national Battalion/Page 7 January 12, 1983 ■id. im is avoid heart trouble Doctors test protein ry (itch and 'h's la Iter diem the oper i was se mment ■ he can re ntion. |K United Press International TUCSON, Ariz. — Doctors eekinga safe diet for obese peo- flp have developed a 472- alorie, high-protein prepara- ion that appears to avoid the omedmes fatal heart problems issoaated with liquid-protein ■s widely used a few years 'go. ■The new diet, developed at he University of Rochester dedical Center, is a sup- rlemented version of a prepara- ion called Optifast available mlv to doctors. ■Dr. Dean H. Lockwood told NOTICE Our retirement planning cre dentials are impeccable. Shouldn’t you let us work for| you? Call Larry or Swede 693-0030 an American Heart Association conference Monday that the fin al product contains all essential minerals, trace elements, vita mins and essential fatty acids. Carbohydrate is added along with selenium, molybdenum, fluoride and cadmium. The preparation is not avail able commercially, but details will be revealed soon in the American Journal of Medicine, Lockwood said. Safe high-protein, very low- calorie diets are considered an effective way to cut weight, he said. These diets minimize loss of muscle and maximize loss of fat. Liquid-protein diets gained popularity in 1977 and Lock- wood said an estimated 100,000 people w r ere using the diets ex clusively for at least a month. It soon became apparent, howev er, that some people using the diets were dying. Government researchers counted at least 60 such deaths in 1977. Lockwood said detailed Safe high-protein, very low-calorie diets are considered an effective way to cut weight, Dr. Dean H. Lockwood, said. These diets mini mize loss of muscle and maximize loss of fat. medical reports were available on 17 people and 11 had epi sodes of life-threatening heart rhythm irregularities. In addition, Lockwood said autopsies revealed significant diet deterioration of the heart mus cle, indicating the cardiac mus cle was not spared during the liquid-protein diet. The Rochester researchers tested six people on the initial liquid-protein diet for 40 days and found three developed similar heart problems. The new diet was put through a similar test involving six peo ple for 40 days and none de veloped heart irregularities. “The data does suggest a hypocaloric (very low-calorie) diet vigorously supplemented with essential elements, micro nutrients and vitamins appears to be safer than the once- popular, incomplete liquid- protein preparations,” he said. However, he said additional testing with large numbers of people is necessary to substanti ate the findings. People in the news One for the Gip United Press International President Reagan, who played football for Pat O’Brien’s Knute Rockne in the 1941 movie “Knute Rock ne — All American,” will be honored this week along with two top football coaches of the year. Reagan, once a radio sports announcer, will receive the 1983 “Tuss” McLaughry Award from the American Football Coaches Association at the Eastman Kodak Com pany coach of the year ban quet Thursday in New York City. Also to be honored are the Kodak Coaches of the Year, one from the university division and one from the col lege division, not yet announced. Steve Allen will provide entertainment. Past McLaughry Award winners include astronauts Bob Crip- pen and John Young, Jimmy Doolittle, James Stewart, Billy Graham, Dwight D. Eisenhower and John Wayne. Newman everywhere Time was when Paul New man kept a low profile, but now he suddenly springs up in newspaper and magazine in terviews and on television talk shows. One time he’s selling his new film, “The Verdict,” another time it’s his salad dressing. He even appeared on a public service ad for seat belts. Newman is wooing Oscar, according to News week magazine. “He’s a willing participant in this campaign, no matter what he says about hating awards,” a studio executive said. Newman has never won an Academy Award. A spokesman for Newman said the actor is not seeking Oscar votes. Wayne Newton told David Hartman on Monday’s “Good Morning America” how bad publicity dragging his name into a Mafia investigation has hurt him and his family: “From a negative standpoint, it has been awfully hard — not only on myself but particular ly for my family. My daughter goes to school. She’s 6 years old. We’ve had situations where women in school take votes whether or not their children should play with mine. 