Page 6--Saturday, October 4, 1980-The Michigan Daily Bomb explodes near Paris synagogue PARIS (UPI)-A powerful car bomb exploded outside a synagogue crowded with worshippers yesterday, killing at least four persons and injuring 24 in the worst anti-Semitic attack in the history of post-war France. A caller claiming to represent a neo- i fascist group, the European National Fascists, took responsibility for the blast outside the Rue C'opernic synagogue near the Arch of Triumph in one of Paris' fashionable residential districts. IN OTHER RECENT outbreaks of anti-Semitism, Jewish graves were defaced, fires set, and swastikas pain- ted at kosher restaurants, Jewish- owned stores and the homes of prominent Jews. Jewish organizations in Paris, alar- med by the incidents, held a rally Tuesday night around the memorial that was strafed with gunfire. Eight thousand persons showed up to protest the attacks and demand a government crackdown. 0 A YOUNG MAN SLIGHTLY injured in a bomb blast that killed four people and injured 16 others outside a synagogue in Paris last night, displays his anger AP Photo a few minutes after the explosion. A right wing group claimed responsibility for the attack. Swiss candy spies fudge up BERN, Switzerland (UPI)-Swiss counter- espionage agents have tracked down a young man and his girlfriend suspected of trying to sell Swiss chocolate secrets to the Soviet Union and China, the Justice Ministry said yesterday. The unnamed couple will go on trial. A ministry spokesman said the 26-year-old man and his 19-year-old fiance offered to sell the recipes for 40 different kinds of chocolates. "THEY WERE HELD under arrest for three days but are now free pending legal action on charges of attempted economic espionage on behalf of foreign powers," the spokesman said. "The whole affair is more funny than serious, but the law is the law," the spokesman continued. The couple offered the chocolate secrets in letters sent in mid-August to the Soviets and Chinese em- bassies in Bern, the Swiss capital, a statement said. Similar letters were sent to the East German and Saudi Arabian embassies. Justice ministry officials declined to reveal how police-who then alerted the counter-espionage ser- vice-learned of the letters. "WE CAN'T GIVE out that kind of information," the ministry spokesman said. Switzerland takes economic espionage very seriously and officials at first were reluctant to give any details at all about the affair. The finally disclos'ed that the would-be chocolate spies worked for the Suchard candy company, the wonan as an apprentice. Government officials said the man faces prosecution for trying to sell industrial secrets while the women probably will be charged with being an accomplice. "The charges will in all likelihood be less severe than normal because no information actually changed hands," one official said. Switzerland takes a fairly benign attitudetowards foreign spies-as long as the agents spy on each other and not on the Swiss. With few political or military secrets to hide, the Swiss take particular exception to foreign spies out to obtain industrial information. 0 Census Bureau to appeal headcount ruling" WASHINGTON (UPI)-The Census Bureau asked the Justice Department yesterday to appeal a ruling that requires the bureau to revise the 1980 headcount by adding people who were missed-and pinpoint local areas where theylive. Census Director Vincent Barabba said the agency is seeking an appeal because, "there is no feasible statistically defensible" way to do such *a detailed analysis of the undercount. THE DECISION on whether to appeal rests with the Justice Department's solicitor-general. 1 A federal judge in Detroit ruled Sept. 25 that the Census Bureau must revise its figures to include people who were not counted-either because of bureaucratic foul-ups or because they avoided census takers. The judge said until the problem is resolved, no final census figures for 1980 can be reported to the president and the states. The agency was given 30' days to say how it would make the change. IN OTHER CENSUS developments yesterday:, Barabba said the new population estimate ,is 227 million, including an estimated undercount of 3.1 million or about 1.4 per cent. The undercount is gxclusive of illegal aliens missed by census takers. The other 223.9 million includes some illegal aliens reached by the census. " Massachusetts officials sued the Census Bureau in federal court, claiming a serious undercount in nine specific towns and cities. State of- ficials-like those in Detroit and elsewhere-said they feared a loss of federal funds and representation in Congress. CENSUS DATA is used in drawing new House and state legislative district lines each 10 years to determine allot- ment of seats in the House of Represen- tatives and to distribute some federal funds. After the 1970 census, the bureau estimated it )-issed 2.5 per cent of the population, excluding illegal aliens, and felt the estimate was sound. But, said Barabba, the bureau does not feel it can defend the accuracy of an undercount estimate down to the local level. "We do not have.at this current time ... the ability to measure the extent of undercount. We're very comfortable with our estimates at the national level," he said. "So far, as we read the judge's order, he is saying that now that you have determined there are 'x' million people missing throughout the country, you will allocate them down to levels so that we can redistrict as well as apportion. We. . . do not have what we believe is a statistically defensible procedure" to accomplish that. TONIGHT CINEMA GUILD PRESENTS WOMEN IN LOVE The D.H. Lawrence novel provided two sets of cross-cutting loves in Provincial England during the WWI period. What good old Ken Russell did was to place the situation into sweeping, pulsating action. Moreover, the film gives a startl- ing and biased depiction of the legendary Bloomsbury set (who are they?), whom Lawrence loathed. With Bates, Reed, Jackson, Linden. In color. 7:00 & 9:00 at LORCH HALL (which . I still call Old A &.D). "Aren't I enough for you?"-ursula. aViewpoint lectures aren't breaking even I (Continued from Page 1) this year. Viewpoint also cut the num- ber of paid-admission lectures from eight per semester to three per semester. "We are taking a gamble that studen- ts want to hear the major names," Car- ter said. In addition to Nader and the Alexander-Kilpatrick lectures, Viewpoint hopes to have former Yippie Abbie Hoffman speak on Nov. 6. The group has a contract for Hoffman's ap- pearance, but if he isn't out of prison, he won't be coming to Ann Arbor. Last year, two lectures-Gloria Steinem and Jane Fonda-Tom Hayden-were successful. Most of the other 14 lectures-including those by former ambassador to Iran William Sullivan, feminist Bella Abzug, and science fiction writer Joe Haldeman-were "flops," Carter said. ATTENDANCE AT the free lec- tures-such as the Bullard talk-has also dropped. "Last year the turnout was at least fair enough so that the lecturer stayed and gave a talk," Carter said. Viewpoint officials are baffled by declining attendance. Although the all volunteer staff is small (it has only 10 active members) it has stepped-up publicity this year, Carter said. More than 200 signs were -posted advertising Bullard's speech, and TAs and professors were asked to announce the lecture in classes. 01 0 NEW YORK CHICAGO DETROIT. The SUMMER BUSINESS INTERN PROGRAM OFFERS LSA SOPHS, JUNIORS, AND SENIORS THE OPPOR- TUNITY TO GAIN PRACTICAL EXPERIENCE IN PAID INTERN- SHIPS: MARKETING, FINANCE, ADVERTISING, BANKING, PUBLIC RELATIONS, ACCOUNTING, MEDIA, COMPUTER SCIENCE, DETAILING. AND MOIREI I