2B LIFE/ttle Clarlottt $0(1 Thursday August 25, 2005 Chocolate just may be a healthy choice Continued from page 1B perfect ways to remove the pungent flavor. “Most chocolate, in fact, isn’t flavanol-rich,” said Norm HoUenberg, a radiolc^ pro fessor and flavanol ©qjert at Harvard Medical School. “But all chocolate is rich in fat and calories. Chocolate is a delight. It can and should be part of a prudent diet. That means you limit what you take.” Flavanols are found in other foods, such as red wine, grapes, apples and green tea, althougli cocoa beans .are a particularly rich source. Mars Inc. developed the technology to visualize fla vanols on a computer screen. Says Harold Schmitz, the company's chief science offi cer: “Now we understand cocoa well enough to start to do new things with it." The company is starting with CocoaVia granola bars, made with a special cocoa powder that retains most of the flavanols The bars also have plant sterols, which have been shown to ^lelp lower cholesterol. For now, the 80-calorie, 23- gram snack bars are sold only on the Internet. The bars have a satisfyingly rich choco late flavor, along with a slight but distinct bitter taste. Mars says its Dove dark chocolates —a 1.3 ounce bar is 200 calories — also contain flavanols. Researchers are excited by the potential of flavanols to ward off vascular disease, which can cause heart attacks, strokes, diabetes, dementia and hypertension. Vascular diseases are linked to the artery’s inability to make a simple but funda mental chemical called nitric oxide. Flavanols appear to reverse that problem. “The pharmaceutical indus try has spent tens, probably himdreds of millions of dol lars in search of a chemical that would reverse that abnormality,” HoUenberg said “And God gave us fla- vanol-rich cocoa, which does that. So the excitement is real.” On the Net: Mars Inc.: wwwjnarsjrom USDA’s Jlavanol database: www.nal.usda.gov/fnic/food' comp/Data/Flav/flavJinnl College freshmen, roommates and strangers Continued from page 1B have been friends if we’d met casually” Gordon said, recall ing an evening he held a ti'aslican to keep his room mate from vomiting on the rug. “But Uving together defi nitely set up a different rela tionship.” In some ways, the room mate chaUenge may* be tougher than it used to be. Particulai’ly at a diverse school like Brown, room mates may come from com pletely difierent backgrounds. And experts say that in the past more students arrived at coU^e accustomed to sharing a room with siblings. Tbday more teens grow up having their own rooms. Nonetheless, students and administrators say that even roonunates with big differ ences can usuaUy tolerate ajid even ei^oy living with each otlier by foUowing a few guidelines • Don’t lie on the housing sheet. After notifying a coUege tliat they plan to attend, stu dents typicaUy receive a form asking questions like whether they smoke, stay up late and like to keep their room neat. The forms are intended to head off the most pi'edictable lifest3de clashes. But administrators say they never cease to be amazed by the number of students who let their parents fill out the fonn—or who fill it out with their parents looking over their shoulder. “If you are a messy person, go ahead and indicate that,” says Carol Casey associate dean of student affairs at Rhodes College in Memphis, Tfenn. “If you don’t and you happen to get into a room with a neat fi^ak, that can cause immediate conflicts that could have been avoid ed.” As for parents, “they’re bet ter off having their kids tells us they smoke even if they don’t want to deal with it,” said Aaron Fetrow, dean of campus life at Guilford College in North Carolina, and a veteran of residence- life positions at several other schcxjls, including the University of Tennessee. • Don’t be disappointed if your roommate doesn’t become your best friend. Often, people who aren’t great friends make great roommates. Great fiiends make bad roommates if per sonal issues get entangled in roommate issues. That’s why many colleges discourage students fix)m liv ing with a high school fiiend, though they may offer the choice. Fetrow says that dis courages meeting new peo ple, and often backfires. • Communicate, early and often. ‘Tou don’t have to like the person you’re living with as long as you can communi cate what you need and they need,” said Allison Lombardo, another Brown student and author of the book “Navigating Your Freshman Year” in a series called “Students Helping Students” (Natavi Guides). “Passive aggressiveness usually does n’t help.” Honesty gets problems dealt with before they become serious. “If somebody was doing something in the bathroom or Help wanted: Preservationist for S.C. black history WE ASSOCIAI’EO PRESS CHARLESTON, S.C. —Hoping to do more to preserve and pro mote South Carolina’s black history a state agency has set out to hire a specialist to help identify historical sites, structures and cultures. About two dozen people have applied for the job, which was posted Aug. 5, at the Departm^t of Archives and History The agency is conducting a regional search. Ihe state has done little to preserve South Carolina’s black legacy said agency director Rodger Stroup. Of tlie state’s 1,000 official markers, about 60 designate black historical sites, he said. “We haven’t had anyone with a specialty in that area,” he said. “There's a need for more detailed information about the history of Afiican Americans than anybody on our staff has.” The department has worked for about seven years to get state legislators to fund money for the position, but budget fOTecast had been bleak imtil this year, Stroup said. The hill-time position vriU pay $30,000. Stroup said the heritage coordinate will help communities imderstand and record their histories Much of black history has been oral, rather than writ ten. Prior to the Civil War. it was filial to teach blacks to read and write in South Carolina, he said. “As older folks pass away, we need to capture that history now car it’s lost,” Stroup said. The coordinator also will woik with the Afiican-American Heritage Commission, a 15-member group that tries to raise awareness of the state’s black history Stroup said the coordina tor will keep that all-volunteer group moving forward. Wlien he saw the job posting, Michael Allen, an education spe cialist with the National Paik Service who also has served as commission chair, said he immediately sent it to his fiiends and colleagues. Commiaaion chairwoman Jannie I^arriot said she wanted for years to have a black heritage expert in Columbia. With the ccmmissioners serving as volunteers, a full-time worker is needed to focus on saving a big piece of state history that’s been overiooked, she said. , Clic Cjarlotte ^ost one of the common areas that didn’t work well (for the other suitemates), we had to make the issue public right off the bat,” said Emily Christianson, a recent University of North Carolina graduate who says she made a difficult relationship with one roommate fi:eshman year work tolerably well. “Otherwise it would fester.” • It’s possible to be too nice. ‘T think a lot of times people tend to be really overly cour teous,” Christianson said. ‘You have to be very realistic with this person. It’s not like a r^ular fiiend.” (jordon remembers a period of artificial civility before things got bad with his room mate. “We were probably too respectful of one anoth^, not doing anything without ask ing each oth^,” he said. “Tley can I turn on the TV? Can I turn on the radio? Does this light bother you?”’ But beneath the surface, bigger issues were lurking. Best to get them out. When roommates can’t work out problems them selves, resident advisers or residence life deans may try to help with some kind of con tract, so that at least both parties know what the other expects. ‘Tt usually involves a trade off I’ll stop burning incmse if you stop leaving dirty under wear on the floor,”’ Fetrow said. But sometimes it’s just oil and water. While most schools discourage the practice, there are always a few cases that require a mid-year room switch. “There’s a point where it’s just so different it’s not going to happ^,” he said. WOHDOP oon HROArx;ASTlN(^ Nf- fWORK 'y WAD O/v, -AM Nc 1340 wadesboro, nc -xHtk ‘ht- “Koknh Cjool, f'aiU'l ^ktlip 'ZXlWS. 'Jchniffn, '/5t. 'TWt'od. )/u«tA T^Adio. 'Zkmimxl i>»i f4f And much mw/ in And jit IdiAiid! 150! N. l-fiS SERVICE Road • Charlotte, NC 2fl2l6 704-393-1540 Get The Lead Out! 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