The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, September 29, 1981-Page 3 Study says sex becoming less fun, more work U.S. advisers in Salvador to stay t. WASHINGTON (AP)- Despite earlier suggestions that U.S. advisers would be out of El Salvador by Sep- tember, Reagan administration officials are now predicting a long-term American military presence in the war-torn Central American nation. Lt. Col. Jerry Grohowski, a Pentagon spokesman, said U.S. military advisers will remain in El Salvador for the "foreseeable future" as that coun- try's military-civilian junta contipues its war against leftist insurgents. LAST WEEK, Thomas Enders, assistant secretary of state for inter-American affairs, told a House committee that. "we expect to continue to send trainers to El Salvador to meet particular needs that may arise." "Numbers will increase again, but we do not an- ticipate that the numbers will grow beyond the high mark of our effort this year," he said. Grohowski said there are now 31 non-combat U.S. advisers in El Salvador, down from 56, the number of advisers dispatched last, March when the Reagan administration vowed to "draw the line" against "communist aggression" in the small, impoverished country. THE CONTINUED U.S. military presence comes despite a Defense Department statement last March that U.S. advisers would be brought home by Sep- tember. In that statement, however, the Pentagon left open the possibility that "some others might be sent in." Grohowski said the administration has lived up to its public statement because the advisers dispatched to El Salvador earlier this year have returned and have been replaced by other Americans. LAST WEEK, AS part of a $5.8 billion foreign aid. bill, the Senate voted to cut off U.S. aid to El Salvador unless President Reagan certified everyi'six months that the junta has made a concerted effort to halt human rights abuses by its forces. The Senate approved that requirement with the stated goal of bringing "an end to the indiscriminate torture and murder of. Salvadoran citizens." The House is expected to approve similar language. SPOKANE, Wash. (UPI) - Medical psychologist Lonnie Barba says for many people sex isn't as much fun as it used to be and has, in fact, become work. Barbach, 34, said when she was younger peer groups influenced teenagers to avoid sex, but that has changed in recent years. "Now the ante is up because children as young as -13 are being coerced into sexuality by their peers. "THAT'S WHERE people are facing a lot of problems, because they're becoming sexual before they are ready," the University of California professor of Medical Psychology told a workshop in sexuality. She said sex "has become less fun and more work, because American society has created unreasonable sexual roles for both men and women," SHE SAID women are taught early in childhood to avoid sex. "Women are not supposed to be sexual. There's a real strong feeling" that you won't be decent," said Bar- bach, adding that women become defensive about their sexuality and use it as a tool to catch men. "When a woman becomes angry with her partner, she withholds sex from him. They're not focusing on what they need and may not' get much pleasure out of it." MEN, SHE SAYS, are "expected to know everything and be more than willing to teach. She called that situation the "ready-teddy syn- drome." "We give machines more con- siderations than we allow men in sex," she said. "It makes sex goal-oriented. It creates a split between simple physical interaction and sex." She concluded that partners "mustadiscuss their sexual relation- ships as seriously as if they were talking about buying a house, sparing few details. "Love or an emotional relation- ship is one of the most important things in sexual activity," she said. Bomb blast near guerrilla checkpoint kills at least fifteen people in Lebanon ZRARIYEH, Lebanon (AP) - An ex- plosives-packed blue Mercedes car blew up outside a crowded restaurant next to a Palestine guerrilla checkpoint yesterday, killing at least 15 people, Palestinian militia commanders repor- ted. They said 40 others, including women and children, were wounded by the blast and many were in critical con- dition. ACCORDING TO witnesses, the driver parked the car and walked through the restaurant before the ex- plosion and it was not known if he sur- vived the blast. "I had to pull the body of one little girl out of those trees," said a rifle-toting Palestinian physician, pointing toward a citrus grove across the street from the restaurant. "This is the start of a new war," said the physician, who,serves with a unit of Palestinian guerrillas and declined to give his name. "There is no longer fighting, just bombs. You don't know when they will go off or where." MOST PALESTINIANS at the scene agreed that a lone man in a blue!Mer- cedes sedan pulled up to the checkpoint shortly before 10 a.m. One group of wit- nesses said he parked the car next to the checkpoint, walked into a crowded SAT scores remain stable for second year in a row restaurant and strolled out the rear door before the car exploded. The checkpoint had been set up to help maintain a cease-fire between a pro-Iranian militia made up of Lebanese Shiite Moslems and the