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Word: tobacco (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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...half percent of its annual profit for the next 25 years. In addition, the states are entitled to divide two and a half percent of Liggett's yearly profits to compensate future Medicaid costs, and annual payments to cover state medical expenses already incurred. Another five percent of the tobacco company's income is to be pooled ready for other states needing Medicaid reimbursement. Maryland is already preparing such a suit. The first check from Liggett is scheduled to arrive this week. TIME's Elaine Shannon says "The state lawsuits are using 'good Samaritan arguments', saying simply that they didn...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Liggett Group Agrees to Another Multi-Million Dollar Settlement | 3/15/1996 | See Source »

THERE ARE TWO JEFFREY WIGANDS. ONE IS the grave, embattled, righteous man millions of viewers watched on 60 Minutes last month as he offered up potentially devastating inside information about the machinations of his former employer, tobacco giant Brown & Williamson. Then there is the somewhat antic teacher his high school students know and love. One day recently he was darting about the dingy science classroom at DuPont Manual High School in Louisville, Kentucky, like a gnome on triple espresso, questioning and wisecracking in his rapid-fire Bronx rasp as 30 ninth-grade advanced physical-science students went over results...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: JEFFREY WIGAND DOESN'T LIVE HERE ANYMORE | 3/11/1996 | See Source »

...said, 'Hell, I don't want this,'" Wigand recalls. "But my little girl Rachel, she likes to open mail. She said, 'Open this.' So I opened it. I almost dropped." Lucretia Wigand says through her lawyer that "the notoriety of the claims and counterclaims between Dr. Wigand and the tobacco industry have caused tremendous stress to the family." Wigand now lives in a bare bachelor apartment, while his two daughters, Rachel, 9, who has spina bifida and requires expensive daily medical treatments, and Nicole, 7, remain with their mother. Lucretia's job at a Louisville department store offers adequate medical...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: JEFFREY WIGAND DOESN'T LIVE HERE ANYMORE | 3/11/1996 | See Source »

TAKE A PUFF OF TOBACCO, AND A BLAST OF 4,000 CHEMICALS fills your lungs, blood and brain. The smoke delivers a strong hit--about 2 mg in each cigarette--of nicotine, a compound the U.S. Surgeon General in 1988 deemed an addictive drug. But is nicotine alone what hooks people on tobacco? Apparently not. According to a new report, smoking may exert yet another powerfully addictive influence, one that enhances the effect of nicotine in what a leading researcher calls a "diabolical synergism...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: HOW SMOKERS GET HOOKED | 3/11/1996 | See Source »

ELAINE SHANNON says persuading tobacco-industry tattler and 60 Minutes star Jeffrey Wigand to talk to TIME was like "skiing a double black diamond run." The former Brown & Williamson exec is under a court order not to discuss his years in the nicotine business. "But he could talk about his decision to play David to Big Tobacco's Goliath." Shannon, a Washington bureau correspondent who has covered "nearly every Washington scandal since Watergate," won Wigand over with the persistence and honesty that have marked her 27 years as a reporter. "You're very direct," a DEA agent once told...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BEHIND THE SCENES | 3/11/1996 | See Source »

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