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Monday, April 29, 2013
Monday, April 22, 2013
Pall Mall Cigarettes Brand History
The world’s first-ever king-sized (85 mm) non-filtered cigarette was introduced in 1939 by the American Tobacco Company, a brand extension to the regular-sized Pall Mall which was introduced forty years earlier by Brand Pall Mall (Butler & Butler / A.T.C.) Today, Pall Mall "Famous Cigarettes" remain synonymous with quality. Filtered Pall Mall cigarettes have a smooth strong taste and are packed very tightly with tobacco making them burn slower and last longer than most other major brands. The consumer is paying less than premium price, but gets a longer smoke with a soft, pleasant taste and that is the key to the Pall Mall brand's success.
Pall Mall Non-Filter is still made today. Filtered versions of Pall Mall have come and gone, beginning in 1966 with the introduction of Pall Mall Gold (the world’s first 100 mm cigarette). Filtered Pall Mall was relaunched in the United States in the early 2000s, and are still available. BAT produces Pall Mall and also Lucky Strike Click & Roll cigarettes and Dunhill Fine cut Black cigarettes.
Thursday, April 11, 2013
Turns Out Teens Know Smoking Kills, but They Don’t Know Jack About Weed
With medical marijuana
legalized in 18 states, and two states—Colorado and Washington
state—recently legalizing small amounts of marijuana for personal use,
there’s a good chance that teens assume marijuana is safe, says Arthur
Dean, chairman and chief executive of Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of
America. “The perception of harm among young people is being
significantly eroded,” he says. Similarly, says Dean, teens are less
likely to think their parents and other people in their lives disapprove
of pot use.
Monday, April 8, 2013
Tobacco Association of Macedonia: actively cultivate high yield and quality of oriental tobacco
Tobacco Association of Macedonia: actively cultivate high yield and quality of oriental tobacco
The past 20 years, researchers of the Tobacco Association of Macedonia is committed to tobacco breeding work, constantly looking for the yield per mu higher, better quality oriental tobacco, and ultimately breed improved Prilep (Prilep) series of oriental tobacco seeds, and to be recognized. Among them, "Prilep 66-9/7" higher yield per mu, with a typical representative.
As a high-quality high-yielding varieties, "Prilep 66-9/7" officially recognized in 2004. According to rough estimates, in 2010, a series of oriental tobacco grown in Macedonia, Prilep, with its output accounting for 70% of the total output - 80%. Compared with the existing tobacco varieties in Macedonia, Prilep 66-9/7 yield significantly higher, suitable for large-scale commercial cultivation, to produce a standard of quality leaf.
The Prilep 66-9/7 cultivation began in 1992. The researchers used a high-yield, high aroma of hybrid seeds and seeds with good quality, according to their biological properties, several laboratory studies, field trials and improvements, and ultimately breed now this can frost-resistant mold varieties of the disease and other diseases.
As the growth and changes in environmental conditions, "Prilep 66-9/7" of tobacco plants to grow into an average stem height between 65-75 cm. Compared with other tobacco varieties, tobacco stems smaller but very strong. Leaves an average of 52 evenly distributed on the tobacco plant. Larger leaves Ye Changping are 18-22 cm in the middle of leaf, leaf length 16 cm - 18 cm, and the top of the leaves, leaf length of 8 cm - 10 cm.
"Prilep 66-9/7" suitable for planting in loose, breathable, good drained soil, even less nutritional elements in the soil.
The past 20 years, researchers of the Tobacco Association of Macedonia is committed to tobacco breeding work, constantly looking for the yield per mu higher, better quality oriental tobacco, and ultimately breed improved Prilep (Prilep) series of oriental tobacco seeds, and to be recognized. Among them, "Prilep 66-9/7" higher yield per mu, with a typical representative.
As a high-quality high-yielding varieties, "Prilep 66-9/7" officially recognized in 2004. According to rough estimates, in 2010, a series of oriental tobacco grown in Macedonia, Prilep, with its output accounting for 70% of the total output - 80%. Compared with the existing tobacco varieties in Macedonia, Prilep 66-9/7 yield significantly higher, suitable for large-scale commercial cultivation, to produce a standard of quality leaf.
The Prilep 66-9/7 cultivation began in 1992. The researchers used a high-yield, high aroma of hybrid seeds and seeds with good quality, according to their biological properties, several laboratory studies, field trials and improvements, and ultimately breed now this can frost-resistant mold varieties of the disease and other diseases.
