated has a
ke to protect. A Sports
:ial" Olympic program,
, profiles , and schedule
t Olympic events - along
letes by Ms. Leibovitz-is
in a profit of S.'l million to
itfazine says it expects to
1 million copies of the M
O
nds nationwide. And its
icial sponsor has helped
advertisers, such as
AT&T Corp.
Sports Illustrated twotelevision special will
'<hts before the start of
igazine also will devote
to special coverage of
us project is a •14-page
Olympic Daily" maga:h day of the Games,
ifficial souvenir publi•ated says ad space in
»T OF EARNINGS REPORTS
eses
ii.
1995
,287,000
W.OOO)
,166,000
(N) New York Stock Exchange
(A) A m e r i c a n Exchanoe (Na)
Nasdaq Stock M a r k e t (Pa) PacKlc ( O - C h i c a g o (P) Philadelphia (B). Boston (T) Toronto
(Mo) Montreal ( F ) Foreign.
GARMENT GRAPHICS INC. (Na)
QuarMar31:
1996
•
1995
S5,288,793
Sales
S7,362,513
(213,572)
Net income
90,702
841,000 Avgshares
3,066,407
3,075,186
21,000)
331,000 Shr earns (com 8, com equiv)
Net income ..
.03
(.07)
Year:
' (.31)28,719,367
33,5RB.23?
Sales
Not income
(I,062.JIR!
056.92.11
D
.\vn ^tviros
V.,71 ,.•..::'
(.07)
1
PENWEST LTD. (Nq)
1996
1995
Guar Mav 31:
Sales
S49.106.000 W3,618,(XX)
Net income
1,030,000
2,000,000
Avg shares
6,985,805
6,957,557
Shrearns:
Net Income..
.15
.29
9 months:
Sales
141,042,000 128,818,000
Net income
3,684,000
85,910,000
Avg shares
7,065,365
7,057,445
Shr earns:
.52
.84
Net Income..
a-includes a nonrecurring pretax
gain ofS899.000.
REEDS JEWELERS INC. (Ma)
Ouiir .v.rv.' 31;
Rep. Kennedy Plans Bill
Banning TV Liquor Ads
By
a WAI.I.
STRFFT
JOUHNAI.
Staff
ncportcr
WASHINGTON - Rep. Joseph Kennedy II (D., Mass.), who has been pushing a law to restrict alcohol advertising,
said he will introduce a new bill today
calling for an outright ban on, liquor ads
on television.
Rep. Kennedy's planned proposal follows spirit-maker Seagram Co.'s move
this week to begin advertising liquor on
television. Seagram broke ranks with the
liquor industry, airing ads for its Crown
Royal Canadian whiskey on an NBC
affiliate in Corpus Christi, Texas.
"This is a direct attempt to deal with
Seagram's misguided attack on the people of this country through the subversion
of the code of conduct." Rep. Kennedy'
said, referring to the industry's selfimposed ban on TV and radio advertising
it has adhered to since 1918. Seagram
declined to comment on the proposed
legislation.
Rep. Kennedy added that legislation
introduced in May that would restrict all
alcohol ads probably would be broken up
and attached to other bills. That legislation faces stiff opposition from various
industries, including advertising and
broadcasting.
Wi
De
Staff n
- NEV
pected
shareho
compan
holders
YesU
proposal
not expt
Alfred D
tor of in
ners L.P
against n
Mr. I
Woolworl
spinning >
lated stor
ate's par
whole, thi
Woolwortl:
growing ui
Champs, f.
particularl
and F.W.
But Wo
the idea. C
Roger N. I
.. 1994 to rev.
billion retai
can't absolutely define what incremental
ing among
revenue" comes from being an Olympic
keep the con
sponsor, says Mr. Elliman. "The tougher
question is, 'Would we make more or less if to overhaul
up.
we weren't an Olympic sponsor?' We
would still be doing a ton of Olympic
tyi a rece
editorial I content | anyway."
intends to e:
the athletic s
apparel chai
Noted.....
tinue sheddi
and fix ne}
THEME PARKS: Walt Disney Co.'s
long-planned second theme park in Ana-, the Kinney s
worth dime s
heim, Calif., will be called Disney's California Adventure. The, company is exThat won
pected to announce further details soon.
worih stores
The park will be adjacent to Disnryl.-mfl.
�Page 10
22ND STORY o f Level 1 p r i n t e d i n FULL f o r m a t .
