8000 pages of documents
- the complete archive is available at the Galen II site.
Sir Charles Ellis: a top researcher for the British-American Tobacco Co.
in London. Sir Charles held patents for Ariel, a virtually smoke-free cigarette
that was never marketed.
Edward Finch: held variously the posts of president, chairman of the board
and chief executive officer of Brown & Williamson from 1964 well into
the seventies.
Dr. S.J. Green: head of research for BAT in the mid-sixties. A life-long
advocate of safer cigarettes who ultimately broke with the industry over
the health issue. [See
document 1192.02, especially p.1]
Dr. Robert B. Griffith: director of research for B&W 1964 through 1969
and also a profound believer in the safe cigarette project.
Earl Kohnhorst: vice-president of research and development at B&W in
the mid and late-eighties.
C. I. McCarty: Chairman and chief operating officer for public relations
at B&W beginning in 1977.
Ernest Pepples: B&W's general counsel and a senior vice-president throughout
the eighties.
Robert A. Sanford: a researcher and technical manager at B&W in the
late sixties, became director of research and development in 1976 and vice-president
of research and development in 1980.
J. Kendrick Wells III: assistant general counsel at B&W in the eighties,
and still a senior executive at B&W.
Addison Yeaman: general counsel from 1959 until 1969, then held various
senior posts until his retirement in 1981.
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