| The Tobacco Reference Guide |
| by David Moyer, MD. |
| Chapter 4 History of tobacco in chronological order |
| tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour |
| History of tobacco in chronological order: 1900 |
| globalink (artefact pour saut de ligne) |
| "12 Dogs Develop Lung Cancer in Group of 86 Taught to Smoke" |
| February 6, 1970, front page headline in the New York Times |
| tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour saut |
| Phillip Morris CEO Joseph Cullman in an appearance on "Face the Nation" in 1971 |
| when asked about "invasive lung tumors" in smoking beagles said that this was not |
| the same thing as cancer. When he was asked to comment about a study that found |
| smoking mothers gave birth to smaller babies, he said, "Some women would prefer having smaller babies." |
| Ashes to Ashes, p. 358 |
| tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour saut |
| Partly at the urging of the tobacco companies, President Nixon in 1973 at the |
| beginning of his second term did not reappoint his anti-tobacco Surgeon General |
| Jesse Steinfeld. The post of Surgeon General went unfilled for four years. |
| Ashes to Ashes, p. 367 Arnold Palmer quit smoking in 1975, as did Jack Nicklaus |
| in 1982. |
| tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour saut |
| In 1978, Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare Joseph Califano labeled |
| cigarettes "Public Health Enemy No. 1" and said that their users were committing "slow-motion suicide." |
| Ashes to Ashes, p. 436 |
| tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour saut |
| Two years earlier, Jimmy Carter had appointed a Philip Morris board member as the |
| head of the President's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports. |
| Dying for a Smoke, Pyramid Video, 1993 |
| tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour saut |
| Page 82 of 87 |
| globalink (artefact pour saut de ligne) |
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