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Philip Morris

'baseball - Dental Group Urges Tobacco Ban by Players'

Date: 11 Jul 1994
Length: 1 page
2050910398A
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Fields

Type
NEWS, NEWS ARTICLE
Attachment
2050910329/2050910415
Area
CORREA,EDELIA/OFFICE
Site
R523
Named Person
Greene, J.
Request
Stmn/R1-093
Document File
2050910163/2050910524/Missing
Named Organization
American Dental Assn
Univ of Ca
Author (Organization)
Reuters
Litigation
Stmn/Produced
Master ID
2050910385/0400
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Date Loaded
05 Jun 1998
UCSF Legacy ID
fci93e00

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them. Boston's Fenway Park will post no tobacco ads after 1995, and Colorado's new Coors Field will also ban the ads. "Baseball-Dental Group Urges Tobacco Ban by Players" Reuters (Q7/1 1/94) The American Dental Association on Monday called for a ban on the use of chewing tobacco and snuff by Major League Baseball players during games. "Without a doubt studies show that snuff and chewing tobacco are culprits in a variety of serious health conditions, including oral, pharyngeal, oesophageal cancer, and periodontal diseases," said John Greene, dean of the University of California School of Dentistry. Greene was the chief researcher in a new study released by the Chicago-based association involving professional baseball players. Many of the players partaking in the study were found to have lesions and other problems during the oral examination, and made serious efforts to quit using tobacco, according to the study results. "Executive Suite: Michael Miles--Unemployed and Loving It" Business Week (7/18/94) P.32; Zinn, Laura Michael A. Miles, late of Philip Morris, is America's most eligible executive. Miles, PM's CEO, called it quits on June 17, facing near- unanimous antagonism from his directors and from former Chairman Hamish Maxwell--who had voted against splitting Philip Morris into food and tobacco units three weeks before. It wasn't the most graceful of exits. Miles won't talk much about Philip Morris or his departure, except to say that "the way it's been played in the press has been pretty accurate. I don't think anything is served by rehashing it at this stage of the game." He has no regrets about pushing to split the company: "I did the best I could. I don't have any second thoughts about the decisions I made." And he denies the rumors that his resignation was forced: "It was my decision, and the timing was mine." Forced or not, Miles now reigns as America's most eligible executive. Headhunters and food and tobacco industry insiders say Miles could be a candidate for a top position at H. J. Heinz, PepsiCo, Proctor & Gamble, and Pet Inc. Miles calls such talk "wild rumors," and says he won't start pursuing employment until September 1, and then feels "I think I ought to stick to something I know something about, which is consumer packaged goods and restaurants." Friends have suggested he put up some of this own capital--he owns, among other assets, 86,267 shares of Philip Morris stock, worth roughly $4.5 million--and join an investment firm. Miles hasn't entirely ruled that out. When asked about General Motors, which recently announced it is looking for a new marketing chief, Miles responded, "I don't want to talk about that. That is strictly a ~05091039~ I

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