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HARVARD GAZETTE ARCHIVES
HSPH awards attorneys general for anti-tobacco fightHSPH will also honor the scientist who established the link between passive smoke and lung cancer in nonsmokers. The Richmond Award recognizes individuals who carry forth the vision of former U.S. Surgeon General Julius B. Richmond, the John D. Macarthur Professor of Health Policy and Management, who provided innovative leadership to protect the most vulnerable populations and was the first national director of the Head Start Program.
Among the Richmond honorees are former Mississippi Attorney General Mike Moore, who, in 1994, filed the first lawsuit by a state against the tobacco companies; Washington Attorney General Christine Gregoire and former Massachusetts Attorney General Scott Harshbarger, who played key national leadership roles; and Matthew Myers of the National Center for Tobacco Free Kids, who played a pivotal advisory role. Ultimately, 46 states jointly settled lawsuits with the four largest tobacco companies, and four other states settled separately. Also receiving a Richmond Award is Dimitrios Trichopoulos, the Vincent L. Gregory Professor of Cancer Prevention at HSPH, who published a groundbreaking study demonstrating that passive smoke was associated with increased lung cancer risk in nonsmokers.
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