The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 185, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 10, 1972 Page: 27 of 32
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Managing Restaurant No Easy Way To Make Living
NEW YORK (AP) —Caian two years ago was the worst No( a staid businesswoman, is filled with labels from Dior, plains. “Then I conduct a lot of dautfiter, ajs te *
THE BAYTOWN SUN
Wednesday, May 10,1072
attractive young woman
happiness managing a staff*
60 people and seeing that 200
300 people are fed and ente
tained six nights a week?
Yes-if she’s Georgia _
bazis, director of Dionysos, a!
Greek restaurant she opened
here with two friends two years
ago. And as though it’s not
' enough to run the place, Mrs
Sambazis often contributes to
the entertainment by singing
there too.
“I think it was my destiny,”
the dark-haired restaurateur
says, sipping a Bloody Mary
that she ordered “very spicy,”
“I always liked entertaining
and I had wanted to go into the
restaurant business. I met Taki
------Stambolis—.anti----Paul
Sapounakis and we said, ‘why
not open a restaurant,’ so we
did. The three of us have had a
very happy ‘marriage.’
“None of us knew anything
about the restaurant
business,” she continues, “and
i was the worst
i me, since many
j out of business.
faith in myself
i I didn’t know it was
Miss Sambazis says she thinks
her wardrobe is important to
her business. “Some people
will come in just to see what
as international ay you’re wearing, ” she main-
tains, and unabashedly admits,
Stavropoulos, Trigere, Cardin
and Narducti.
Being in the restaurant busi-
ness-and hers is open late—
Miss Sambazis is, by necessity,
a night person. “I sleep until 11
business over the phone. I like
lunching, seeing other restau-
rants, other people. And I usu-
ally get to my restaurant about
> p
plays havoc with her sodal life.
But she also says she doesn't
mind too much. And besides,
she points out that her custom-
ers come from all walks
being hampered in
it business by
Miss Sambazis
the opposite is true,
d^try to help you be-
yu’re a woman,” she
admits, however,
sometimes hard to
the staff. “Greek
malW’ she says, smiling. “I
don’t\ jink they’re used to
taking orders. But you
shoulgt have, to demand
respecEventually you should
just gtfe.” g
Missimhazis had a rather |.
unorthax background for be-
coming) restaurateur. She
grew us in Peekskill, N.Y.,
went todlege at Berkeley, in
Califoir, returned to New
York Ci, where she took act-
ing lesss, worked for one of
the maj television networks
and th* at an advertising
agencyr 10 years.
“I thuif you have a general
knowleo of business you can
transfer from one area to an-
other,” e says. “I did have to
ask a nlion questions.”
“I like clothes.” Her wanfrobe or 12 in the morning,” she ex- vorced and has a 6-vear-old
Hie restaurateur, who is di- life-designers, diplomats, ac-
s uaru sumeunies, ue-
e you have to smile, anile,
5,” she says. “But I
ln’t nave it any other
MODERN MOSCOW demonstrates that city life is looking up behind the Iron Cut-
tors, among others, and that
she gets to meet more than
hundred of them every night
she’s working.
‘‘It’s hard sometimes,
cause
smile,
wouldn’t have it .any
way;”
What about when she’s not
working? Though admittedly
not “the outdoor type," she’s
taking tennis lessons—"a new
way to meet men," she laughs,
And even when she’s on vaca-
tion, she says she worries
about work_ahd'TcaIls'the
restaurant two or three-times a
day.”_.
GOOD BYE MULE
MILLERSV1IJ-.E, Md. <AP)
—Among the unsolved cases at
the local police station is the
theft of Elwood Diggs' mule
Diggs said two men asked his
father'll they could borrow the
900-pound animal
The elder Diggs, near-blind
at 92, said he couldn’t describe
the thieves, but-that they drove
off with the mule in a red truck
loud Seeding Like A Nod
From Heaven In Oklahoma
by BILL JOHNSON _
Associated Press Writer
..The big plane banked and
came up parallel to the tower-
ing storm front. A stream of
chemicals began spewing into,
the clouds. Suddenly, the:
heavens opened up and the rair i
poured down.
