Fifty-six-year-old Michael Dreisbach has experienced first-hand the toll tobacco use can take on one's body.  Roughly a month after turning 50, the Pennsylvania native underwent a Laryngectomy, an operation that removes the larynx, or "voice box."  Dreisbach's bout with throat cancer, however, has only made him stronger.  Today, he's employed as a Processing Unit Supervisor with the Wake Co. City Couty Bureua of Identification, located in Raleigh.  He along with his fellow squad members process prisoners, take and compare fingerprints, give suspected impaired drivers intoxilyzer examinations and testify in District and Superior Court.  In his spare time, Dreisbach is an active member of the SAVE (Survivors and Victims of Tobacco Empowerment) organization, a Garner Police Department volunteer, and recently finished his term as president of Triangle Victory Voices at Raleigh's Rex Hospital.  He also serves on the board of directors of the International Association of Laryngectomees (IAL) and is Chairman of the Tobacco Education Committee.