Place
of hope
(continued)
A hero says thanks
Almost
immediately after he completed his prostate cancer treatment at
UC Davis Cancer Center in September, football legend Jim Otto went
to work raising awareness and money to help defeat the disease.
He also donated his famous name and face to the UC Davis Cancer
Center’s new television ad campaign. In the ad, Otto talks
about how he could have gone anywhere in the world for his treatment
— but chose UC Davis Cancer Center.
The football great has thanked his treatment team in other ways,
too. On his last day of radiation therapy in September, Otto brought
Raiders’ shirts and caps emblazoned with his number, 00, for
members of his treatment team. He also posed for pictures and wrote
a $25,000 check to the Auburn Endowment, a non-profit foundation
that raises money for prostate cancer research at UC Davis.
“Jim Otto was a warrior on the football field, and now he’s
a warrior in the fight against prostate cancer,” says Ralph
deVere White, director of the UC Davis Cancer Center and Otto’s
physician. “His openness about his illness and his recovery
is going to make a tremendous difference for a lot of men who may
be afraid to even have their prostates checked. We’re lucky
to be on his team.”
Considered the best center ever to play the game, Otto was elected
into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1980. He now works as director
of special projects for the Raiders.
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Jim
Otto, in white shirt, with his cancer treatment team.
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