NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Loews Corporation (NYSE: LTR; CG) will report its third quarter 2006 earnings for both the Company and its Carolina Group on Tuesday, October 31, 2006. A conference call for analysts and investors will begin at 11:00 a.m. EST and will be hosted by Loews Corporation's chief executive officer, James Tisch, and chief financial officer, Peter Keegan.
The news release and a live webcast will be available online at the Loews Corporation tobacco website.
Those interested in participating in the question and answer portion of the conference call should dial 877-692-2592, or for international callers, 973-582-2757.
Following the call, a replay will be available at cigarettes site.The telephone replay will be available through November 7, 2006 and requires the passcode.
Loews Corporation, a holding company, is one of the largest diversified financial corporations in the United States. Its principal subsidiaries are CNA Financial Corporation (NYSE: CNA - News), Lorillard, Inc., Boardwalk Pipeline Partners, LP (NYSE: BWP - News), Diamond Offshore Drilling, Inc. (NYSE: DO - News), Loews Hotels and Bulova Corporation.
Contact:
Loews Corporation
Peter W. Keegan, Senior Vice President, 212-521-2950
Investor Relations:
Darren Daugherty, 212-521-2788
Candace Leeds, V. P. of Public Affairs, 212-521-2416
Online cigarettes store, according to the survey.
When the clerk asked for identification to verify his age, the man attempted to grab the cigarettes, according to a Lancaster police report.
The Government, on its part, is grappling with enforcing the Cigarettes and Other Tobacco Products (Provision of Advertisements, Regulation of Production Supply, Distribution, Commercial and Trade) Act 2003', and said that such notices were being sent out to "violators" in both print and audio-visual media asking them not only to desist from violating the law in future, but also provide details of measures taken to avoid such violations.
"It's one thing to see a [lung] disease that was already diagnosed, but another to see changes that no one predicted were there," says lead author Sean Fain, a UW-Madison assistant professor of medical physics. "This approach allows us to look at lung micro-structures that are on the scale of less than a millimeter."
Young teens who smoked just one Marlboro at the age of 11 were twice as likely to take up smoking within the next few years as their peers who resisted the urge, the study shows. This was despite not having smoked in the intervening period.
The researchers base their findings on annual surveys of almost 6000 eleven to 16 year olds attending 36 representative schools across South London, and measurements of salivary cotinine, a biochemical indicator of nicotine intake.
Sources in national broadcaster Doordarshan (DD) said the channel was forced not to bid for rights to telecast this year's Formula One Racing event as it would have meant showing the sponsor - a major international tobacco player - on the players' T-shirts, on the cars and all across the venue of the race.
In 2004, 14% of 11 year olds and 62% of 15 year olds in England said they had experimented with cigarettes .
However, senior officials in the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (I&B) said every television channel "should, at all costs, conform to the law of the land in which it is telecasting its programmes. Indian laws have completely banned advertising by cigarettes ;having dull skin and hair, and yellowed nails; and being out of shape and breathless.
The tobacco companies insist they are not targeting teens but many of the magazines carrying tobacco advertising do appeal to young people. And who, young or old, can ignore all those posters at the convenience store? Keep in mind also that Arkansas has the highest rate of teen smoking in the nation.
The cashier said the man asked for two cartons of cigarettes .she placed them on the counter and began to ring them up, the man reached across the counter and grabbed the cigarettes to take them.
The cashier said she held onto the cigarettes and a struggle occurred.
During the struggle, the cashier said she was struck in the face.
The cashier told officers she was able to bite the suspect, possibly on the hand, during the attack.
The robber took the cigarettes and ran out of the gas station, heading north and disappearing into a nearby apartment complex.
The nation's largest cigarettes maker is disputing a study by the Massachusetts Department of Public Health that found nicotine in cigarettes has risen about 10 percent in the past six years.
Durazzo points out that while severe, such a strategy might be effective because among alcoholics, "cigarettes and alcohol tend to go together. One may elicit cravings for the other. So if you are able to give up both at the same time, it may increase your chances of staying sober, because you don't have one substance serving as a trigger for use of the other."
Representatives from Philip Morris Philippines Inc., manufacturer of Marlboro cigarettes, confirmed after a series of laboratory testing, that the confiscated cigarettes are fake.
The locus on chromosome four involves a cluster of roughly 200 genes, including some that are involved in alcohol metabolism. But saying there's a propensity for alcoholism behavior based on that chromosome location would not be very predictive, in part because it remains unknown exactly which genes or combination of genes play a role in this behavioral effect, Wilhelmsen said.
The study also found the three most popular cigarettes brands with young smokers - Marlboro , Newport and Camel - delivered significantly more nicotine than they did years ago.
A detailed questionnaire was used to search for alcohol-related behavioral traits, or phenotypes, shared within each family. Questions concerned the quantity of alcohol consumed, such as the number of alcohol drinks per month for six consecutive months and the number of alcohol of drinks consumed in a typical week and typical day.
Tobacco companies invited EPA officials to view a series of emissions tests to persuade them that a 500-foot buffer zone was not needed around fumigated warehouses. The UCSF researchers cite a Phillip Morris email to show that PM experts knew that the test methodology was flawed and the results would show no emissions problems. The PM employee wrote, "...the test plan and methods will provide, literally, no information, so it won't hurt us to do it."
A coalition of phosphine users, including tobacco companies, hired Sciences International, a private company headed by Elizabeth Anderson, a former EPA director, to prepare a report challenging the EPA's plan to impose stricter exposure limits for workers and the community. Anderson obtained additional funding from the coalition to publish the consultant report in Risk Analysis.
"This shows that the tobacco industry's influence on our nation's health extends far beyond policies directly concerned with smoking or cigarettes said Ruth Malone, RN, PhD, associate professor in the UCSF School of Nursing and senior author on the study.
Donna Rheaume, a spokeswoman for the Department of Public Health, defended the report, which concluded that the higher nicotine levels made it easier to get hooked on cigarettes and harder to quit.
The tobacco companies are appealing the ruling and have asked for a stay of Kessler's order while they pursue that appeal.
Wallace pointed out that the flavored exotic blends are premium-priced, and sell for upward of $7 a pack in some parts of the country. She also said all cigarettes - except two that advertise themselves as "additive-free" - contain flavorings and said the new Camel blends follow that trend.
Debate exists on how many cancer deaths are preventable in principle-estimates range from 50 percent to 80 percent-but most researchers agree that tobacco use (mostly smoking) accounts for the majority. Today, Camel smoking claims about 438,000 premature deaths in the U.S. annually. It is responsible for up to one-third of all cancer deaths and accounts for 20 percent of annual U.S. mortality due to all causes, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention."
Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., did not vote on the amendment July 15 due to an injury he suffered in a July 3 motorcycle accident, but his press secretary said he supports the amendment.
Two facts about smokers rivet cancer researchers: the notion that not everyone who tries cigarettes becomes addicted, and the knowledge that only a fraction of long-term smokers (about 15 percent) will develop lung cancer, although tobacco also is responsible for one-third of all cardiovascular deaths under age 85.
Differences also are likely between smokers in their physiological responses-how their bodies vary in susceptibility to the cancer-causing compounds in cigarettes -which implies that agents might be designed that help prevent cancer from developing or treat it more.
Donna Rheaume, a spokeswoman for the Department of Public Health, defended the report, which concluded that the higher nicotine levels made it easier to get hooked on cigarettes effectively if it does. To explore these topics, other teams of researchers in the Department of Epidemiology and the Department of Clinical Cancer Prevention are working together.
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