The Michigan Daily-Sunday, September 14,l980-Page 7 Turkish military raids party offices From UPI and AP ANKARA, Turkey-The new military regime seized the headquarters of &urkey's extreme right and moderate y P tpolitical parties yesterday, and d to crush terrorism in nationwide on leftist and rightist hideouts. In a move to reassure Turkey's allies, the ruling National Security Council of . Kenan Evren said the strategic NATPO nation would honor all foreign liabilities and payments-debts amoun- ting to a staggering $16 billion. THE PRE-DAWN Friday coup, friging to a blookless end th* political infighting that had paralyzed the. civilian government, prompted no ap- parent public dissent. The mood here and in Istanbul was one of relief. !' Tanks and soldiers guarded major in- tersections. Turks jammed shops that had been closed in the takeover, and hufried home before the night curfew Weht into effect. "'Curfew was relaxed ',until 8 p.m., taroks were thinned out from the capital ahd' slum residents began 0whitewashing their walls of political Jra'fiti. THE RULING FIVE-man National ecurity Committee, headed by Gen. j enian Evren, 62-year-old chief of staff aid; leader of the coup, restored inter- national communications, reopened the airport to international traffic, and an- nounced banks would be operating tomorrow. Evren has promised Turkey will remain friendly to the West and main- tain its commitments to the North Atlantic-Treaty Organization. Turkey, traditional guardian of the strategic Dardanelles dividing Europe and Asia, anchors the southern and eastern flanks of the NATO alliance. It serves NATO in the crucial role of buffer to the Soviet Union to the north,' the troubled Mideast to the south, and' revolutionary, fundamentalist Moslem Iran to the east. U.S. AMBASSADOR TO Turkey James Spain spent the day denying1 charges that the United States was behind Friday's military coup or knew about it in advance-allegations that1 were fueled by the fact that Air Force1 Chief of Staff Gen. T hsin Shahankaha returned from a vi t to the United States Thursday night, only hours before the coup that ousted Prime, Minister Suleyman Demirel. Evren, the armed forces chief-of- staff, said he staged Turkey's third' coup in 20years to stamp out terrorism, end political bickering, and stem aE rising tide of Islamic fundamentalism Terrorist leader escapes despite pleas to surrender divided neighborhoods into spheres of leftist or rightist control. "The soldiers came and told me to paint out the slogans, and I was happy to do it," said one middle-aged worker. "I did i, and I liked doing it.' "Last night was the first night I wasn'.t afraid to sit next to the window," another resident_ said In the Ankara slum of Esertepe, an army commando dressed in camouflage fatigues and toting a sub- machine gun hopped on a skate board belonging to a local youngster and went careening down the street-gun and all. that he said was pushing Turkey to the brink of civil war. On the second day of martial law, his troops raided targets of both the left and the right-including Moslem fun- damentalists-and uncovered an un- disclosed amount of machine guns, ex- plosives and material used for making bombs, reports said. ARMY TROOPS SEIZED control of the left-leaning Republican People's Party headquarters, whose leader, Bulent Ecevit, was reported sharing a prison island with Demirfl, his long- time rival. "You must leave," a soldier politely but firmly told one foreigner. "This is no headquarters, there is no political party." Unconfirmed reports said as many as 120 parliamentary deputies as well as other politicians also were arrested. But Alparslan Turkes, leader of the extreme right National Action Party blamed for much of the rightit terror,I eluded capture. Turkish Radio broad- cast an appeal to Turkes to surrender. ABOUT 40 TURKISH leftists oc- cupied the Turkish consulate in West Germany for several hours yesterday to protest the military coup in their homeland, police reported. They said the invaders, who carried placards and draped the offices with political banners, left the building peacefully and there was no violence. Leaders of the group delivered a petition to consular officials protesting the military takeover, demanding Turkey's withdrawal from the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, and calling for the banning of a right-wing Turkish group known as the Gray Wolves, a police spokesman said. USING PAINT SUPPLIED by soldiers, Anakara's slum dwellers whitewashed their walls to obliterate the political graffiti that had long I i NOW OPEN I18 E. W ASHINGTON (NEXT TO BIMBO'S) FEA TURING FISH 'n CH IPS $.95 " SANDWICH ES o STE AKS OPEN FOR L UNCH EON AND DINNER LI L LPV lLlflIvU'lIvl -Ivv vVVP%1 Tonight: JIM BIRCHER and GINNY WALLACE COCKTAILS 118 EAST WASHINGTON ENGLISH ALE 663-9757 Li REPOR TS REVEAL CONTINUED CORRUPTION: GSApractie N WASHINGTON (AP)-The drumbeat of publicity has epded. The flood of indictments has slowed to a trickle. The scandal that rocked the General Services Administration ap- 4rs to be fading into history. , But some investigators, from both Congress and the GSA itself, are wondering whether any real lessons were learned. . THE SCANDAL EXPLODED into public view in 1978 with 4blished reports about contractors being paid to