| The Tobacco Reference Guide |
| by David Moyer, MD. |
| Chapter 41 Personalities, celebrities, and "famous deaths" |
| globalink (artefact pour saut de ligne) |
| Jesse Owens promoted Chesterfields in TV ads in the late 1960's. |
| Cancer Wars, PBS television, 1998 |
| tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour saut |
| Frank Sinatra was buried with some of his favorite things, including a bottle of Jack Daniels whiskey and a pack of Camels. |
| May 24, 1998 media report |
| tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour saut |
| Football icon Charlie Connerly of the New York Giants was the first Marlboro Man. |
| Frontline, PBS television, May 1998 |
| tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour saut |
| Ex-Beatle George Harrison gave up smoking in 1997 after being treated with surgery |
| and radiation for throat cancer. He was pronounced disease-free after a 1998 follow up at the Mayo Clinic. |
| Associated Press, June 29, 1998 |
| tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour saut |
| The deaths of Presidents LBJ and FDR were related to smoking. |
| Tobacco Control, Winter 1994, p. 305 |
| tobacco reference guideg (artefact pour saut |
| Vice President Al Gore's sister, Nancy Gore Hunger, died of lung cancer in 1984 at age 46. |
| US News and World Report, August 21, 1995, p. 15 |
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| Page 3 of 8 |
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