4B LIFE/Ste Clarlutte $ot Thursday, Januay 5,2006 Low fat, high-carb diet leads to moderate weight loss mt: Asscx'unij FHfss CHICAGO — Older women who ate less fat and more car* bohydrates lost about 2 pounds over seven years, a large study showed. While one obesity expert called the results disappoint ing, the lead author of the research said it refutes claims by promoters of the Atkins and Zone diets that low-fat diets are partly ■ behind America’s obesity epidemic, “It will help people to under stand that the wei^t gain we’re seeing in this country is not caused by the lower-fat diets,” said study author Barbara V, Howard of MedStar Research Institute, a nonprofit research group. However, the skimpy weight loss after seven years won’t satisfy people looking for a cure for obesity; said Dr. Michael Dansinger, an obesi ty researcher at T\ifts-New Englemd Medical Center who was not involved in the study “This is like losing the Super Bowl but claiming a second place victory,” Dansinger said. “The results are disappointing in the con text of a country trying to bat tle obesity” The study appearing in Wednesday’s Journal of the American Mediced Association, included more than 43,000 women, ages 50 to 79. They were followed for an average of seven years and six months One group of women low ered the fat in their diets while increasing finiits, veg- etaldes and whole grains. The other group didn’t change their diets significantly The taiget fat content of the diet was 20 percent, but the women on the diet actually got about 30 percent of their calories in fat; their previous fat intake was about 39 per cent. The women on the diet increased their carb calories fixjm 44 percent to 53 percent, while the women not on the diet stayed at about 44 per cent carbs. The low-fat group lost, on average, 4.8 pounds in the first year, then regained most of that wei^t. The non-diet group stayed at about the same wei^t ov^* the seven years. The women were part of the Women’s Health Initiative, a research project of the National Institutes of Health that involves thou sands of postmenopausal women across the coimtry Other WHI studies have uncovered the risks of taking hormones. Weight loss was not the original focus of the study, Howard said. Other findings on the low-fat diet’s effect on heart disease and cancer will be released this year, she said. But researchers realized their data could answer chaiges made by popular diet promoters who drew a link between obesity and recom mendations of low-fat eating plans by health organizations and the government. Low-fat diets promote foods Filmmaker captures New Orleans amid chaos niE ASSOCIA IED PRESS NEW ORLEANS- Gripping his tnunpet, Irvin Mayfield talks about growing up on Music Street and how his father taught him to play The Jazz musician also dis cusses liis decision to evacu ate before Hurricane Katrina and his father’s choice not to—and the monthslong wait his family had to endure before learning Irvin Mayfield Sr. had drowned, ‘This is something we’re not going to be able to heal fiom, as a dty for a long time,” Mayfield tells New Orleans filmmaker Stephen Rue, pres ident of the Motion Picture and Tfelevision Association of Louisiana. It’s part of more than 135 hours of interviews Rue col lected and plans to release as a 130-minute documentary Rue wants the film to give a comprehensive view of Katrina’s effects as told by the people who experienced it. The film, which he’s financ ing himself, should be finished by mid-March, he said. With countless film and TV crews in and out of the dty since Katrina, among them a crew working with filmmaker Spike Lee, Rue said he has something they don’t—exten sive footage just weeks before the storm from the now- destroyed Lower 9th Ward Rue was shooting footage in the neighboihoods there for a Habitat for Humanity project. That neighborhood, one of the dtys poorest, was wiped out by a sudden levee breach at the Industrial Canal. “We probably have some of the last video footage fiom there,” he said. “I think about the many many people we met. I wonder if they made it, wonder where they are now.” Since the storm, he has traveled to several states to interview evacuees. But much of his post-storm cover age has been in New Orleans with people such as Mayfield, founder of the New Orleans Jazz Orchestra, to document the storm for historical pur- Rush hour relief with a snappy good taste A pretty fast meal that’s gixxJ for you Ux) nit: ASSOCIATED TRESS Let’s not resign oiu^ves to scrappy meals on tlrese madly busy days, nor lose out on taste and nutrition. Sometimes we can have it all—we just need the right redpe Ginger apple chicken stm fiy is a winner to try It does n’t take long to make, the result is pleasing, with a snappy taste that will clieer jaded palates and warm a chilly evening The combination of ginger and apple works a kind of magic on the chicken, and a touch of Asian influence com pletes the pfdatable whole. If you happen to have guests to entertain, well—that’s their good luck to share this. Ginger Apple Chicken Stir-Fry (Start to finish 40 minutes) 2 teas{xx)ns sesame oil 2 garlic cloves, minced 2 tablespoons minced ginger root 1 pound boneless skinless chicken breast, cut into strips 1/3 pound pea pods 1 small sweet red pepper, cut into stripe 10 shiitake and/or white mushrooms, sliced 1/4 teaspoon pepper 1/3 cup applesauce, unsweetened 2 tablespoons apple dder vinegar 2 tablespoons soy sauce 1 tablespoon cornstarch 1/3 cup chicken broth or water 2 medium apples, cored and sliced Heat sesame oil in