features Battalion/Page': October 11, II Acne may be cured Warped by Scott McCul United Press International NEW YORK — Doctors re port a drug that went on sale last month appears to tame the worst kind of acne. But Dr. Alan R. Shalita, assis tant dean of the State University of New York’s Downstate Medical Center, stressed the medicine Accutane should only be used by those who have se vere acne and not by patients with less advanced forms of the disease. He said Accutane seems to work by shrinking the sebaceous glands. The medicine, developed by Hoffmann-La-Roche Inc. and known generically as isotreto- noi, offers the first known effec tive treatment of acne that pro duces deep pitting and scarring. He said the major side effect appears to be chapped or in- flammed lips, which occurs in 90 percent of patients treated in cli nical trials. One course of treatment usually lasts 15 to 20 weeks. Ab out one-third of patients who have undergone therapy with the new medicine have required a second course of treatment. Improvement is seen in some patients after one month of therapy. The interesting thing, Shalita said, is that for many pa tients the skin continues to im prove even after the medication is stopped. THERE WAS A TRAVEL I A/G CIRCUS TD\NN,SEL, AND THEIR ELEPHANT ESEAPED AND WENT RAMPAGING THROUGH A LITTLE OLP LAPJES' GARDEN... ..SHE HAD NEVER SEEN AN ELEPHANT BEFORE AND DIDN'T KNOW WHAT IT WA5. 50, JUST ABOUT THE TIME IT STARTED EATING HER CADBAGGE5, SHE CALLED.. ~UH-0H. J you SPELLED CA&B AGES " W RONG. OVER THERE. YOO'VE GOT TOO MNY "Gs " IN IT. WELL...OH, CAN'T I TOST FINISH... GETTING _ _ OUT Rudder Forum 8'00 OCT. 7,8,9 and 14,15,16 Tickets available atMSC box office or at the door Strike may aid United Press International NEW YORK — If the NFL players strike drags on, it could provide a bit of a lift for the busi nessmen who are investing $ 100 million in the United States Football League, Commissioner Chester R. Simmons concedes. He said a prolonged strike MSC • TOWN • HALL could make the fans hungry for pro football by March when the USFL launches its 20-game sea son and could induce some col lege players to sign with teams in the new league instead of hold ing out for jobs in the older league. Simmons does not, however, expect the strike’s impact on the new league’s fortunes to be big in any case. The major question is whether the fans will go for foot ball from March through early July- Frank M. Magid Associates Inc., of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, a major broadcast research firm, did the marketing survey for the promoters of the league and concluded most fans think the present pro football season is too short compared with the 162- game baseball season and the 82-game pro basketball season. Simmons said officials and club owners of the new league are betting on success where the World Football League failed af ter two seasons. Also, the WFL never got real television money. The USFL has a two-year contract with ABC and a cable contract with Enter tainment & Sports Network Inc., which can pipe the games into 16.5 million homes. The WFL raided NFL player rosters and got into a salary war with the older league. The USFL will avoid that trap, Sim mons said. Since its rosters will necessarily be composed of very young players, its average salar ies in the first season may be almost 50 percent less than those in the NFL, he said. Simmons said there art ty of players available adt; priced players don’t neces; mean interesting ft games. “We’ve all seen a football played by teams lot of expensive stars,”he Ticket prices will beal less than NFL prices,Sii said. He doesn’t expect the ity of the USFL’s 12 ted break even the first seasoal that, a team would have toy about $6 million between! receipts and broadcastanJa revenue share. Simmons sees no possibij players performing in !f leagues even though their ing seasons do not ov player’s contract runs months. That creates a valiii al and technical overla opinion. A few NFL whose options had i already have signed wilhl 1 clubs. Simmons said he is comil spring football will nothavt! harmful effect on major lea baseball. “In the first place,ourse.- will have ended by the tins: baseball pennant races is start heating up,” hesaid.1 people who go to baseballs in the season tend tobetM, Houston by a hot and ran The Aggi ihe-wool fans and baseball; f draw seven days a week#? our one. The national:: vised baseball game of ther will be on Saturday and broadcast will be on Sunds there’s no conflict there.” rc.'s -’-tv r/-rt -vr. r,v'‘ w , CoCCtxjt eStation 'i jin*. OtaLian ztitauumt A&M’s B< Aggies sti 696-7311 Monday: Spaghetti Feast V All you can eat! t. 1 * Lunch: 11-2 Dinner: 5-10 St 404 Shopping Center East University IN CONCERT October 22 8 p.m. G. Rollie White Tickets: $ 6 00 , $ 5 75 , *5°° MSC Box Office: 845-1234 MSC • TOWN HAT.T,