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Tobacco news:
Executive blames media for end of Joe Camel cigarettes
Joe Camel cigarettes - one of the most popular figures in advertising in recent years - was killed by the media, the tobacco executive behind the ad campaign testified Thursday.
The cartoon camel nearly quadrupled Camel's share in some market segments, but constant reports that the campaign was aimed at children did it in, said Lynn Beasley, executive vice president of marketing at R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Camel cigarettes.
"When we talked to adult Camel cigarette smokers, we found that they were beginning to believe it," Beasley testified in a landmark tobacco case in Miami.
Koop ties college-age smoking to Joe Camel
A rise in smoking by college students can be attributed to the effect Joe Camel cigarettes had on children, former Surgeon General C. Everett Koop said. "Kids smoke now more than ever," Koop said in Iowa City on Friday. Koop noted a national study indicated children were more familiar with Joe Camel, an advertising icon for Camel cigarettes, than they were with Mickey Mouse.
"Now they've moved on to college."
The rise in college-age smokers is also a result of doctors' reluctance to use drug therapies to help smokers younger than 20 quit, Koop said. A critic of the tobacco companies' settlement with states, Koop also took aim at the process by which it was achieved.
"Congress is riddled with people who owe a tremendous amount of favor to the tobacco industry," he said. "There was one lobbyist for every two congressmen."

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