As the growth and changes in environmental conditions, "Prilep 66-9/7" of tobacco plants to grow into an average stem height between 65-75 cm. Compared with other tobacco varieties, tobacco stems smaller but very strong. Leaves an average of 52 evenly distributed on the tobacco plant. Larger leaves Ye Changping are 18-22 cm in the middle of leaf, leaf length 16 cm - 18 cm, and the top of the leaves, leaf length of 8 cm - 10 cm.
"Prilep 66-9/7" suitable for planting in loose, breathable, good drained soil, even less nutritional elements in the soil.
RJ Reynolds Tobacco Company in 2011 market share shrinking
RJ Reynolds Tobacco Company in 2011 market share shrinking
Reynolds American Inc., parent company of RJ Reynolds RJ Reynolds Tobacco Company is due to a 7.4% drop in cigarette shipments in the fourth quarter, the company's market share shrunk by 1.1 percentage points to 27%.
February 8, Renault said in a statement: "cigarette sales in the fourth quarter by some negative effects, such as a competitive product line extension to promote, the timing of the company's promotional activities, as well as from the company since brands in the decision to withdraw.
" For the full year 2011, the company's market share fell 0.3 percentage points to 27.3%.\
" For the full year 2011, the company's market share fell 0.3 percentage points to 27.3%.\
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
Bloomberg Wants Retailers To Keep Tobacco Products Out Of Sight
First supersized soda, now cigarettes: Under New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg's new plan, retailers in the city would have to keep tobacco products out of sight. The goal, he says, is to curb the rate of youth smoking.
The measure would make New York the first city in the nation to keep tobacco products out of sight in stores.
Here's more from Monday's news release announcing the proposal:
"Under the new legislation, sellers would be required to keep tobacco products out of sight, except during a purchase by an adult consumer or during restocking: tobacco products would be required to be kept in cabinets, drawers, under the counter, behind a curtain or in any other concealed location."
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Best info about cigarettes click here.
Tuesday, February 26, 2013
EU urged to press ahead with tobacco crackdown amid lobbying scandal
Leading doctors are calling on the government to lean on the European commission to press ahead with the promised tough new tobacco products directive, in spite of the resignation of the EU health commissioner and a growing scandal in Brussels around alleged tobacco industry influence.
The commissioner John Dalli has revealed that he was forced to resign by the European commission president, José Manuel Barroso, following an investigation by the EU anti-fraud office Olaf into a complaint by a Swedish tobacco company. Swedish Match, which makes the smokeless tobacco product "snus", which is banned in the EU, alleged that a compatriot of Dalli's had offered to arrange meetings with the commissioner for money. Dalli denied meeting any lobbyist and said that the Maltese entrepreneur Silvio Zammit had been approached by the company. No money had changed hands.
Dalli has consistently denied any knowledge of the payment requests and has threatened legal action over how the case was handled. Olaf said it had no proof that he was behind the requests. Zammit has also denied any wrongdoing.
In a letter to the Guardian on Friday, Sir Richard Thompson, president of the Royal College of Physicians, Dr Lindsey Davies, the president of the Faculty of Public Health, and Dr Clare Gerada, chair of council of the Royal College of General Practitioners, call on the government to use its influence with Brussels amid concern that delays in appointing a new health commissioner could in effect kill the tobacco products directive, which may not get approval before new elections in 2014.
"The directive seeks to tackle head-on the industry's attempts to enlist young people as smokers by introducing graphic warnings and banning flavouring and other enhancements," says the letter.
"It would also extend the ban on smokeless tobacco 'snus' to e-cigarettes and includes the possibility of requiring plain packaging.
"We call on the UK government to encourage the European commission to support the directive's continued progress rather than blocking it in the wake of recent developments."
In an article in the Lancet published on Thursday, experts say that delaying the directive would be a victory for the tobacco industry at the expense of public health and would raise serious questions about EU decision-making that would need to be investigated.
Women who quit smoking before 30 cut risk of tobacco-related death by 97%
Women who smoke into middle-age have three times the death rate of non-smokers and risk dying at least 10 years early, according to a definitive study of the effects of tobacco in more than a million women in the UK.
The good news, according to the study by a team of Oxford University researchers led by Sir Richard Peto, is that giving up cigarettes before the age of 40 reduces a woman's risk of smoking-related death by 90%. Quitting by 30 reduces it by 97%.
The study, published by the Lancet a day before the 100th anniversary of the birth of Sir Richard Doll, who first established the link between smoking and lung cancer, shows conclusively for the first time that the disastrous effects of smoking for men are no different for women.
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