Oakwood Healthcare Foundation
Women's Healthcare Classic 2011
Looking for the perfect gift? Maybe you're shopping for an item to add to your own private collection. No matter your reason, there is a good chance you will find what you're seeking here on Oakwood's Women's Healthcare Classic online auction!
The 19th annual Women’s Healthcare Classic at Dearborn Country Club, Dearborn, Michigan and the Friends of the Women’s Healthcare Classic at TPC of Michigan in Dearborn, is scheduled for Monday, June 13, 2011.
Proceeds from the Women’s Healthcare Classic will benefit women’s breast care programs and other women’s initiatives in cancer, cardiology, obstetrics and gynecology.
By joining together, the Women’s Healthcare Classic makes a considerable difference in the lives of women and their healthcare needs. The proceeds from this event significantly help in responding to those needs and the needs of women who might not otherwise be able to receive programs and services that could change the quality of their life.
Because of your support you can make a difference to someone’s mother, sister, wife, aunt, niece, or best friend - - it’s HER quality of life that can be changed for the better.
To purchase tickets for any of the WHC events, please visit www.oakwood.org/foundation or call the Oakwood Healthcare Foundation at 313.586.5234.
The Oakwood Healthcare Foundation is very pleased to have the support of LPGA Hall of Fame golfer Judy Rankin.
Judy was voted LPGA Player of the Year twice, amassed 26 tournament wins, won the Vare Trophy for the lowest scoring average three times and topped the money list twice. She became the first player voted into the LPGA Tour Hall of Fame in 2000 under the veterans category and was also inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 2000.
In 2006, Judy was diagnosed with and underwent treatment for breast cancer. She has since become an outspoken advocate for the importance of early detection. In her speeches, Judy shares the lessons she learned from her battle with breast cancer. Her advice to the other women is that bad news does not necessarily mean a bad outcome and that while confronting the disease is life-changing, it does not have to be life-altering. "I don't think of myself as a ‘can do' person but I am a ‘will do' person. Facing this[breast cancer], I always knew I would do what I had to do. It's our will that gets us through."