To the people of Altus, Okla
ing to become a. way.jjf .life,!
Radcliffe said. “People ore
fi nding that the arid Southwest
a good place to live, and
they’ll have to have water.
“There are only two ways to
get it to them: bring it in from
water-surplus areas or in-
crease the efficiency of Mother
Nature to make rain. And,
• v un. ruvu*, , tenure Ul IIHW 1 dill. ,VIIU,
there is no doubt that the clou dt there might not be areas of
seeding operation, performed
under an emergency govern-
ment appropriation, had toucl i
ed off the life-giving rain
By the time the rain had
stopped, 10.04 inches bad fallur i
on the parched southwest Okl a
homa area that day last Se p
tember, compared with a total
of 24.61 inches for all of 1971
‘Cast year the project wa:s a same method, although the farmers launched a program to
*’ nni/1 D W UOiwllL___ut___II____l.JIJ. ^11 L. I____
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15 7 Cu. Ft. freezer... nofrosting ever... Four cabinet shelves, one
adjustable. Four shelves . door, plus two juice can storage racks.
Automatic icemaker storesp to 190 cubes of ice. One-piece,
around, steel cabinet.
wrap-
The "BIG TOP"
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*377
20.8 cubic foot refrigerotor/freezer with the largest top freezer ever. . .
6.96 cubic feet. Big 13.8 cubic foot fresh food section, Jet Freeze Ice
Compartment. Rolls out on wheels. 30'/z" W, 66" H.
success,” said R.W, “Rip”
Radcliffe, project engineer at
the Altus office of the U.S, 'B u-
reau of Reclamation. “There
was five inches of rain in about
45 minutes to an hour
By the end of this week, t;he
planes should be in the air < jver
southwest Oklahoma again,
water surplus in too many
more years.”
The ground generators used
by Krick employ high voltage
electricity to burn sticks of sil-
ver iodide, which then are
caught by the air currents and
carried away
A portion of the federally dHions are judged right, and a
funded program will use the group of Cotton County, Okla.,
burning silver iodide will be in raise $10,000 for a rainmaking
planes and the crystals can project,
be dispensed into the clouds. And at Maysville in south
Also to be used in the big central Oklahoma, about 20
rainmaking program is the hy* persons joined together in
droscoplc method, in which "Pray for Rain" community
urea or amonium nitrate are prayer session
dropped Mto the clouds.
“lbe hydroscopic method i
this time under a |22!5„0OO used on a broad storm front," GflS Company
federal weather modification Radcliffe said, "While the sil- u ,
ver iodide is used on an Individ- ilOJlOrCu I1 OF
ual storm cell.” a e n 1
A lafge part of the Bureau of oUlC KCCOFu
HOUSTON tSpi
Houston
1.9 Cl. Ft. Party
Portable Refrigerator
Compact
Freezer
Holds
Up To
147 lbs.
Perfed for tho don, j
tic, nurtory, inock b
offico or dormitory roo
. . Only 22* wtds, Tf
high. Four mini-cuba»
frays, fait fooling.
!107
Attar Sala Price $118
4,2 eu. ft. hold* up to 147
lbs. of frozen food ... two-
ilido out shalvas, sliding
storage basket, convenient
door shelves.
