I IL. Il I ..III 3II d LJrI e Irr.c ruy csc 0 Solzhenitsyn rejects second govt. summons MOSCOW (A') - Alexander Solzhenitsyn, the target of bitter offic- ial attacks for publication of his book on Stalinist labor camps, re- jected yesterday a summons to the Soviet prosecutor's office. He said he would not appear for interrogation. The prosecutor's office had delivered a second summons to the apartment of the author's wife, and Solzhenitsyn said he refused to acknowledge legality of the summons. FOLLOWING a furious campaign of official press denunciations of Solzhenitsyn and his book, "Gulag Archipelago," the prosecutor's action could be the start of an attempt to silence the author by arrest and initiating charges against him. A summons was delivered on --_- Friday, but Solzhenitsyn's wife re- fused to accept it. A new docu- ment was taken to her apartment yesterday and Solzhenitsyn then issued a defiant statement to the prosecutor.rel "In a situation of general illeg-rebel tow n ality which for many years has .S Dogmobile? Cars may be going to the dogs, but they're not yet being driven by them. Though it looks Rex is ready to roll, he is only guarding his master's car until she returns. POST-SKYLAB LAYOFFS: S$pace CAPE CANAVERAL (W) - When the Skylab astronauts drop- ped into the Pacific Ocean Fri- day after 84 days in space, 1,816 employes at the Kennedy Space Center saw their jobs come to an end. They joined more than 13,000 aerospace workers at the cen:er who have lost their jobs since 1968, when 26,000 persons were employed during the height of America's space program. BY JUNE 30, the work force at Kennedy will be about 9,450, said a spokesman for the Na- tional Aeronautics and Space AJ- ministration. jobs dwindlE The latest group to receive pink slips worked mainly for contract- ors such as the Boeing Co., Gen- eral Electric Co., and Interna- tional Business Machines Corp., handling launch support facilities Some will spend their last two weeks on the job moving the Sa- turn 1B rescue rocket back to the Vehicle Assembly Building, where it will be taken apart and modified for possible use dur- ing the 1975 Soviet-American mis- sion. After that, there will be no more Americans in space until perhaps 1978 or 1979. 'LAYOFFS WILL take place in all skilled categor ing some managemen gineering and somet sonnel," said Al Even ing's personnel staff. Boeing, which launc 3 last Nov. 16 with 2,150, was down to by the first of the ye McDonnell Douglas tic-s Co. said that by February it will ha its work force at Ker 590 last NovemberK o J. P. WEIDIG ofA administrative staff sa those losing their jo known since before C Chrysler Corp. is payroll here from 3 vember to about 150 McDonald, a Chrys man, said that by ' company will havet calling some employ on the linkup progra Russians. Bob Winchester, per ager for Rockwell, sa pany has arranged tr many of the workers brought in other co interview them for jo existed in our country - and the AP Photo personal eight-year campaign of slander and ;harassment of me - I refuse to acknowledge the legal- like Argus ity of your summons and will not come for an interrogation to any state organ," the statement said. THE SUMMONS, requesting his appearance at 10 a.m. today, did not say why the procurator gener- al's investigative division wanted to see Solzhenitsyn. The Solzhenitsyn statement, re- leased to Western newsmen, con- tinued: "Before asking legality ies, includ- from citizens learn how to observe t, some en- it yourself. Free the innocent from hourly ner- confinement. sou Ee- "Punish those guilty of mass t of Boe- executions and false informers. Punish the administrators and the ched Skylab special organs which have per- a staff of formed genocide exile of peoples. about 2,000 Remove from local and regional ar. satraps today their unlimited pow- ,s Astronau- er over citizens, the ordering the end of about of courts and psychiatrists." ve reduced SOLZHENITSYN apparently .nned v from views the shifting of certain na- a about 427. tionalities from one place to an- other in the Soviet Union as a Mal:)ony ll'form of genocide. aid many of The office of procurator gen- )bs "h a v e eral in the Soviet Union bears hrstmas." some similarities to the attorney cutting .its general's office in the United 00 last No- States and has broad powers to in- I. But Tom vestigate and prosecute crimes. ler spokes- However, the action against October the Solzhenitsyn would not have been to start re- taken without a high-level Com- es to wori| munist party decision since the im with the procurator's office is under party ,, control as are all other public of- sonn:l man- fices in the Soviet Union. li the com- SINCE SOLZHENITSYN has re- ransfers for fused to comply with the sum- s and h a d mons, the prosecutor's office may )mpanies to decide to forcibly bring him to bs. the office. ' t PREMIER turing- N~ CHAMBERS '' " .- En Ivory soap girl . . ,'i destroyed MANILA (' - Thousands of refugees fled yesterday from burn- ing Jolo town in the southern Philippines, where air f o r c e planes bombed and strafed as gov- ernment troops battled Moslem secessionists, reliable military sources said. About 6,000 refugees, most of them Moslems landed by boat yes- terday 100 miles north of Jolo in Zamboanga city on Mindanao, the southernmost main Philippine is- land, according to government so- cial welfare officers. Officials were seeking urgent shipmentof food, clothing and medicine for the refugees, who were being housed in school buildings. MAJ. GEN. Fidel Ramos, com- nmander of the Philippine constab- ulary, told reporters that govern- ment forces had pushed the invad- ing rebels three to six miles out of the town. However, other reliable military sources reported fighting was con- tinuing in at least five pockets in Jolo. Other well-informed sources said the attack on Jolo occurred simultaneously with attacks on at least two towns in Zamboanga del Sur and in some areas in Cotabato and Lanao del Norte provinces on Mindanao. The government described the rebels as "Maoists" but the dissi- dents said they were fighting to set up their own nation in the pre- dominately Moslem areas of the southern islands. MVEl co 17 at SPRING BREAK March 3-10 $269 double triple Ka p259 -INCLUDES- " Round-trip air transportation via. AA DC-1O, *Round-trip transfers between hotel & 8airporttsatE RmaoHoe *Services of alocal tour guide Fighting erupts along Iraq-Iran border BEIRUT, Lebanon (P) - Iraq Arab state equipped mainly with and Iran were reported moving up American weaponry, announced; troops to reinforce their common that 41 Iranian soldiers were killed border yesterday after a territor- and 81 wounded in Sunday's bor- ial dispute erupted in heavy fight- der clashes with the Soviet- ing. More than 140 casualties were equipped Iraqis. reported. The Tehran announcement came The border hostilities Sunday about 24 hours after Baghdad re- raised fears of a major collision ported one Iraqi officer was killed between the two military powers and 22 soldiers were wounded in of the wealthy Persian Gulf area, the fighting. source of much of the world's oil. The clash ended a four-month But official sources in Tehran, truce between the two countries, the Iranian capital, said the fron- which have been vying for domi- tier was quiet yesterday. nance in the gulf since the BritishE Baghdad newspapers claimed forces withdrew in 1971. Iran was rushing in tank and in- The Tehran government state- fantry regiments opposite Iraq's ment charged Iranian losses re- Badra border region. Reports in sulted from an attack by Iraqi' Beirut newspaper said Iraq also ground forces on the Iranian fron- was hurrying in extra troops. tier post of Mehran and a bomb- IRAN, a Western - oriented non- I ing raid on a nearby dike. LIMITED SEATS! 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