ttling tle-Known Disease Joan Provizer, a woman in the professional world, lives with scleroderma. PHIL JACOBS EDITOR ple and is potentially fatal when vital organs are involved. According to Ms. Provizer, the condition occurs when skin collagen, or protein, does not break down. The skin becomes less flexible and pliable. Ms. Provizer talks about herself and the fact that her facial skin seems to be stiffer. She said it can be seen by watching her speak, though to the untrained eye it doesn't seem obvious. "Think about it I never had heard of this, and now I have it." Joan Provizer Joan Provizer is battling scleroderma. NEWS H EWIS IT J ETRO D E TH 14 "I look pretty good for someone with it," she said. "There's a lot of pain asso- ciated with it, both inter- nally and externally." Most scleroderma vic- tims are between the ages of 25 and 45, and 80 per- cent are women. The dis- ease occurs as a tightening in the muscles and ten- dons, but for some it goes beyond that to the heart oan Provizer is forever busy and on the go. As a time-management expert, she's delivering speeches, making contacts and keep- ing her life moving. It would be difficult to imagine that Ms. Provizer, a business-like woman, would be battling any- thing other than her Day Timer and rush-hour traf- fic. But, like 700,000 other Americans, Ms. Provizer suffers from a little-known disease that isn't evident in its preliminary stages. Its name, scleroderma, is known as the disease that turns people to stone. Its symptoms include fatigue, joint or bone aches, stiffness of the hands and extremely cold hands. The symptoms are vague and generalized, making the disease often difficult to diagnose. It's not hereditary nor is it contagious. Yet it can crip- and lungs, kidneys and esophagus. Ms. Provizer was diagnosed over seven years ago when she com- plained of stiffness in her hands. "There's a certain emo- tion that every person who has scleroderma goes through," she said. "There's anger, denial and guilt. Think about it — I never had heard of this, and now I have it. You feel very frightened by it, and you have to adjust your lifestyle to it." Ms. Provizer added that the scary part for her is that not too many people know about the disease. She said it doesn't get the publicity that muscular dystrophy or multiple scle- rosis have, yet its patients number almost triple the number of MS patients. To help publicize the disease, the United Scleroderma Foundation of Southeastern Michigan is holding Walk N Roll '93 on Saturday, June 12. It will be held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in downtown Royal Oak at Oakland Community College, be- tween Seventh Street and Lincoln, off Washington. ID Technion Hosts Job Forum For Engineers RUTH LITTMANN STAFF WRITER hen members of the American Technion Society met twlo months ago to plan an event intro- ducing U.S. scientists and engineers to Russian emi- gres who specialize in the same fields, they expected 25 people. But more than four times that number showed up at the Jewish Corn- munity Center in Oak Park when the event took place in mid-May. The