Page 6--Friday, July 31, 198f-The Michign Daily Rebels stage co up in, Gambia ,4 DAKAR, Senegal (UPI)-With their president in London for the royal wedding, rebel troops in Gambia yesterday led a bloody coup against the tiny West African nation's 16-year-old democratic government. The insurgents -declared a revolutionary council was in control, but reports reaching Dakar said police loyal to President Sir Dawda Kairaba Jawara were offering some resistance. The rebels claimed control of key communications and transportation points. THERE WAS NO immediate word on the fate of Vice President Assan Musa Camara, who had been in charge while Jawara was in London for Wednesday's wedding of Britain's Prince Charles to Lady Diana Spencer. The dawn coup ended, at least temporarily, elected rule in one of Africa's few functioning democracies, a former British territory that was the setting for the novel "Roots." The rebel radio identified the new chief of state as Kukli Sanyang. Diplomats said it was mnclear if he was a member of the paramilitary field for- ces-Gambia's army of a few hundred men who carried out the coup-or a political opposition figure. JAWARA, PRESIDENT since independence in 1965, went into-seclusion outside London, a Gambian Embassy spokesman said. Most communications with the capital of Banjul were cut and the airport was closed. Reports reaching Dakar indicated several deaths with sporadic fighting still going on. The insurgents held the capital's radio station, bridges and ferries across the Gambia River and the airport. The rebel-held Radio Banjul said the new ruling National Revolutionary Council included three military men and nine civilians belonging to the Socialist and Revolutionary Labor Party, apparently an underground group not -among officially recognized political parties. 4 TESTIMONY SAYS CUBAN WEAPONS PURCHASES NEAR RECORD: Haig discusses Soviet arms sales WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of State Alexander Haig Jr. said the Soviet Union is sending weapons to Cuba in-near-record amounts this year and that some of the arms are being reshipped to Central America. If the present pace of arms shipmen- ts to Cuba is maintained, it would double the 1980 total and would be the most for any year since1962, the year of the Cuban missile crisis, Haig said. "WHILE MOST of the tonnage, is believed to be earmarked for Cuba's regular armed forces and its newly created territorial militia," Haig said, "there is solid evidence that some of the goods are being reshipped to Central America." Haig made his remarks in testimony prepared for the Senate Armed Ser- vices Committee and in a brief session with reporters afterward. The commit- THE MOVIES AT BRIARWOOI J -94 & S. STATE. @ 769-8780 (Adjacent to J C PE *DAILY EARLY B-RD MATINEES-Adults $1.50 DISCOUNT IS FOR SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 1:00 A.M. ti! 10 P.M. Sun. & Hols. 12 Noon tdi 1:30 :iscount-All seats S100-Onen to en tee meeting was, closed, but the State Department released copies of the testimony. When asked by reporters where the Soviet weapons were being rerouted from Cuba, Haig said: "Considerable to Nicaragua and clearly, substantial amounts have found their way into El Salvador." THE SECRETARY said "the United States has had discussions with the Soviet Union on this subject and there have been expressions of concern. Thus far, I would describe those discussions as unsatisfactory. But they are still in process and it remains to be seen." The State Department has said previously that Soviet bloc arms were being shipped through Cuba to El Salvador and Nicaragua. While Haig has threatened to go to "the source"; to stop the arms shipments, meaning, Cuba, he has never elaborated on the threat. State Department officials said Wed- nesday that the department is actively at work on the administration's policy toward Cuba. WHILE HAIG didn't provide any figures on Soviet arms shipments to Cuba, he was quoted in an interview with the Boston Globe Wednesday as saying the Soviets shipped 40,000 tons of- sophisticated arms to Cuba during the first seven months of the year. An aide to Haig said he stood by that figure. In his congressional testimony yesterday, Haig complaited that while the Soviets are increasing arms ship- ments to Cuba, Congress resilts ap- proving the administration's military assistance program. "The current state of affairs in the Congress regarding security assistance I I Haig ... discusses Soviet arms is alarming," Haig said. "This short- sighted approach to security assistance cripples our foreign policy and places U.S. credibility on the line." HAIG SAID THE Soviet Union spent $16 billion last year on arms for developing nations, including Cuba, while the United States "transferred only $10 billion in equipment." The request for security assistance funds is contained in the ad- ministration's- foreign aid bill, which has encountered serious resistance in Congress. The previous Congress also declined to approve the Carter administration's aid package two years in a row. In- stead, the nation's assistance effort stayed at old spending levels under a continuing resolution. "I must state in all candor that we are liable to serious consequences if we do not remedy this depressing situation in fiscal year 1982," Haig told the ar- med services committee. a a BI1LL MURRAY s:0 FRIDAY & SATURDAY. 12 MIDNIGHT A LIEN (R) , THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK STRIPES (R) ROCKY HORROR (R) I Open Today..l.a first for Ann Arbor SIMULATION STATION festering: 60 video/mechanical I " games. The best of the P new technology! The AMAZE N' BLUE i MACHINE with fantastic simulated adventures. The Most Exciting Entertainment Ever! 500 East Liberty. Downtown'next to SECOND CHANCE. I I I h i