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9
Things You Can Do
To Make Your World Smoke-Free!
Like
Justin and Eric in North Dakota, you can make
your school smoke-free. |
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As we've seen, cigarette companies try to link tobacco
with athletics.
You can show that smoking and sports don't mix by writing
a letter to the
owners of your local sports teams, asking them to make
the stadium free
of tobacco ads. Many pro teams are already taking action---like
the
Baltimore Orioles, Colorado Rockies, Seattle Seahawks,
Houston Rockets, and Minnesota Vikings. These teams don't
allow any tobacco advertising in their stadiums.
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Write a letter to your favorite restaurant, asking them
to go completely smoke-free. (Having a separate
nonsmoking section does not eliminate your exposure to
secondhand smoke. Just like you can't put chlorine in
half of a swimming pool, you can't keep smoke in half of
a room.) Tell them that when the air in their restaurant
is clean, their food will taste better---and that you'll
come back and bring your friends!
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Try this project: In Lincolnwood, Illinois, students took
a survey of local businesses. Then they used the school
newspaper to encourage kids to shop at stores that didn't
sell cigarettes.
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Promise you'll never, ever smoke. In Minnesota, kids
called Body Guards get members of their families (and
other people in the community) to sign a pledge saying
they'll be tobacco-free. Of course the kids sign the
pledge too!
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Paint posters to encourage younger kids not to smoke.
With your teacher's permission, plaster them all over
your classroom, library, or cafeteria.
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Kids who are too young to buy cigarettes from a store
often turn to vending machines. It's illegal, but usually
they get away with it. So talk to your town board or city
council about banning vending machines in your area. Many
towns are already doing it---and in places like Perth
Amboy, New Jersey, it's kids who are leading the way.
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Send a letter to your local newspaper---the more people
that know about the dangers of smoking, the better. After
his mom died of lung cancer, Wiley Seigler of New Mexico
wrote the Albuquerque Journal. Surely everyone who
read Wiley's sad letter thought twice before lighting up
a cigarette.
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If you already smoke, quit! Here are some people who can
help you---or a friend---kick the habit. Call for more
information---or ask how you can volunteer.
American Lung Association
1-800-586-4872
(1-800-LUNG-USA)
American Heart Association
1-800-242-8721
(1-800-AHA-USA1)
American Cancer Society
1-800-227-2345
(1-800-ACS-2345)
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Office on Smoking and Health
1-800-232-1311
(1-800-CDC-1311)
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