Top magazines agree to keep tobacco ads from
school copies
By MICHAEL GORMLEY
Associated Press Writer
June 20, 2005
ALBANY, N.Y. -- Tobacco ads in school library editions of Time, Newsweek, People
and Sports Illustrated magazines will be eliminated under a nationwide agreement
announced Monday.
The deal between publishers, tobacco companies and states attorneys general
follows a 2003 agreement by publishers and tobacco companies in which tobacco
ads were banned from classroom editions of the magazines.
Monday's agreement _ necessary according to officials since school libraries
often don't subscribe to the classroom editions _ provides for "selective
binding" of those editions beginning this summer. Tobacco companies have
agreed to a publishing method that will keep their ads from school library
subscriptions.
A survey by the New York State Department of Health Tobacco Prevention Program
found 70 percent of libraries in 223 middle schools and high schools had copies
of Time, Newsweek, People and Sports Illustrated with tobacco ads. School
libraries said the magazines are among the most popular with students.
"Just as we did in 2003, we continue to make our best efforts to address
the important issue of not exposing children to tobacco advertising," said
Newsweek spokesman Ken Weine.
"Beginning in mid-July, Time, Sports Illustrated and People magazines will
offer tobacco companies the opportunity to remove or edit their advertisements
in magazines that go to public elementary, junior high and high school libraries
throughout the United States," said Time spokeswoman Diana Pearson. The
action will be at no cost to the advertisers, she said.
"This is a major success in our continuing efforts to reduce the marketing
of tobacco products to children," said New York Attorney General Eliot
Spitzer, the lead state official in the agreement between the publishers and the
National Association of Attorneys General.
"About 2,000 kids become new smokers every day, and about a third of them
will eventually die prematurely from smoking-related disease," said Iowa
Attorney General Tom Miller, co-chairman of the association's Tobacco Committee.
"Every step we take is important to reduce this terrible death toll."
Cigarette ads have been banned from television and radio under federal law since
1971.
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On the Net:
http://www.oag.state.ny.us
http://www.naag.org