MATCHINGMNMOMATOR .... <137
KOOLCO
Phone 42 6681
116 S. ALEXANDER
BAYTOWN/TEXAS
contract awarded by the i
Bureau of Reclamation to i
Weather Science Inc. of
Norman, Okla. Reclamation’s weather modi-
The primary objective of the fication program will be de- p, ,v ,, pi
program is to increase r ainfall voted to research. Rain gauges , j v ,j V J*
Z, £5K£LJS *». *•«"» «»w-* «* E&S&2S
homa counties will be affected clouds and other technical "^e°ho”recl for outstanding
Beckham, Custer, Greer, measurements will be made, . ,, , ,h*
Marmon, Jacksoc, Kiowa, Ro- Radcliffe said one of the^ jjj* Division of the
ger Mills and Tillmar,. At the technical tools was an airplane ,, , N t| ,yF! , ^f .
same time, the city of Lawton, fitted with a large disc on top,
Palm Springs, Calif., for a $27- disc," he said. "We can tell American °M
000 rainmaking prog ram. The from their size and type wheth- ,
Krick firm will use ground- CT the cloud seeding is eftec- Natural S
based silver iodide generators, tive."
a number of them already in Once the
place, to seed clouds. program gets underway,
‘There is no question but Radcliffe said, it will be ;
“All the scientific evidence spreads out.
“If So I Vri.
sion division, with a fleet of 164
vehicles and nearly 200 driv-
large-scaie ers was awarded third place in
the contest, based on its .safety
what we have the ability to in-lnecessary to monitor closely Per,ormance ,n 1971 Dur‘n*
crease rainfall,’’ Radcliffe the Krick operation
said. “You can overseed a cloud
! and destroy it,” he said, "The , „„
the material into the clouds, storm cloud blows Its top and ^ ™
we have shows that cloud seed- “if he (Krick i is getting in to
ing from airplanes is the rrieth- the cloud and we came by and
od which will work in south- seeded, it could do more harm
west Oklahoma. Ground than good.”
generators have about a 3,000- While saying the scientific ^ In,titut«‘ were foun,ed in
foot capability in this area, evidence indicates that seeding
They depend on the air from planes ta superior to ,el™ne(d after inspection and
ground generators In some
areas HONOR JUAREZ
MkCsJHHan
** tm
m
the silver iodide crystals into
the clouds. With a plane you
can put the material right
where It will do the most
good.”
‘Regardless of the method
used, the objective is the same
to put something into a cloud
that tiny droplets can gather
around to become Mg drops,
which then fall as rain
With one of the driest first-
quarters on record through
much of the nation’s mid-sec-
tion from Nebraska to Texas,
Colorado and New Mexico, the
lessons learned In southwest
Oklahoma may soon be applied
in other states
"We use ground generators
to Increase the snow pack and
runoff to the Colorado River,"
ht said
Radcliffe sees the brief
emergency cloud-seeding
operation of last year and ex-
fordemanstrationprojeet*.in-
Arizona, New Mexico, Texas,
Oklahoma, Colorado and
Kansas,
Another $3 million per year
for the same period would be
provided for comparable pro-
grams in North Dakota, South
Dakota, Nebraska. Wyoming
arid Mohtaiia._
Bellmon said the proposed
program could bring $200 mil-
lion in benefits to the agricul-
ture industry and increase wa-
ter for city arid industrial users
in drought-prone areas,
in the meantime, Kriek's
ground generators sizzle on
command when the cloud con-
this period, the drivers trav-
eled 3,860,000 miles and had
erage for the 108 fleets included
in the contest was 10.5 acci-
dents per million miles
All accidents, as defined by
the American National Stand-
panded program of this year as Juarez 100 years ago. He was
he forerunners of a mulU-state
weather modification program
as envisioned by Soil. Henry
Bellmon, R-Oklaj^H ■
Bellmon and five Republican
“Weather modification is go- a year tor the next four yearslhe made his home
MEXICO CITY (AP) - This
is known is the "year of Jua-
rex’! in Mexico,
Mexico City's International
Airport will be called Benito
Juarez Airport on July II to
commemorate the death of
Mexico's great liberator. |
There will also be
ceremonies at Guelatao,
Oaxaca, where Juarez was
bom, and In Mexico City,
colleagues have Introduced Veracruz and Ciudad Juarez
legislation to provide $4 million where at one time or another
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 185, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 10, 1972, newspaper, May 10, 1972; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1104525/m1/27/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.