4B LIFE/ Ciatlotte $ot Thursday July 7, 2005 Obesity takes heavy toll in the military VIE ASSOCIATED PRESS WATERTOWN, Wis.-With America at war and in need of a few good men, Jon Schoenherr expected a warm reception when he walked into an Army recruiting office in this Midwestern farm com munity, intending to enlist. But a sergeant gave the 17- year-old some smprising “He told me I’d have to lose a little bit of weight,” said Schoenherr, who dropped 50 pounds to qualify Besides terrorists, germ warfare and nuclear weapons, military officials increasingly worry about a different kind of threat- troops too fat to fight. Wei^t issues plague all branches of the military fix)m elite Marines to the Air Force, often lam pooned as the “chair force” because of its many seden tary jobs. Thousands of troops are struggling to lose wei^t, and thousands have been booted out of the service in recent years because they couldn’t. However, one of the biggest worries concerns those not even in uniform yet: Nearly two out of 10 men and four out of 10 women of recruiting age weigh too much to be eli gible, a record number for that age group. “This is quickly becoming a national security issue for us. The pool of recruits is becom ing smaller,” said Col. Gaston Bathalon, an Army nutrition expert. Unless weight rules are relaxed, “we’re going to have a harder time fielding an Army” he said. Idday^s soldiers are super- sized, averagir^ 37 pounds heavier than their Civil War counterparts. Military offi cials say that’s not all bad, because most of it is muscle, not fat, and the result of bet ter nutrition. “Large and in charge” makes soldiers look suits and rislty pnlls to shed pounds. Problems don’t end when active duty does, eifiier. The Veterans Affairs health sys tem increasingly is strained by vets piling on pounds and developing wei^t-related dis eases like diabetes. Ironically the big concern used to be soldiers not w^gh- ing enough. Congr^s passed PHOTO/THE STOCK MARKET more formidable to the enemy they note. But at an obesity conference in Las Vegas last fall and in interviews since then, Bathalon and other military officials detailed the heavy burden that excess pounds are causing for some troops and taxpayers. Weight problems add stress to already stressful jobs, cost ing many soldiers promotions and leading some to try des perate measures like rubber the school limch program after World War II, worried that too many hi^ schoolers were malnourished and unfit to fight. “This is the same deal in reverse. We’ve got youi^ kids who are not going to be quali fied for military service. They’re either unfit or over fat,” said Col. Karl Friedl, commander of the U.S. Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine at Natick, Mass. USARIEM, as it is known, has 170 doctors, dietitians, psychologists and other scien tists who study military med ical issues, fix)m preventing heat exhaustion to coping with sleep deprivation. They view soldiers as specialized athletes whose physical condi tion can be a life-or-death matter. Increasingly, they deal with weight. It starts with new recruits. Each branch of the service has its own entry rules, but by federal weight guidelines, 43 per cent of women and 18 per cent of men in prime recruiting ages exceed screening weights for mili tary service, Bathalon said. Army standards are based on body fat, using a chart for body-mass index a ratio of weight and height—as a screening tool. If soldiers or recruits exceed chart limits, body fat calculations are done using a formula based mostly on WEiist size. Marines can be as much as 10 percent over weight standards to ship to boot Lunch would be “tuna fish r^it out of the can” or a low- carb wrap at school, he said. After schcx)l, he’d lift wei^ts. He’s now a svelte 165 poimds and about to join a special forces unit. ‘Tve had some people who have lost dose to 100 poimds to join,” said Sgt. Chad Eske, his recruiter. But often, making it into the military is just the start of the struggle. The military even has its own version of the “fi-eshman 15”—after basic training, Army women gain an average of 18 px)unds in their first year and often have problems with annual weigh-ins that determine whether they can stay A survey Bathalon and oth ers did of 1,435 troops referred to Fort Bragg Hospital for weight loss helps show the drastic measures some try Roughly three- fourths did things doctors recommend—eating less, exercising more and downing more fimts and vegetables. But many resorted to potentially harmful things. Nearly half tried using rub ber suits or saunas to sweat off pounds, a third of men and half of women tried appetite suppressants, and one in five tried laxatives. 