Pubdate: Wed, 3 Sep 1997 Source: Reuter Koop tells Clinton to ``stay tough'' on tobacco WEST TISBURY, Mass. (Reuter) Former U.S. Surgeon General C. Everett Koop urged President Clinton on Sunday to be tough with tobacco companies in any settlement of classaction lawsuits against the tobacco industry. ``I encouraged him to stay tough on tobacco,'' Koop, a leading tobacco critic, said. ``The look in his eye said he's going to stay tough.'' The two men had a brief, impromptu meeting at Alley's General Store on the resort island of Martha's Vineyard. Clinton had stopped by to buy coffee, blueberry muffins and peaches. Koop, surgeon general under Republican presidents Ronald Reagan and George Bush, strolled over after leaving a nearby church and was taken in to meet Clinton. Presidential aide Bruce Lindsey said the meeting had not been planned. Clinton has yet to adopt a final position on the landmark $368.5 billion settlement reached in June by tobacco firms and state attorneys general. The agreement is subject to congressional approval. In July, Koop and David Kessler, a former head of the Food and Drug Administration, urged Congress to start afresh in crafting a national tobacco control policy. They said the tobacco settlement in its current form was ``flawed'' and would do little to combat smoking. A White House official said earlier in August that Clinton would demand that tobacco companies boost the proposed settlement by at least $50 billion to offset a special industry tax break. Under the settlement, tobacco companies agreed to pay billions of dollars to settle smokingrelated lawsuits brought by individuals and states. They also agreed to drastic curbs on their advertising and marketing and the payment of cash penalties if they failed to meet targets for reducing youth smoking. In exchange, they would be protected from certain categories of lawsuits.