nonstick skillet or wok. Add garlic and ginger, and stir for about 30 seconds. Add chicken and cook in hot oil 4 to 5 minutes, or until chicken is no longer pink. Remove chicken fiom Student athlete has one hectic schedule Continued from page 3B and daycare for Cameron, 18- month-old Amaiui and 3- month-old Mia. Tajdor’s 17 credit hours are necessary for the ftiture they are building. Basketbtdl is required to pay for the education. Suffice it to say the Pratts are mature beyond their years, and Taylor doesn’t fit the prototypical hoop dream er who lives for the game, savors the devil-may-care col lege lifestyle and fantasizes about the NBA’s riches. Having your first child at 17 will do that “It definitely humble you,” Pratt said. “You’ve got to put yourself second, behind your kids. It puts extra perspective on life.” Agrees Jami: “When you get money, you don’t spend it on yourself” Their cozy and tidy mar ried-housing apartment is a refiection of their spartan lifestyle and focus on the fam ily Photos of family adorn the walls Where the typical stu dent-athlete might have XBox games or GameCubes stacked near the televisicsi, the Pratts have children’s movies; cartoons are playing on the television. They dcm't get out much. “We used to go to movies.” Taylor said. “We haven't done that in two years." his wife added On a special occaaicn. such as th^ anniversar>’. theyTl eat out Tbammate Marvin Moss and his girifiiend. Abigail, who live nearby with th^ dau^ter, will look after Cameron, Amauri and Mia. Assistant coach James Clark and his wife sometimes baby-sit as w^; the Pratts had Christmas dinner with Clark’s in-laws in Livingston. ‘He doesn't hang out much with everybody on the team,” Jami said of Ta>ior. “Really, he just stays home. He does just as much as I do.” It has been that way since Cameron was bom in 2001, about a year after Thyior and Jami met at a roller-skating paik in Claremore, Okla., her hometown. Taylor’s father, Revon, lived near Claremore, a town of 16,000 about 15 miles northeast of Tulsa, where TV>dor was attending Will Rogers High School. “I didn’t notice her,” Taylor said of Jami. Said Jami; “I noticed him because he was really tall. You can always tell somebody new in a small town.” They met that day, exchanged phone numbers and kept in touch when Tajdor moved briefly to Houston before returning to TYilsa. Soon they were attend ing the 180 Church for teenagers on Wednesday nights, Jami's mother was bringing Taylor to thdr home after church on Sundays and Jami was venturing to his home on weekends. When Jami became preg nant with Cameron, she moved into the Pratt home in Tidsa, where she lived until like grains and pasta, which are mostly forbidden by low- carb diets. “The Zone” diet author Dr. Barry Sears, after reading the new study said he stands by his belief that the recom mended low-fat, higharb diet caused Americans to gain wei^t. He noted that women on the low-fat diet in the study lost only a fi*action of a pound per year, on average, and they added 1.6 centimeters—about a half-inch—to their waist cir cumferences. The other group added 1.9 centimeto^. “I was struck by what the study didn’t say” Sears said. Dansiger said his research has shown that diets like Atkins and The Zone woik, but are hard to stay on. “People who succeed at maintaining a dramatic weight loss have changed their mindset and priorities and have made exercise and healthy eating among the top priorities in their lives,” he said. ‘Tt’s a tapestry of stories by those affected,” Rue said Whatev«'’s left once the doc umentary is complete may be used in a cable TV series cov ering various aspects of the disaster, including racial issues and animal rescue efforts. Rue said. Media coverage and home footage taken during the storm by private citizens will also be used in the film And he’s incorporating interviews with historians such as Douglas Brinkley, who’s writ ing a book due out next yesir titled “The Great Deluge.” Cliarleston House on Tke plaza A i_«.w Country Restaurant Where Everyday is a Holiday Lunch 11:30 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. Dinner. 5:00 p.m. - 11:00 p.m. The Management cordially invities you to join in celebrating our 3128 The Plaza Charlotte, NC 28205 704-333-4441 Lots of good food and beverages We’ll feed’ you til we fill’ you up, fuh true! Parking available on premises and shuttle services off premises. skillet. Add pea pods, red pep per and mushrooms, and cook, stirring, until tender- crisp, about 3 minutes; sprin kle with pepper. Combine applesauce, vine gar, soy sauce, cornstarch and chicken broth or water. Add chicken to vegetables, add sauce mixture and sliced apples, and cook until sauce is thickened and clear, about 4 minutes. Serve over steamed brown rice. Makes 4 servings. Nutrition information per serving: 340 cal., 25 g carbo., 16 g total fat (5 g saturated), 70 mg chol., 5 g dietary fiber, 670 mg sodium, 25 g pro. they were married in August 2002. They were forced to grow up fast. “Neither of us were partiers,” Jami said, “so for me it wasn’t like a huge change.” Nor did Cameron’s birth have a dramatic impact on Tajior’s life goals. He mostly played baseball as a youth and was a solid basketball player who didn’t earn any scholarship off^ out of high school. He aver aged five points and two rebounds at Northeastern Oklahoma A&M Collie, a two-year school about 100 miles up the ^Tll Rogers Tlimpike in Miami AmeriCare^Health AmeriCare Health “Sugar CvCCk Medical Center 721 W. 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