Health The LiteRise touch system lets you raise our Duette® and pleated shodes, wood and aluminum blinds with just a touch of a finger. Hidden controls eliminate the lift cord so they look sleek and raise evenly every time. LiteRise. Because when it comes to your windows, we're always in touch. WINDOM IA11110111 www.hunterdouglos.orn Free In-Home Service • Free Professional Measure At No Obligation COMPETITIVE PRICING & EXPERT INSTALLATION SPOT All other HUNTER DOUGLAS products Luminette • Duettes • Woods Vertical Blinds & Silhouettes Hours: Mon-Sat 10-5 21728 W. Eleven Mile Rd. Harvard Row Mall • Southfield, MI 48076 352-8622 . Rochester Hills 651-5009 EXERCISE WAREHOUSI is pleased to announce the Grand Opening of our new Troy Location All Equipment Marked Down!! Huge Treadmill Sale! 5t:31; Quality Equipment + Quality Service + Great Prices LIVONIA 31539 8 Mile Rd. Just west of Orchard Lake 248-476-2213 111111 TROY 3271 Rochester Road Just north of Big Beaver in the Troy Point Plaza 248-528-1300 SUBARU eeftelled, Toodfteed eeva 11/10 2000 102 23100 Woodward Av e. Ferndale, MI 48220 (248) 547-8800 www.hodgessubaru.com "Subaru Only Dealer" FOR ALL YOUR SUBARU NEEDS! The Cancer Spreads Fifteen months later and 23 weeks into her second pregnancy, Suzette felt pain in her abdomen. Her stage 4 cancer had metastasized to her liver and bones. Following nine weeks of chemotherapy, at 33 weeks gestation, baby daughter Jordan was born. Two months later, Suzette had a stem cell transplant. Her tumors shrank signifi- cantly; there were no treatments for five months. That peaceful time ended with the diagnosis of brain cancer and more treatment. While on vacation last June, Suzette found another lump in her breast. She underwent a second radical mastectomy and is receiving chemother- apy to shrink her tumors so she can receive a bone marrow transplant. The good news: Becky, her sister, is a perfect donor match. The bad news: the insurance company refuses to pay for the procedure, which costs about $100,000. Suzette knows better than anyone how much she might lose. "Earlier this year, a doctor advised me to write my will and prepare my family for me not being around," recalls Suzette. "'Hey, wait!' I thought. 'That's not the message I wanted. I'm not ready to leave my husband and family.' I found another physician who was willing to work with me against this aggressive cancer." Suzette fights back, struggling against the heartbreaking obstacles that increas- ingly confront her and other seriously ill women with breast cancer. "No one knows what it's like unless you've gone through it. That's why I go to Gilda's Club in Royal Oak. Women like me — some younger, some older — support each other. I have a chance to sometimes take my mind away from the wars." Grim Statistics Breast cancer is the most frequently diagnosed non-skin cancer among women in the United States. Approximately 185,000 new cases of breast cancer are diagnosed yearly. About 10 percent have metastatic dis- ease at the time of diagnosis and about 40-50 percent of the others eventually develop metastatic disease. Some 44,000 women die from the disease each year. "We don't have a choice about the cancer, but we do have a choice about how we live," says Scott Herskovitz, who sold his pizza business to spend more time caring for Suzette and the girls. "It is wrenching to watch Suzette during the high-dose chemo treat- ment; she is sick and in pain," Scott says. "When she's feeling good, our family leads a normal life and we're hoping that this second stem cell transplant will help our family find those peaceful days again." Breast cancer patients continually face physical, economic and psychoso- cial issues. Women like Suzette want increased control and better informa- tion about their treatment options. Judy Michaels is a long-time friend of Scott's family. "The sense of corn- munity that envelops Suzette and her family is extraordinary," says Michaels. "Women Suzette has known from her elementary school years are helping and high school friends not seen in a decade are volunteering support. Friends and relatives of the parents and sometimes perfect strangers have pitched in and donated their help to this young family." Leah McLean and Suzette have been friends since junior high days. Setting her career aside as an oncology social worker to raise her family, McLean stays home with her four small children. She was helpful getting Suzette connected with support services and, with other friends and family members, organized an upcoming fund-raising event to help raise money for Suzette's second bone- marrow transplant. "People have responded generous- ly," says McLean. "The goal is to have everything donated — the food, the decorations, and the many items for the silent auction. "Suzette was known to go to birth- day parties after a chemo treatment. She takes each day as something pre- cious — a perspective that we could learn from. She is an inspiration as she moves forward and doesn't let her loss- es push her down." The hope is that this "experimental" treatment will not only save Suzette's life but help research come closer to saving thousands of other lives. ❑ "A. Celebration of Life" fund-raiser for Suzette Herskovitz is a dinner- dance featuring the Simone Vitale Band. It will be held at Canterbury Village in Lake Orion, on Thursday, Nov. 16. For informa- fion, call Leah McLean, (248) 620- 9515. To send contibutions, make checks payable to My Friends Care BMT Fund P.O. Box 1391, Clarkston, MI 48347. ,