The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, January 26, 1988-Page 5 Acne cream prevents wrinkles By ALYSSA LUSTIGMAN The cream you use to clear your; greasy, acne-ridden skin today may also prevent the sallow, prune-like complexion of your tomorrow. ; A University Hospital Depart-7 ment of Dermitology study released last week revealed that a relatively common acne medicine known as Retin-A is also a 'miracle' cream that can remove wrinkles and age spots. THE STUDY, headed by Dermatology Department Chair Dr. John Voorhees, was published in this month's Journal of the American Medical Association. By applying the 0.1 percent tretinoin cream onto the skin daily, the study presented strong evidence that the wrinkling and roughness of skin once thought unavoidable with aging can be reversed. "Fine wrinkles disappeared, deep wrinkles were lessened, dark brown age spots were lightened and small brown spots disappeared," said Voorhees. "The pale, shallow look on older people was also replaced by a rosy glow - as if they had been skiing." THE CREAM only works on skin damaged by the excessive exposure to the sun, known as photoaging. It does not, however, combat the skin's natural and genetic instrinsic aging process. In a test that lasted forl6 weeks, 30 patients participated in a double- blind study. Neither the patients nor their examiners knew which cream contained the tretinoin. All patients applied the vitamin A compound to one forearm and an unmedicated cream to the other. Half received tretinoin to the face, and half received the unmedicated cream. ALL OF THE patients showed some improvement in the areas where Retin-A was applied, Voorhees said. "Some showed moderate im- provement and some showed modest improvement, but everybody showed something," he said. The study reported that all 30 pa- tients had statistically significant improvement on the tretinoid-treated forearms, but not on the forearms treated with the non-medicated cream. Fourteen of the 15 patients who ap- plied trenioid to the face showed im- provement. NONE OF THE patients treated with the non-medicated cream showed a significant change. "We don't know what will happen in the long run, so it is hard to say what the overall affects will be," said Voorhees. Voorhees explained that the cream works in the cell, producing gene ac- tivation. The normally dormant genes are activated to produce pro- tein, which works on the damaged skin cells. THE STUDY also showed that some pre-cancerous cells moved back toward acting as normal cells. How- ever, Voorhees added that the study was designed only to show the pro- cess of aging, not to see if pre-ma- lignant cells can be made normal. 'U' Law students help Detroit immigrants Daily Photo by DAVID LUBLINER Hats off LSA sophomores Robert Ceresa (left) and Zeb Esseltyn try on hats yesterday at the hat and sweater sale at the Union. Reading test scores drop, exam blaned By JILL GOTKIN working on University law students are helping foreign- requesting Ar born Detroit residents wade through the nation's United States new immigration laws. American citi The Immigration Law Project, a student-run McPhedra legal service at the University, sends volunteers back to India to the non-profit Institute of Metropolitan the United S Detroit, where they counsel clients on issues her visa, he s ranging from the changing of visas to petitioning "Since the for political asylum. (last fall), cl Each volunteer contributes one day a week at legal fees," the institute, advising clients on their political supervisor at rights, filing appropriate papers with the foreign-born Immigration Naturalization Services and doing and legal repi background research on immigration cases. "If it wei For example, first year law student and large number volunteer Charles McPhedran is presently been offere Gov. vroioses one a case involving an Indian woman mmerican citizenship. She came to the on a six month visa and married an izen. n will either advise the woman to go and apply for citizenship or stay in tates and try to get an extention on aid. formation of the volunteer program lients have saved over $10,000 on said Mary Lane, social work t the institute, which provides the community with both information resentation,. ren'.t for the student volunteers, a r of potential clients would not have d information or the chance of representation," she said. Lane said the program began by luck when a student in January 1986 expressed interest in volunteering. The following fall, a number of interested students began the program and since then, ten first, second and third-year University law students have participated in this program. The students receive neither compensation nor credits from the University. But law students working at the institute and. taking University Prof. T. Alexander Aleinikoff's immigration course during the summer can earn one credit. Ultimately, the project's goal is to hire it's own attorney, find funding and start a student-run clinic on campus, said Jim Baker, co-chair of the project. WASHINGTON (AP) - A gov- ernment-backed testing agency de- layed release of 1986 reading exam results because scores among nine- and 17-year-olds dropped sharply, and embarrassed officials suspect testing procedures, not students' reading } abilities, may have slumped. The drop was in the reading por- tion of the National Assessment of Educational Progress, an exam given to-70,000 students ages nine, 13, and 17 who are selected to represent their entire age group. Scores for 13-year- olds did not fall. The assessment, calling itself "the nation's report card," is run under a $4 million-a-year federal contract by Educational Testing Service of Lawrence Township, N.J. "We have, it's embarrassing to say, a real mystery here. We haven't come up with any ideas that solve the problem," Archie Lapointe, executive director of the testing pro- Birdsall researches so und waves (Continued from Page 3) project examining alternative means for arms control outside of formal treaties.was rejected in 1985 under the old research clause, defended Birdsall's research. "If students and faculty in the University community sit in judgment of other's research, it stands in the way of academic freedom," he said. "I hope that no one will sit in judgment of whether the end-use of the research is more important than (Birdsall's) freedom of research," Tanter said. WEEKEND MAGAZINE Fridays in The Daily 763-0379 KINKO'S HAS KODAK DISKS single-sided 5.25"-990 h double-sided 5.25"-1.19 gram, said yesterday in a telephone interview from ETS headquarters. Lapointe called it "an incredible, unbelievable loss," and said flatly, "We don't believe that data." "If we were to accept that data, it would look as though kids have lost a year or more's performance... from 1984," said Lapointe. "It's such a sharp loss that had it occurred, just about every teacher of those youngsters in the country would have perceived (it)." Chester Finn, the Education De- partment's assistant secretary for educational research and improve- ment, said, "It's a combination of a disappointment and a mystery.... It's either a glitch in the NAEP instru- ment or a glitch in American read- ing." Both the service and the depart- ment have convened panels of experts to review the problem and recom- mend ways to avoid a recurrence. lk J I IU percent hike for 'U' (Co UmsdfrorPage 1) budget in late June or early July. The appropriations for the state's 15 public universities are introduced as a bill in the Senate. It is then referred to the higher education subcommittee of the Senate Appropriations committee. That subcommittee, headed by Sen. William Sederburg (R-East Lansing) holds hearings in February and March with representatives from all the universities testifying, and will in most cases increase the appropriation. The bill then proceeds to the full Senate Appropriations committee, and then to the full Senate. After passing through the Senate, the bill goes to the House, where the entire process is repeated. At any time the appropriation could be increased or decreased. ALTHOUGH its common for the appropriation to rise somewhat during the legislative process, University officialsaren't expecting more than a two to three percent increase as a final figure. The governor said he hopes lawmakers won't try to increase spending above his overall target, but focus on priorities. SHARPEN YOUR SCISSORS.. . OJie 1irbIi an19 W tII Coupon Page is coming to save you $! Wednesday, January 27, 1988 Immediate Occupancy For Winter Term All apartments located on central campus Flexable Terms Maximum Space for Minimum Price Lots of Parking 721 S. Forest, Ann Arbor We Pay Heat 1700 Geddes, Ann Arbor (313) 761-152 1215 Hill, Ann Arbor 543 Church Stree1 and others... Ann Arbor, NI 48104 UAC/MUSKET PRESENT AND t. }1 T HE t- 1 f ' MASS MEETING Tuesday, Jan 26 8pm Kuenzel Room £ '