paint >vernment wall space that did not exist and federal stock- les being pilfered. The 'disclosures' made the letters "GSA" almost 4nopymous with government corruption, and President arter personally pledged a thorough investigation into problems that dated back several administrations. But two recent reports by Congress' watchdog arm, The eneral Accounting Office, found continued ismanagement of two of the most abused areas of GSAac- t vities: The self-service stores and so-called "multiple ards schedule" that allows officials to shop by catalog for r*illions of different items, ranging from typewriters to party vars. i PERSONALLY DON'T see any significant im- rovement in GSA," said Howard Davia, GSA's top auditor. "The same opportunity is there, the same players are there." D Davia said GSA's new leadership has shown little deter- nination to punish officials who waste money and has not significantly reformed abused GSA programs. "There is just not the inclination to get tough," he said. MORE THAN. TWO ears after the scandal surfaced, )some of those most deeply involved in the investigation nueston whether it ever got close to the bottom of corruption at the government's multibillion-dollar buildingand supply agency. The investigation has led, by GSA count, to the convictions f 143 low- and middle-level federal employees and gover- ment contractors. Not a single high-ranking government of- icial was indicted. Liberal Party NEW YORK (AP)-The Liberal Par- carrying New Yor es under fire Officials currently directing the probe say they have pur- sued the evidence aggressively. However, two former top GSA officials said they suspect a political decision was made not to press the investigation. "MY ONLY JUDGMENT is that somebody didn't want the investigation to be continued," former GSA Ad- ministrator Jay Solomon said in a recent interview. Solomon, a Carter appointee who helped bring the scandal to light but left in early 1979 apparently under White House pressure, refused to say who he things might have wanted the investigation stopped. In a separate interview, William A. Clinkscales Jr., the GSA's former top investigator, said, "There's no question in my mind that if the administration had supported the GSA investigation it would have led to higher-level officials, who at minimum allowed the offenses to continue." THE SUGGESTION, HOWEVR, that the investigation has not been energetically pursued brings angry denials from of- ficials currently in charge of the probe. "If the implication is that we have set our sights at the lowest level ... I resent that suggestion," said Muellenberg. "I would be tickled pink to get the so-called big fish." Clinkscales, although still working at GSA, was re- assigned "early this year because of differences with his new superior, GSA Inspector Genral Kurt Muellenberg. Both Solomon and Clinkscles said the problem with the in- vestigation can be traced back to Solomon's firing in mid- 1978' of former GSA No. 2 man Robert Griffin, a friend of House Speaker Thomas O'Neill Jr. From that point on, Solomon said his relations with the White House cooled and the investigation began to "go downhill." Although Solomon said at the time that Griffin was being dismissed because of management disagreements, not because of the scandal, the firing outraged O'Neill, who com- plained publicly that his friend had been treated "shabbily." OKs Anderson k in November." ty followed the lead of its policy com- mittee yesterday and backed the in- dependent presidential candidacy of John Anderson, breaking a 36-year tradition of support for the Democratic nominee. The party chose Anderson by a vote of 85,590.5 to 9,896 for President Carter. Anderson, campaigning on the West Coast, said in a statement released by ,his campaign office that he was } "delighted" by the action. "Once again the traditionally Liberal Party has shown that it is willing to put principles above politics," he said, ad- ding that he and his running mate, i Patrick J. Lucey, "look forward to The vote for the Republican congressman came after two and one- half hours of factious debate although the party's backing was considered a foregone conclusion after its executive committee decided the week before to recommend that Anderson's name ap- pear on the party's line in the Novem- ber general election. Also appearing on the Liberal line will be the name of Sen. Jacob Javits, who on Tuesday lost the Republican Party's nomination for another term in office. Carter, who had the Liberal backing in 1976, had courted it this year. The party's decision to back the Illinois congressman was seen as a blow to the Carter efforts to win New York's 41 electoral votes. The party's leadership contended that Carter had ignored the party and its liberal principles. "The Liberal Party is not just a ling; it's a cause," said party chief Raymond Harding at yesterday's session. "By nominating John Anderson, we reaf- firm that cause." MEET CAPITOL RECORDS' RECORDING ARTISTS THE MOTELS MONDAY, SEPT. 14-3 pm at Schoolkids' Records (Records) 523 E. Liberty 994-8031 FRIDAY, SEPT. 19 SATURDAY, SEPT. 20 SUNDAY, SEPT. 21 r 7:15 PLAN NINE FROM OUTER SPACE(1959) dl IZA 1:30 THE TERFEOR OF TINY TOWN(1938) 3:30 7:15 BRIDE OF THE MONSTER(1953) &2.50~ THE ATTACK OF THE KILLER TOMATOES(1978) tn All i I I