Health & Fitness RESEARCH Not For Women Only Three guys make breast cancer walk their challenge. Judith Doner Berne Significant Breast Cancer Statistics Special to the Jewish News y ou have to be a little crazy," says Bert Stein. "It's a mission; it's nothing to like," says Morrey Katz. "Morrey's my muse. He pulls me along," says Sye Linovitz. No matter. Because for the past six years, these three close friends have trained and then walked nearly 60 miles to raise money for, and awareness of, breast cancer. They compose one of the few, if not only, all-male teams (the Mavens) in the annual late-summer Michigan Susan G. Komen 3-Day for the Cure walk that this year raised about $5.4 million for breast cancer research. They also are among the oldest par- ticipants: Stein is 77; Katz is 76 (they double dated to the 1951 Detroit Central High School prom) and Linovitz is the baby at 71. "Bert Stein is our second-oldest reg- istered walker in Michigan, Morrey Katz our third oldest and Sye Linovitz our seventh oldest," according to a spokes- woman for the Susan G. Komen 3-Day for the Cure. Although the oldest of the three, Stein, a retired accountant, is also the fastest, always immediately heading to the front of the pack. "It's only because I want to get out of the sun," he insists. "I find a group of women. It's a different pace. No one passes our group. We don't have a lot of joking!' Ahead Of The Pack This year, which all agree was the hot- test, Stein finished second on the first day and 10th on the others. That's from a field of more than 1,800 walkers, of which 8.6 percent were male. While Stein completes each of the two longest days in 61/2 hours, his two bud- dies are content to cruise along more slowly, exchanging conversation and jokes with other walkers. "Morey and I are more social walk- ers," says Linovitz, who retired as a design analysis engineer for Ford Motor Company. "It's one of the few places you can talk about boobs and women will, too." 46 October 14 • 2010 iN • Breast cancer is the most common cancer among American women, except for skin cancers. The chance of developing invasive breast cancer at some time in a woman's life is a little less than 1 in 8 (12 percent). All think we would feel guilty if we didn't do it," says Bert Stein, right, pictured with his high school buddy Morrey Katz, who lost his wife to breast cancer. These three close friends have trained and then walked nearly 60 miles to raise money for, and awareness of, breast cancer. • In 2010, it is estimated that across the United States 207,090 new cases of invasive breast cancer will be diagnosed in women and 1,970 in men; that about 54,010 new cases of carcinoma in situ (CIS) will be diagnosed (CIS is noninvasive and is the earliest form of breast cancer); and that about 39,840 women and about 390 men will die from breast cancer. • Breast cancer is the second- leading cause of cancer death in women, exceeded only by lung cancer. The chance that breast cancer will be responsible for a woman's death is about 1 in 35 (about 3 percent). Death rates from breast cancer have been declining since about 1990, with larger decreases in women younger than 50. These decreases are believed to be the result of earlier detection through screening and increased awareness as well as improved treatment. Sye Linovitz is the third member of the Mavens. The 3-Day "is harder than a mara- thon," says Katz, a Commerce Township resident who has run eight of them. For a marathon, "you train for 26 miles and it's done. For the 3-Day:' he says, "you walk 20 miles; then the next day, you get up and walk 20 miles; and then the next day, you walk another 16!' On the first night (Friday), seconds Linovitz, who has had a knee replace- ment and two stress fractures, "you say, `I'll never do this again.' On Saturday, you say, 'Maybe,' and on Sunday, after the moving closing ceremony, you say, 'I can't wait to register for next year!" And indeed, Stein and Linovitz, both West Bloomfield residents, are already registered for the 2011 walk set for Aug. Not For Women Only on page 47 • At this time, there are more than 2.5-million breast cancer survivors in the United States. This includes those still being treated and those who have completed treatment. LI Source: American Cancer Society, www.cancerorg