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Cigarette and Tobacco News:SPRINGDALE : Teens cite background in anti-tobacco courseRead complete article: Northwest Arkansas Times, 2009-05-01 Author: TRACIE DUNGAN
Summary: Youngsters run the risk of being considered uncool when trying to convince their peers it's a bad idea to smoke or chew tobacco, but two University of Arkansas freshmen shrugged that off.
In their earlier teen years, Lizette Castillo of Fordyce and Shawn Burns of Texarkana became volunteer anti-tobacco advocates.
Both are 19-year-old minority-group members who grew up in different parts of south Arkansas. Coincidentally, both trained, through separate programs, on the best methods to sway other youth.
The two reflected on their paths Thursday, in-between peer advocacy sessions they taught for seventh- and eighthgraders at The Jones Center for Families in Springdale.
"I don't like to follow the crowd," said the Mexican-born Castillo, who since third grade has spoken English with a Southern twang just like most any other Arkansas-raised girl.
"I was the only Hispanic, for one thing," said Castillo, who graduated as valedictorian of her class from Fordyce High School.
She doesn't think she could have scored the academic accomplishment if she'd followed the popular, partying crowd that favored smoking and drinking, she said.
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Tobacco History: Cigarettes and Literature | The Social History of SmokingGeorge Latimer AppersonChapter 8:Parr was not a model smoker. He was brutally overbearing towards other folk, and would accept no invitation except on the understanding that he might smoke when and where he liked. It was his invariable practice, wherever he might be visiting, to smoke a pipe as soon as he had got out of bed. His biographer says—"The ladies were obliged to bear his tobacco, or to give up his company; and at Hatton (1786-1825) now and then he was the tyrant of the fireside." Parr was capable of smoking twenty pipes in an evening, and described himself as "rolling volcanic fumes of tobacco to the ceiling" while he worked at his desk. At a dinner which was given at Trinity College, Cambridge, to the Duke of Gloucester, as Chancellor of the University, when the cloth was removed, Parr at once started his pipe and began, says one who was present, "blowing a cloud into the faces of his neighbours, much to their annoyance, and causing royalty to sneeze by the stimulating stench of mundungus." It is surprising that people were willing to put up with such bad manners as Parr was accustomed to exhibit; but his reputation was then great, and he traded upon it.
Read More | The Social History of SmokingGeorge Latimer AppersonChapter 11:Sidgwick's praise of tobacco, classically draped in Greek verse, occasionally of the macaronic order, is delightful. He hails the pipe as the work of Pan, and the divine smoke as the best and most fragrant of gifts-healer of sorrow, companion in joy, rest for the toilers, drink for the thirsty, warmth for the cold, coolness in the heat, and a cheap feast for those who waste away through hunger. How is it, he says, that through so many ages men, who have need of thee, have not seen thy nature? Often, he continues-the verses may be roughly translated-often, when I am in Alpine solitudes, tied in a chain to a few companions, clinging to the rope, while barbarians lead the way, carrying in my hands an ice-axe and breathless crawling up the snow-covered plain-then, when groaning I reach the summit (either pulled up or on foot), how have I rested, on my back on the rocks, charming my soul with thy divine clouds! He goes on in burlesque strain to speak of the joys of tobacco when he lies in idleness by the streams in breathless summer, comforted by a bath just taken, or when in the middle of the night he is worn out by revising endless exercises, underlining the mistakes in red and allotting marks, or weighed down by the wise men of old-Thucydides, Sophocles, Euripides, the ideas of Plato, wiles of Pindar, fearfully corrupt strophe of chorus, wondrous guesses of Teutons and fancies of philologists, when men swoon in the inexplicable wanderings of the endless examination of Homer, when the brain reels among such toil-then he hails the pipe, help of mortals, and hastens to kindle sacrifices at its altars and rejoices as he tastes its smoke. Let some one, he exclaims, bring Bryant and May's fire, which strikes a light only if rubbed on the box-
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