Texas A&M The Battalion Friday, September 2,1983/The Battalion/Page 1B )ilman reviving Galveston United Press International ALVESTON, — If Galves- were a cat it would be find- itself starting at least its third in no small part clue to uston oilman George F. As anyone knows who has Iked the littered beaches, or has walked ramshackle ighborhoods or searched itlessly for quality nightlife, Galveston is not purring as it once did. It was different from the middle of last century to the ear ly 1900s. Immigrants flooded into a port city that was bustling with ocean-going trade. The Strand in the wharf area was alive at all hours. As late as the 1940s, there was a steady cash flow with illegal gambling in speakeasies along Seawall Blvd. But the famous 1900 Hurri cane decimated the city. Hous ton, 50 miles to the north, attracted away much of Galves ton’s port business. And Finally the Texas Rangers ended gamb- hng. Today, restoration of histor ical buildings, financed with readily available bond money and aided by federal tax exemp tions offered to those who pre COME FLY WITH US Texas A&M Flying Club Club offers: t Late model Cessna training aircraft FAA Certified Flight Instructors i Very economical rates olearn more, please attend our first meeting Sept. 6, 7:30 p.m at our Clubhouse at the north end of the ramp at Easterwood Airport. If you need aride, meet at Physics Room 201 at 7:00. For more information, call David Irown at 693-3341. serve the past, has a small part of town bustling again. Mitchell, chairman and presi dent of Mitchell Energy & De velopment Corp. of Houston, a company with net earnings of $115 million last year, is crowing about the potential for year- round tourism. “It’s amazing now that even the disbelievers are beginning to believe history can create one of the biggest booms that Galves ton has had in the last 15 years,” he said. Mitchell, 63, the Galveston born son of a Greek immigrant, owns a fashionable weekend home on the island. The town of 62,000 residents has two institutions providing life support — the port and the University of Texas Medical Branch. Other than that, it is a summer resort and escape for Houston residents. Mitchell and his wife, Cynth ia, took a chance five years ago by investing $2 million to build and operate a posh gourmet re staurant, the Wentletrap, in an old building located on The Strand — that once-proud thor oughfare along the city’s wharves which served as the business district’s spinal cord. Now, the Mitchells own 10 old buildings in The Strand His torical District. One of them, the 1879 Blum Building, is being re novated and will he reopened in 1984 as a 120-room luxury Vic torian hotel. The Tremont House, at a cost of $12 million. “The Tremont House is risky but it has a great deal more appeal and interest to my wife and I than does a condominium project,” he said. The Wentletrap, the Tre mont House or any other re novation probably would not be done at all if not for government help. Getting in practice staff photo by Mike Davis Senior yell leader Todd Kronshage and junior yell leader Kelly Joseph lead yell practice during Freshman Orientation Week. The season’s first regular midnight yell practice will be this Friday night. Americans changing to healthy eating habits United Press International Americans are changing their eating habits to reflect an in terest in health and fitness and a broadening of tastes to include international foods. Chicken consumption in the United States has increased 70 percent over the past 20 years. Turkey is up 42 percent, sea food 32 percent. Mexican style food consump tion has grown 91 percent in the past six years alone and oriental food 93 percent, says Tony Adams, marketing research di rector for a major food manu facturer. His figures come from various sources, including The Gallup Organization, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the SAMI division of Time magazine. “We now consume six and a half times as much apple juice as we did 20 years ago, two and a half times more chilled fruit juice and twice as much frozen orange juice,” the Campbell Soup Co. executive said in a speech at a recent press lunch in New York. Adams added that “tints, can ned tuna, vegetbles and espe cially salads have all shown dou ble-digit growth in these past two decades.” Broccoli consumption has tri pled in the past 20 years, he said. These astonishing percen tages reflect three strong trends, said Adams and two other Campbell executives: Ethnic and American regional fare and health and fitness. 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