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© 2006
CoxCom, Inc.
d/b/a Cox Communications Phoenix.
All rights reserved. |
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My Voice. My Choice: Just
Once. |
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Gruesome, yes. Factual, yes. The
stories and the realities are frightening. The
bottom line is there are few things known to man
that can trigger a nearly unstoppable downward
spiral, like METH.
Cox Communications in partnership
with the Scottsdale Unified School District,
Northeast Valley Coalition Against Methamphetamine,
Partnership for a Drug Free America and SCF Arizona
present “My Voice. My Choice: Just Once.”
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Rebroadcasts:
Wednesday, March 12th 7:00p-8:00p
Friday, March 14th 7:00p-8:00p
Friday, March 21st 8:30p-9:30p
Saturday, April 14th 5:30p-6:30p
Friday, April 11th 7:00p-8:00p |
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Get the latest
news about teens’
and children’s issues |
Cox
Communications recently hosted a youth summit
addressing the dangers of methamphetamine use for
local students, educators and parents and created a
one-hour program titled: My Voice. My Choice: Just
Once. |

View the
introductory video for the show by clicking here.
(recommended for hi-speed users only) |
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The show features
interviews with local Arizona students and experts.
Mark your calendar and tune in to My Voice. My
Choice: Just Once Wednesday, November 28 at 7:00
p.m.
Adults
Click Here for our online poll
Teens
Click Here for our online poll
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Learn
more, watch more, care more. Click the image to
visit the Connect With Kits/Coz7-AZ page. You'll
find plenty of additional information, videos,
helpful dialog and advice.
Click Here |
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The “Just Once” show features the stories of
three very different kids whose lives have been impacted by
Crystal Methamphetamine. The kids featured include:
Jamie, a 19-year old former honor
student who tried meth at the beginning of her senior year
in high school, became addicted almost instantly and dropped
out of school after being jailed on meth possession charges.
Mike tried meth for the first time
during a freshman art class. Mike was blinded in an
explosion of a homemade lab he was using to make the drug.
Meghan was a casual pot and cocaine
user in high school. When Meghan tried methamphetamine, she
could not control her addiction until she voluntarily
entered rehab. She is a rare success story that has not used
meth for over a year.
Check listings
for additional rebroadcast availability. |
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There are some drugs so
addictive – all it takes is one time for a person to get
hooked. That's what happens with crystal meth addiction. |
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In Just Once
you’ll hear true stories about crystal meth
addiction from kids like yours
Narcotics officer Jason Grellner says it is the
drug that police hate most
Each year, 12 million kids try meth -
and, says officer Grellner, “we don’t have many
success stories of people getting off of it until
their lives are completely ruined.”
See How Families Cope with Crystal
Meth Addiction. The
stories and the realities are frightening. Just Once
is a program every parent should watch with their
child. |
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