11 percent of women and 6 percent of men had tried vomiting. Half of the troops said stress was a reason they had gained weight, and half had come for help because they’d been denied promotion. “The Air Force is not escap ing the national trends,” Maj. Christine Hunter said at the obesity conference, showii^ a photograph of the new Baghdad Burger King, already the thirji busiest in the world. Author loses ‘Groove’ after divorcing inspiring husband VIE ASSOCIATED PRESS SAN FRANCISCO — Author'IbrryMc^fiUan has filed for divorce fix)m the man who inspired the 1996 novel “How Stella Got Her Groove Back,” which chronicled the romantic adven tures of a 40-something woman who falls for a guy half her age. In papers filed in Contra Costa County Superior Court, McMillan, 53, says she decided to end her 6 1/2-year marriage to Jonathan Plimimei; 30, after learning he is gay The revelation led her to conclude Plummer married only to get his U.S. citizenship, she said. McMillan met Plunmier at a Jamaican resort a decade ago. ‘Tt weis devastating to discover that a rela tionship I had publicized to the world as life- affirming and built on mutual love was actual ly based on deceit,” she said in court papers. ‘T was humiliated.” In response, Plummer maintained McMillan treated him with “homophobic” scorn border ing on harassment since he came out to her as gay just before Christmas. Conferderate flag continues to stir emotions years after removal VIE ASSOClATEl>PRESS COLUMBIA—An organizer of the march against the Confederate flag that brought nearly 50,000 people to the Statehouse five years ago regrets her group didn’t fight harder to remove the flag completely from the capitol grounds. Five years ago Friday two Citadel cadets lowered the Confederate flag firom atop the Statehouse dome. At the same time, a similar flag was raised atop a pole by a Confederate monument in frcMit of the Statehoxxse. The flag remains there today, and the governor who helped broker the compro mise to move the banner said it will likely stay there for the foreseeable future. “Those who wanted it off the dome and off the grounds entirely, they had to see that that was not a solution that was going to happen,” said former Gov. Jim Hodges, who personally supported a com promise to put the flag in a less prominent place on Statehouse groimds. While lawmakers and pub lic officials mostly accepted the compromise, many that fought to get the Confederate flag off the Statehouse dome don’t want to see it anywhere on the grounds. The peak of tlie fight came in January 2000, when 46,000 people rallied in Columbia, covering the Statehouse lawn on Martin Luther King Jr. Day It was just months after the NAACP announced an economic boy cott of South Carolina. “The march was so incredi bly successful. Ovemi^t, the public conversation went fiom ‘Can we bring it down? to Where is -it going?’ It changed the question,” said Julia Sibley Jones with the South Carolina Christian Action Council, a march orga nizer. But Jones said those fight ing the flag didn’t speak with one voice on where it should go- “The question got reformu lated by the Legislature, who, in my opinion, came up with a bad compromise, not a resolu tion,” she said. The boycott of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People will continue imtil the Confeda:^te flag is completely ‘We lost, OK?” Givens said. ‘We wanted the flag to stay who^ it was. We lost. But we never squawked about it.” camp. “The Marines say, ‘Send iis anybody and we’ll turn them into a Marine.’ They’re pretty successful at it,” Friedl said. Schoenherr, the ^^onsin Army recruit, was pretty suc cessful, too. After wei^iing in at 215 poimds, he did his own boot camp during his senior year in hi^ school, going to the recruiting center for 6 a.m. workouts, then downii^ a boiled e^ or two and orange juice before heading to class. You can build your bottom line! Advertise in tEie Oarbtte Call today: (704) 376-0496 McMllan is seeking to have the marriage annulled; Plummer has asked the court to set aside a prenuptial agreement that would pre vent him fiom getting spousal support. McMillan filed for divorce in January, but news of the split didn’t smface until this week, when it was first reixDrted in a San Francisco Chronicle gossip colmnn. Earlier this month, a juc^e ordered McMillan to pay Plummer $2,000 a month in spousal support and $25,000 in attorney’s fees until the case comes back to court in October. McMillan’s latest novel, “The Interruption of Everything,” is scheduled to hit store shelves next month. It plots the mid-hfe adventures of a married mother of three who is questioning her comfortable suburban life. McMillan said she did not plan to let a divorce “detract fiom the many blessings in her life,” according to a statement released throu^ her publicist. Plummer’s attorney could not immediately be loached for comment. removed fiom the Statehouse, said James Gallman the retired president of the state civil rights group. ‘1 think most people who see where it is located now cannot understand why we would fly on our grounds this symbol,” Gallman said. But the boycott has lost its steam. The political will to remove the flag completely wasn’t there in 2000 and still isn’t there, l^jslative lead^s say Flag supporters are split too. Ron orison, the national vice commander of the pro flag Sons of Confederate Veterans in 2000, said moving the flag didn’t end the NAACP boycott. “From that' standpoint, it didn’t resolve anything,” he said. Michael Givens, South Carolina commander of the Sons of Confederate Veterans, said the compromise satisfied him, but he wished lawmak er had allowed South Carolinians to vote on the Drive away to... 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