| The Tobacco Reference Guide
|
| by David Moyer, MD. |
| Chapter 17 Smokeless Tobacco |
| tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour |
| Smokeless Tobacco: U.S. Tobacco Company |
| globalink (artefact pour saut de ligne) |
| In the six years between 1989 and 1994, UST and the Smokeless Tobacco Council |
| paid a stunning $9.2 million in fees to "state legislative consultants." |
| Washington Monthly, May 1996, p. 22 |
| tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour saut |
| Sean Marsee, an Oklahoma high school track star, started using snuff at age 12 and |
| died of mouth cancer at the age of 19. His family lost a subsequent lawsuit against US |
| Tobacco Co., the manufacturers of Sean's brand Copenhagen. |
| Beat the Smokeless Habit (National Cancer Institute), 1992, p. 6 and Wall Street |
| Journal, May 3, 1990 |
| tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour saut |
| "Don't discuss health issues with anyone." Quote from US Tobacco's college |
| marketing manual. The company distributes free samples through the mail and at |
| sponsored events, but only its low nicotine brands. |
| Tobacco Control, Spring 1995, pp. 76-78 |
| tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour saut |
| 400,000 free samples of Skoal Bandits were distributed in 1985. |
| American Medical News, May 15, 1995, p. 16 |
| tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour saut |
| US Tobacco Company, the nation's largest producer of smokeless tobacco, set up a |
| $100,000 fund to benefit firefighters as part of an aggressive new advertising |
| campaign in Tennessee. The company plans to use publicity surrounding the fund to |
| promote its products, including Copenhagen and Skoal. |
| USA Today, September 15, 1994, p. 3B |
| tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour saut |
| Page 27 of 30 |
| globalink (artefact pour saut de ligne) |
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