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| | | | Cigarette and Tobacco News:EDITORIAL: Clerks must be accountableRead complete article: Muskogeephoenix.com (OK), 2009-05-08
Review: If Oklahoma wants to curb sales of tobacco products to minors, then clerks have to be held accountable.
Commissioner Terri White of the state Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services warned on Wednesday that Oklahoma was in danger of losing about $7 million, or 40 percent, of federal substance abuse funds. The funds would not be given to the state if more than 20 percent of the state's retail stores are cited for selling tobacco to minors.
In 2008, 18.1 percent of retailers were found to have sold to minors, and state officials fear the number is rising.
As long as clerks aren't directly affected, they will continue to be sloppy or indifferent at their jobs.
Some may say the clerks may end up being fired for selling to minors, but if the job doesn't mean that much to clerks and they can move to other stores, they won't be conscientious workers.
Clerks who sell to minors should face fines for selling tobacco to minors.
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| | | Black Hawk State Trivia and Facts:Tahlequah, Oklahoma is the Tribal capital of the Cherokee Nation. |
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| |  | | Tobacco History: Cigarettes and Literature | The Social History of SmokingGeorge Latimer AppersonChapter 8:Another famous parson, the Rev. John Newton, was a smoker, and so was Cowper's other clerical friend, that learned and able Dissenter, the Rev. William Bull, whose whole mien and bearing were so dignified that on two occasions he was mistaken for a bishop. Cowper appreciated snuff, but did not care for smoking, and when he wrote to Unwin, describing his new-made friend in terms of admiration, he concluded—"Such a man is Mr. Bull. But—he smokes tobacco. Nothing is perfection 'Nihil est ab omni parte beatum.'" Bull, however, was not excessive in his smoking, for his daily allowance was but three pipes. In his garden at Newport Pagnell, Bull showed Cowper a nook in which he had placed a bench, where he said he found it very refreshing to smoke his pipe and meditate. "Here he sits," wrote Cowper, "with his back against one brick wall, and his nose against another, which must, you know, be very refreshing, and greatly assist meditation."
Read More | The Social History of Smoking
George Latimer Apperson
Chapter 2:
In the afternoon the gallant might attend what Dekker calls a "Tobacco-ordinary," by which may possibly have been meant a smoking-club, or, more probably, the gathering after dinner at one of the many ordinaries in the neighbourhood of St. Paul's Cathedral of "tobacconists," as smokers were then called, to discuss the merits of their respective pipes, and of the various kinds of tobacco—"whether your Cane or your Pudding be sweetest."
Of course he often bragged, like Julio in Day's "Law Trickes": "Tobacco? the best in Europe, 't cost me ten Crownes an ounce, by this vapour."
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