The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 211, Ed. 1 Friday, July 5, 1985 Page: 3 of 24
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Baytown Sun and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sterling Municipal Library.
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OPEN FRIDAY, JULY 5
SATURDAY,JULY i
:* SUNDAY, JULY 7*
Low Ceiling Hugger
O THIS LOW PRICE
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Beds may be hard to come by soon in Turkey
By EMEL ANIL
Associated Press Writer
ANKARA, Turkey (AP) - A
long-awaited surge In tourism is
stimulating Turkey’s economy,
but creating headaches for
tourist officials, who say there
just aren’t enough beds for ev-
eryone.
“We already had to turn down
30 tour groups,” laments Tuna
Hetman, a director of Tantur
Travel Agency in Istanbul. “My
advice to tourists is not to come
without firm reservations. They
could end up sleeping on the
beaches or park benches.”
The number of tourists visiting
Turkey jumped by 30 percent
last year to 2.1 million, earning
Turkey an estimated $800
million, up from $411 million the
previous year. Textiles and food
exports are Turkey’s two largest
money-earners.
Anticipating a similar in-
crease in the number of tourists,
this year, Tourism Ministry of-
ficials are working feverishly to
expand bed capacity. This
Crosby couple V
son named senior
plant engineer
Carl Johnson? formerly of
Houston, has been named senior
engineer of the Nitro Plant in
Nitro, W.Va.
Nitro is a subsidiary of the
Monsanto Co.-
Johnson is a graduate of
Prairie View A&M University
with a bachelor’s degree in
mechanical engineering.
'
Christina:' ........ *•- I
Johnsort is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Johnson of Crosby.
year’s earnings from tourism,
according to Akin Izmirlioglu,
Tourism Ministry deputy under-
secretary, “could be as high as
$1.5 billion if only we had the
beds.”
Currently, Turkey can bed
down 75,000 tourists. Neighbor-
ing Greece, whose population is
roughly a quarter of Turkey’s,
has 370,000 beds for visitors,
while Romania at less than half
the size has 180,000.
Izmirlioglu says another 8,000
beds will be. ready by this sum-
mer and another 8,000 by the end
of the year.
Still officials worry about
space. Managers of many seas-
ide hotels report they are solidly
booked through November. In-
frastructure is also a problem.
“I hope we shall not be buried
under a tourism explosion,”
says Adnan Kahveci, chief ad-
viser to Premier Turgut Ozal.
Officials say foreign credits or
investments are needed for
rapid development of tourism, a
sector Turkish President Kenan
Evren has vigorously promoted,
calling it “an industry without
smokestacks.”
“There is no doubt this is a
market with great potential,”
agrees Kahveci. “We have 4,800
miles of shoreline. The whole
country is an open air museum.”
And travel agents say Winter
sports and hunting have yet to be
explored as options for tourists.
But investors in tourism proj-
ects also expect good roads, suf-
ficient water supplies and elec-
tricity, and well-trained service
personnel — all areas in which
Turkey is short, note tourism of-
ficials who declined to be nam-
ed.
Also inadequate are the num-
ber of airports near resort areas.
Only four airports serve the
Aegean and Mediterranean
coasts. In addition, the national
carrier, Turkish Airlines, does
not have enough planes, a defi-
ciency Turkey is trying to over-
come with recent purchases of
Airbus planes.
Despite the obstacles, foreign
investors have started nibbling
at opportunities in Turkey.
Why the burst of interest in
Turkey as a holiday spot?
Evren says establishment of
law and order under military
rule after years of widespread
terrorism has been^jpe contrib-
uting factor. t
In addition, die steady deval-
uation of the Turkish lira against
Western currencies is another,
making Turkey an inexpensive
holiday spot for Europeans and
Americans, tourism officials
say. %
They say other Mediterranean
countries have reached a satura-
tion point in the tourism field
and travelers are always seek-
ing new horizons.
Turkey is particularly popular
among Arab tourists. An es-
timated 400,000 Arabs visited
Turkey last year and Mukerrem
Tascioglu, tourism minister,
said it was expected that a half-
million Arabs, along with 250,000
other Moslem and Asian
tourists, would come this year.
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Brown, Leon. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 63, No. 211, Ed. 1 Friday, July 5, 1985, newspaper, July 5, 1985; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1075137/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.