dr. tom frieden, the director of the centers for disease control and prevention, to come and tell us about the cdc's tip from smokers, from former smokers campaign. dr. frieden? [applause] thank you very much, surgeon general benjamin. thanks also to the department of health and human services, and secretary kathleen sebelius have been real leaders, effectively pushing tobacco control onto the agenda and moving us forward through the fda and to many other means to reduce tobacco use in the u.s. i'm here as a director of centers for disease control and prevention, the nation prevention agency. i'm also here as a doctor, and when i think about smoking, i think of the patients i have cared for with emphysema, gasping for every breath. the patients i cared for who didn't live to see their children graduate from high school, college. patients i have cared for who had strokes or heart attacks and been unable to go back to the life they were previously leading. and the people who develop cancer, and died from it, or had to go through painful and difficult treatment. that's the real story of smoki