C o p y r i g h t 1996 The New York Times Company: A b s t r a c t s
I n f o r m a t i o n Bank A b s t r a c t s
WALL STREET JOURNAL
June 13, 1996, Thursday
SECTION: S e c t i o n B; Page 12, Column 3
LENGTH: 14 words
HEADLINE: REP KENNEDY PLANS BILL BANNING TV LIQUOR ADS
JOURNAL-CODE:
WSJ
ABSTRACT:
Rep Joseph Kennedy 2d p l a n s t o i n t r o d u c e b i l l banning l i q u o r ads on t e l e v i s i o n
(S)
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH
LOAD-DATE: June 13, 1996
�One thing parents haven't had to worry about is
advertising for hard liquor on TV and radio. For half a
century, liquor companies have voluntarily kept their
ads off the air ~ for the simple reason that it was the
right thing to do. So I was very disappointed this week
when a major liquor company, Seagrams, announced it
would break the ban and put liquor ads on TV. They
are exposing our children to hard liquor before they
know how to handle it. To Seagrams and any other
liquor company thinking about breaking their
commitment: Pull those ads. Get back on the ban.
rr.
�[Thus far, we have avoided legal restrictions on
liquor advertising because the industry respected the
voluntary standards. But today I say to the liquor
industry, if you don't all honor the voluntary ban, I will
propose legislation that will do it for you.] [Proposed
new policy.]
And we are working hard as a country to keep our
children away from tobacco. Every day 3000 kids start
to smoke in this country, and 1000 of them will have
their lives shortened as a result. My administration has
proposed strong rules on the advertising and marketing
of tobacco.
�
Dublin Core
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Title
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Michael Waldman
Description
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<p>Michael Waldman was Assistant to the President and Director of Speechwriting from 1995-1999. His responsibilities were writing and editing nearly 2,000 speeches, which included four State of the Union speeches and two Inaugural Addresses. From 1993 -1995 he served as Special Assistant to the President for Policy Coordination.</p>
<p>The collection generally consists of copies of speeches and speech drafts, talking points, memoranda, background material, correspondence, reports, handwritten notes, articles, clippings, and presidential schedules. A large volume of this collection was for the State of the Union speeches. Many of the speech drafts are heavily annotated with additions or deletions. There are a lot of articles and clippings in this collection.</p>
<p>Due to the size of this collection it has been divided into two segments. Use links below for access to the individual segments:<br /><a href="http://clinton.presidentiallibraries.us/items/browse?advanced%5B0%5D%5Belement_id%5D=43&advanced%5B0%5D%5Btype%5D=is+exactly&advanced%5B0%5D%5Bterms%5D=2006-0469-F+Segment+1">Segment One</a><br /><a href="http://clinton.presidentiallibraries.us/items/browse?advanced%5B0%5D%5Belement_id%5D=43&advanced%5B0%5D%5Btype%5D=is+exactly&advanced%5B0%5D%5Bterms%5D=2006-0469-F+Segment+2">Segment Two</a></p>
Creator
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Michael Waldman
Office of Speechwriting
Date
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1993-1999
Identifier
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2006-0469-F
Extent
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Segment One contains 1071 folders in 72 boxes.
Segment Two contains 868 folders in 66 boxes.
Provenance
A statement of any changes in ownership and custody of the resource since its creation that are significant for its authenticity, integrity, and interpretation. The statement may include a description of any changes successive custodians made to the resource.
Clinton Presidential Records: White House Staff and Office Files
Publisher
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William J. Clinton Presidential Library & Museum
Format
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Adobe Acrobat Document
Still Image
A static visual representation. Examples include paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type Text to images of textual materials.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
paper
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Radio - Liquor Industry - 6/15/96
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Office of Speechwriting
Michael Waldman
Is Part Of
A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.
Box 58
<a href="http://clinton.presidentiallibraries.us/items/show/36403"> Collection Finding Aid</a>
<a href="https://catalog.archives.gov/id/7763296">National Archives Catalog Description</a>
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
2006-0469-F Segment 1
Provenance
A statement of any changes in ownership and custody of the resource since its creation that are significant for its authenticity, integrity, and interpretation. The statement may include a description of any changes successive custodians made to the resource.
White House Staff and Office Files
Publisher
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William J. Clinton Presidential Library & Museum
Format
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Adobe Acrobat Document
Medium
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Preservation-Reproduction-Reference
Date Created
Date of creation of the resource.
6/3/2015
Source
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7763296
42-t-7763296-20060469F-Seg1-058-008-2015