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'».77 2 FOR ONLY KING SUE RfO. ‘*.47 2 FOR ONLY United Press International ITHACA, N Y. — Barring major crop disasters, consumers can expect no more than an av erage increase in food costs this year, says consumer educator Josephine Swanson. “Food prices in 1982 showed the smallest annual gain since 1976,” Swanson told a recent economic training school for agents of Cornell Cooperative Extension. Prices may increase even less in 1983, she said. She said the USDA has pre dicted retail food price gains of 3 percent to 6 percent, with an av erage of 4 percent, but above average increases for pork, pre pared foods, nonalcoholic be verages, sugar and sweets. Swanson said the main reasons for price stability are de- ressed farm prices, abundant arvests and supplies, a low in flation rate and a slow increase in labor costs. United Press International COLUMBIA, S.C. — Chicken was ranked among the five top taste trends among foodservice customers and operators in a re cent survey. The second annual study by Restaurants and Institutions magazine found 22 percent of the respondents ate more chick en in 1982 than in the previous year, according to an article in a National Broiler Council news letter. More than 63 percent of foodservice operators ranked chicken as one of their top good sellers for 1982. About 20 percent of the broil er-fryer production in the Un ited States goes to fast food re staurants. That added up to ab out 12 million pounds last year on a ready-to-cook basis. United Press International CHICAGO — Croquet and windmills were among Amer icans’ top concerns in 1982. Virginia Stenberg, head of Encyclopaedia Britannica’s Lib rary Research Center, bases her comments on 140,000 questions received during the year. The queries often indicate new trends just starting, Sten berg says. She credits nostalgia and growing popularity among col lege students for reviving in terest in the lawn game that was a national craze 50 years ago. They are often the first to start trends, she adds. She thinks the windmill ques tions have a more practical basis — a search for cheaper energy sources. United Press International NEW YORK — Babies reared by their fathers while the mothers work develop faster than the norm. Yale University child psychiatrist Kyle Pruett, who tested 17 such infants, found they scored way above norms on standardized development tests. His findings are reported in the January issue of Psychology Today. Pruett says the babies were distinguished by the amount of love and attention they got from both parents. Unlike many working fathers, working mothers developed close attach ments to their babies. Most breast-fed the infants, often at great inconvenience to themselves, Pruett says. United Press International NEW YORK — American readers apparently are fascin ated by the lives of exceptional women. Six of 10 titles on a recent list of best-selling paperback biog raphies and autobiographies concerned unique women who display strength and independ ence, triumphing over problems that range from incest to child abuse and drug addiction. Women whose life stories made the list of the Association of American Publishers and the American Booksellers Associa tion are Joan Crawford, Gloria Vanderbilt, television producer Barbara Gordon, Ingrid Berg man, artist Georgia O’Keeffe and Katherine Brady. Brady’s “Father’s Days” is her account of a 10-year incestuous relation ship with her father. United Press International PUEBLO, Colo. — Are you confused by all you hear about the dangers of too much sodium consumption? A free pamphlet from the federal government’s Consum er Information Center can help. “Sodium” describes sources of the chemical, gives the sodium content of a Wide variety of foods, and tells what you can do to keep your sodium intake at a healthful level. The pamphlet unfolds to a 12 by 18 Va inch post er that would make an attractive wall decoration for the kitchen. United Press International MOSCOW — To the list of pressing issues in the Soviet Union such as nuclear dis armament and trade sanc tions add a crusty problem — bread. The Communist Party newspaper Pravda devoted a full page Monday to the issue of the thrifty use of bread, in cluding discussion of why loaves are sold without protec tive packing. Fedor Kolomiets, first de puty minister for the food in dustry, said the Soviet chemic al, timber and paper indus tries could not supply adequ ate packing materials. Besides, he said, bread wrapped in plastic loses its fla vor more quickly than bare loaves. United Press International A Soviet satellite high above Earth zeroes is on an American space vehicle. It comes within 50 yards, hovers momentarily, and suddenly explodes, sending hundreds of pieces of shrapnel through the U.S. vehicle. The chances of such a disas ter are increasing, some say, be cause of the U.S. and Soviet emphasis on military space tech nology. Advocates of increased spending claim that our falling behind the Soviets heightens or vulnerability. But Washington’s Worl- dwatch Institute says more funding for space weapons les sens security for both superpow ers. In an article called “Space: The High Frontier in Perspec tive,” author Daniel Deudney, writes, “New space weapons now being tested by both countries make each more vulnerable to first strike and will not give either a defensive advantage.” Furthermore, he says, the trend could stall arms control talks be cause verifying compliance in space is so difficult.