ar- med units of the Moscow-oriented. Lebanese Communist Party. Shiite Moslems predominate in Iran. THE FIGHTING between the Com- munists and the Shiites, whose party is called Amal - or "hope" - developed after the 1979 Iranian revolution. Amal and its armed wing have been emerging as one of this fractured, lawless nation's more imposing military forces. The Shiites make up about one million of Lebanon's three Interested in but sick of Join the si MSA ne People needed~ " report " editin * layout " graph " co-or( Come to the Wed.. Sept.: MSA C! (3rd Flo -H.APP.ENINGS- HIGHLIGHT The University of Michigan Symphony Orchestra will open its 1981-82 season tonight with a performance of Marler's "Symphone No. 3" conducted by Gustav Meier. The concert is in Hill Auditorium at 8 p.m., and is free and open to the public. FILMS AAFC-Women and Work, The Life and Times of Rosie the Riveter, 2235 Angell Hall, noon. AAFC - Coming Home, Angell Aud. A, 7 and 9:30 p.m. Cinema Guild - Interiors, Lorch Hall Aud., 7 and 9:05 p.m. SPEAKERS Center for Chinese Studies - Dr. Masuri Ikei, "Relations Between the Communist Party of Japan and the Chinese Communist Party," noon, Commons Room, Lane Hall. Department of Geological Sciences - Samual Outcalt, "Computer Simulation of Surface Modification Effects in the Arctic Terrain," 4001 C.C. Little Building, 4 p.m. "An Introduction to the TM Program," Rm. 4313 Mich. Union, noon. Barry Furrow, "Medical Accidents, Physician Error, and Legal Culpability," Rm. 126 E. Quad, 4 p.m. Dept. of Chem. Eng.-Brice Carnahan, "The FORTRAN IV Programming Language-II," Nat. Sci. Aud., 7:30-9:30 p.m. CHGD-Sem., Jimmy Spearow, "Genetic Differences as Realted to Ovarian Function," Third Floor: Victor Vaughn Bldg., noon. Computing Ctr-CC Counseling Staff, "Chalk Talk: MTS Files," 1011 NUBS, 12:10 p.m. Computing Center - Forrest Hartman, "Intro. to the MTS File Editor," B120 MLB, 3:30p.m. Computing Ctr-Bob Earle, "Intro to the MTS (Session 4),, 2235 Angell Hall, 7 p.m. Economics - Wayne Passmore, "TROLL Econometrics Program (Part II)," 102 Econ., 7:30 p.m. MEETINGS Organization of students for the ERA-Mass Mtg., Rm. 4108, Mich. Union, 7 p.m. American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics-Mtg., Rm. 107 Aerospace Bldg., 7 p.m. Lesbian/Gay - Health Professional Mtg., for info. call 763-4186. Ann Arbor Co-Club-Mtg., 1433 Mason'Hall, 7 p.m. University Activities ,Center (UAC) - Soph Show, Mass Mtg., "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying," Anderson Rm., Mich. Union, 7 p.m. Extension -Service - annual Mtg., Association of NROTC Colleges and Universities, Campus Inn, 8&30 p.m. Folk Dance Club - Mtg., Beg. teaching, Mich. Union, 7 p.m. MISCELLANEOUS UAC/Impact - Open Jazz Dance Workshops (All Levels), Mich. Union, 7 p.m. Alpha Phi Omega - Blood Drive for the American Red Cross, Mich. Union, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Ecumenical Campus Center - Lunch-Discussion, Ernest Wilson, "Energy Policy in Africa: Political and Institutional Strategies," lunch $1.00, Inter- national Center, noon. Chabad House - Rosh Hasganah services, 115 Hitt St., 10 a.m. Tashlith, 5 and 7:30 p.m. Transcendental Meditation Program - an introduction, Rm. 4315, Mich. Union, noon. Hillel - Rosh Hashanah Services, Orth. (at Hillel) 9 a.m. and 7 p.m., Cons. (at Power Center) 9 a.m. and 7:15 p.m.; Reform (at Hillel) 10 a.m. Charlie Portis and Cathy Chartier should call 764-0558 to claim their free subscriptions to the Daily. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of: Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI., 48109. I'd love to have supper in Rome million, half-Moslem, half-Christian population. It wasn't known what group or person might have been responsible for the bomb. "There is a lot of speculation," the physician said. There are indications of growing' uneasiness between the pro-Amal Shiites and the Palestinians. The groups have been apparent targets in, the wave of previous bombings that have killed 36 people in the past 11 days. A little-known group called "The Front for the Liberation of Lebanon from Foreigners" took responsibility for the previous fatal explosions. The PLO claims the group is a front for Israeli agents. Journalism tbr e aViI? taff of the wspaper for: ting .g t iCS ' dinating Mass Meeting 30-9:006.m. hambers or Union) * NEW YORK (UPI) - College-bound high school students scored just as highly in this year's Scholastic Aptitude Tests as they did in 1980, the College Board said yesterday - only the second time in 18 years SAT scores did not decline. "It is still too early to predict whether this signals the end of the score decline or simply an interruption in the 18-year trend," said Robert Cameron, executive director of research and development for the College Board. THE LONG slide in SAT scores, dating from 1963, has alarmed educators, parents, taxpayers and fed fears the nation's schools are failing. The fears have been reinforced by evidence of poor performance in reading, writing and arithmetic among many high school graduates. The test is a barometer of school per- formance that is considered in the college admissions process. This year, it was taken by 1.5 million students. PROGRA l~ER ANALYSTS I V.