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Joe Chemo
No permission required for students and teachers, but
please call or email Adbusters.Org for other usage
Tels (800) 663-1243 or
(604) 736-9401 or
E-mail: info@adbusters.org
Photo 05
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b Kool?
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please call or email Adbusters.Org for other usage
Tels (800) 663-1243 or
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Photo 02
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Patrick Reynolds in his new
video,
The Truth About Tobacco
Patrick's father died from smoking, so Patrick turned
his back on the tobacco company founded by his grandfather. His new
video,
and his live middle and high school assembly programs,
have reached thousands of students. Patrick has become
one of the nation's best known smoke-free advocates, and a top motivational
speaker in tobacco education.
For information, please visit
www.tobaccofree.org/patrick.html.
For permission to reproduce this photo, contact
Visible Light Photography/Mickey Krakowski
visible@gvii.net
Photo 34
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The real Marlboro Country
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please call or email Adbusters.Org for other usage
Tels (800) 663-1243 or
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E-mail: info@adbusters.org
Photo 04
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In BADvertising
Country, artist Bonnie Vierthaler counters the seduction of tobacco
ads by doctoring them up to make them honest.
By juxtaposing silly, gross and disgusting
images on top of tobacco ads, she jolts people into realizing how tobacco
ad imagery is concealing the truth, manipulating young people into tobacco
addiction.
Best of all, at this site you can learn
How to BADvertise yourself, using scissors and glue or computer and
mouse.
Artist Bonnie Vierthaler's email is bv@badvertising.org.
Photo 46
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Exporting death to Asia,
and making it look cool to Chinese
No permission required for students and
teachers, but
please call or email Adbusters.Org for other usage
Tels (800) 663-1243 or
(604) 736-9401 or
E-mail: info@adbusters.org
Photo 36
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No permission required for students and teachers, but
please call or email Adbusters.Org for other usage
Tels (800) 663-1243 or
(604) 736-9401 or
E-mail: info@adbusters.org
Photo 35
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Patrick Reynolds' grandfather R.J.REYNOLDS, who founded
the tobacco company in 1875, began manufacturing Camel cigarettes in 1913.
He died in 1918, of cancer of the pancreas, after a lifetime of chewing
tobacco -- ironically, the same product which established his fortune,
and earlier, his father's, in the tobacco business. Studies have linked
cancer of the pancreas to chewing tobacco. He married
at age 53, and died at age 67, when his eldest son, R.J. Reynolds, Jr.,
was just 12. As a result, R.J. Jr. would never spend much time working
in the tobacco business, nor would any of R.J. Jr.'s 6 sons.
No permission required for this photo.
Photo 32
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Patrick Reynolds giving a talk to
600 3rd to 6th graders
in Portland, Oregon, 1988.
No permission required.
Photo 06
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Patrick Reynolds
No permission required
(Magazine is out of print for over 3 years.)
Photo credit requested: Hara Photo.
Photo 01
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Patrick Reynolds peaking at a middle school.
No permission required.
Photo 08
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Mr. Reynolds answers a question in a
Q&A session at a high school.
No permission required.
Photo 13
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