41111111111111111111111111111.111111111110. HEALTH & FITNESS wellness sports Smoking Ban Up In Smoke Bowler's 300 Game Part Of 22-Bagger S econdhand smoke Protection Agency (EPA) is a serious health estimates the cost risk that affects savings of eliminating anyone who secondhand smoke in breathes it in. It contains the workplace to be more than 40 cancer-caus- between $35 and $66 ing agents and many other billion a year. toxins, including formal- While 34 states have dehyde, cyanide, carbon adopted some type monoxide and arsenic. of workplace smoking The effects of secondhand ban, Michigan has not. Sharon smoke should not be under- Smoking-ban advocates Milberger, estimated. Did you know: have been trying to get a Ph.D. • Secondhand smoke is measure passed into law Columnist the third-leading prevent- in Michigan for about a able cause of death. decade. • Nonsmokers who are exposed In 2007, the House passed a workplace smoking ban that includ- to secondhand smoke increase their risk for heart disease and lung can- ed exemptions for casinos, smoke cer by 20-30 percent. shops and a few other businesses. In 2008, the Senate passed a com- • Breathing secondhand smoke has immediate harmful effects on plete workplace smoking ban with no exemptions, leaving some critics the cardiovascular system that can increase the risk of speculating that this heart attack. support of a pure • Secondhand ban was disingenu- smoke causes sud- ous and was done den infant death knowing that this syndrome (SIDS), version would never acute respira- become law. tory infections, ear Current state problems and more law won't change frequent and severe unless both cham- asthma attacks in bers agree on the children. same version of • There is no safe legislation. Unable level of secondhand to reach a final smoke exposure — compromise for even brief exposure smoke-free air in can be dangerous. Michigan, the state The 2006 U.S. Surgeon General's Legislature wrapped up its lame- report stated the only governmental duck session last month and the regulatory approach to protect con- proposed legislation died. sumers and employees from deadly Smoking ban proponents will con- exposure to secondhand smoke is tinue to fight for smoke-free air in through comprehensive, smoke-free 2009. Advocates of the ban will need workplace policies. Research shows to start over and pursue a return to that eliminating secondhand smoke the Legislature. It is also possible in the workplace reduces premature supporters will try to put a smoking deaths and tobacco-related illness- ban proposal on the 2010 ballot if the es. It also shows that smoke-free air Legislature doesn't act first. ordinances have no negative effect A new Legislature convenes this on restaurant or bar sales. month. Hopefully, its members will By creating a smoke-free work finally make Michigan's health a pri- ority. i I environment, business owners elimi- nate a variety of associated costs, including higher health, life, and fire Sharon Milberger, Ph.D., is interim director insurance premiums, higher worker of Henry Ford Health System's Center for absenteeism, lower work productiv- Health Promotion and Disease Prevention ity and higher worker compensa- in Detroit. Her e-mail address: tion payments. The Environmental smilberl@hfhs.org. Eliminating secondhand smoke in the workplace reduces premature deaths and tobacco- related illnesses. A28 January 29 • 2009 Steve Stein Special to the Jewish News R oiling a 300 game is a memo- rable occasion for any bowler. Ryan Lash's two perfect games have been particularly memorable. The 29-year-old Commerce Township resident's latest 300 was rolled Jan. 8 in the B'nai B'rith Pisgah League at Country Lanes in Farmington Hills. His wife, Samantha, was in the house, as Ryan Lash always. Exactly one week later — Jan. 15 — she gave birth to the couple's first child, Jaden, at Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak. Lash's first 300 was achieved Dec. 26, 2007, while he was substituting for a bowler on his father Jerry Lash's team in a league at 700 Bowl in South Lyon. That was the last time Jerry Lash bowled. He died Oct. 10, 2008, from ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig's Disease. Ryan Lash, who averages 225 in the Pisgah League, had a quite a night on the lanes Jan. 8. The 12 consecu- tive strikes he rolled for his 300 in the second game were part of an amazing stretch of 22 straight strikes. He also threw four in a row to finish the first game and six in a row to start the third game. "All 22 were all pocket hits," he said. "I really wasn't nervous when I came close to getting the 300 game. I just wanted to do it. Did it help that I'd done it previously? Well, maybe." Ryan Lash has been bowling in the Pisgah League for about 10 years. The 1998 West Bloomfield High School graduate is an account executive for Verizon Wireless. both times by winning the Midwest Sectional championship. Joshua, 13, and Laura, 12, have been skating together since 2003. They train at the Detroit Skating Club in Bloomfield Hills under the direction of coaches Jodie Balogh-Tasich and Seth Chafetz. "The kids were very happy with their bronze medal," said Cheryl Leggett, Joshua's mother. "We're not sure if they're going to move up to the novice level next year. If they do, it will be much more challenging for them. It will really raise the bar." Outside of figure skating, Joshua has another important decision facing him. The eighth-grader has been educated by distance schooling since sixth grade. He's currently studying through the California-based Laurel Springs Home School, which offers K-12 classes. If Joshua leaves home schooling and goes to high school next year, he'll attend Walled Lake Northern. Laura is a seventh-grader at Bloomfield Hills Middle School. Joshua and Laura are seeking spon- sorships to help defray their expenses. Sponsorship information can be found on their Web site, www.joshuandlaura.com . From 12th To Third Not Jewish It wasn't as dramatic as a worst-to-first scenario, but it came close. After finishing 12th last year in the U.S. Junior National Championships, the ice dancing team of Joshua Leggett of West Bloomfield and Laura Perry of Bloomfield Hills won a bronze medal for their third-place finish this year. These were the first two years the duo competed in the intermediate divi- sion. They qualified for the nationals Is the new Detroit Lions coach Jewish? Many around town asked that ques- tion after Jim Schwartz accepted the daunting task of rebuilding the NFL's first 0-16 team. Here's the answer: Schwartz is not Jewish. In fact, one of Schwartz's three children is named Christian. — Joshua Leggett and Laura Perry Please send sports news to sports@thejewishnews.corm