Pe 4 -The Michign Daily -'Saturday, May 14, 1983 Stiffening admissions not always (Continuedfrom Page 1) school diploma, Sjogren said. Many bright high school students do not understand the importance of lear- ning basic skills such as reading, writing and mathematics, he said. Requiring a more disciplined curriculum in highschool, which would include both foreign languages and computer sciences are very important; Sjogren said. THESE CHANGES, however, must be made independent of stiffer ad- missions requirements for college, he said. Any changes in high school curriculum implemented only to ac- comodate college admissions standards better would increase pressure on students, Sjogren said. The University, however, has main- tained very selective admissions stan- dards and will not make any changes for next year, he said. Most University students already meet or exceed the national reports' recommendations. "(The University) is ina comfortable position. We can shift as we want as long as we attract the best (students,)" he said. "We tend to move with the tide to get the best students," he said. Although the average class rank of students entering the University this year went down, Sjogren said test scores have been improving. Fears of humanities cuts causes facult (Continued from Page 1) The former professor speculated that students would not receive a well- rounded humanities background through regular LSA courses, because they will tend to concentrate on electing introductory level courses. LSA ENGLISH Department Chair- man John Knott said engineering students could conceivably be chan- neled into existing LSA English courses that would partially fulfill humanities requirements - provided there are enough faculty members to instruct them. According to Assistant Vice President for Academic Affairs Robert Holbrook, tenured faculty members who would be displaced by the program's elimination would be con- sidered for relocation to other Univer- resignations sity departments. "In general, in cases like this, the salary of an individual would be tran- sferred," Holbrook explained. Salaries for the relocated faculty members would be transferred from the - Engineering College to the new depar- tment. MEANWHILE, the few remaining untenured faculty members face uncer- tain futures while engineering students may be forced to join already over- crowded LSA classrooms to fulfill their LSA humanities requirements, the source said. "Itsseems clear that despite these arguments to preserve the department, decisions have been made to cut something in the College of Engineering - and we are it," Steven- son said. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports California prison assaults kill 4 SAN QUENTIN, Calif-California's toughest prisons-San Quentin and Folsom-have renewed their violent reputations with outbursts that claimed four lives, including those of a murderer, a robber and a kidnapper. One victim of yesterday's attacks was hit in the head with an exercise weight, prison officials said, and the others were stabbed. Three of the victims died in two separate incidents at San Quentin, just north of San Francisco. Prison spokesman Percy Massey said the first to die was San Francisco robber James Kordoules, 24, serving a term for armed robbery. A guard told investigators Kordoules was in the weight lifting area around 9:30 a.m. when he was felled by a 45-pound dumbbell. He died a short time later in Marin General Hospital. It took 14 blasts of birdshot from guards' shotguns to break up the melee in which Kordoules was injured. Ten convicts were treated for minor wounds. Two prison-made stabbing weapons were found in the yard, Massey said. The other two inmates who died at San Quentin were among four stabbed some six hours later as inmates were being marched to their cells from a mess hall. Massey said the fight was not seen by guards. Salvadoran army blames rebels for massacre of 16 civilians El Salvador-Rebels marched 16 men into the main plaza of a fallen pro- government town, tied their thumbs behind their backs and executed them, a Salvadoran colonel and government reports said yesterday. The massacre was alleged to have occurred Sunday in Cinquera, a town 20 miles northeast of San Salvador that fell to rebels after savage fighting that left more than 100 people, including women and children, dead. Col. Rodriguez Murcia, the top commander in Cabanas province, said rebels executed the men in the main plaza of Cinquera on Sunday afternoon after a 12-hour gun battle. "They massacred 16 civilians, all of them men," Rodriguez Murcia said. His comments conflicted with statements by civilian survivors of the at- tack and government soldiers interviewed by a reporter who visited Cinquera Tuesday, the day the army took back the town from Guerrillas. Both the survivors and the soldiers said the victims died in combat. Economy shifts into high gear WASHINGTON-U.S. factories churned out goods in April at the fastest pace in nearly eight years while wholesale prices declined again, the gover- nment reported yesterday. President Reagan's chief economist, Martin Feldstein, declared that the economic recovery was "shifting into higher gear." The combination of lower costs and more business promised higher ear- nings and faster re-employment, although business leaders gathered at a meeting of the prestigious Business Council warned against too high expec- tations. At the White House, Feldstein said the new reports are "further evidence that the recovery is on course, and indeed, shifting into higher gear." Syria rejects Lebanese accord Syria yesterday rejected the U.S.-drafted agreement between Israel and Lebanon as "a grave danger" to its security. But Western and Lebanese of- ficials predicted the Syrians eventually would agree to withdraw from Lebanon and negotiators put final touches on the accord. In eastern Lebanon, Israel's military command said 16 Israeli soldiers were wounded slightly when their bus struck a land mine in the Bekaa Valley, where Syrian and Israeli troops are deployed. An Israeli spokesman said there were no unexpected difficulties in com- pleting the formal agreement, but negotiators simply didn't have enough time to finish their work. Even after it is signed, the accord won't go into effect as long as Syria refuses to withdraw its army from Lebanon. But Israeli chief negotiator David Kimche said the agreement brought Israel and Lebanon "to the threshold of a new era." Lenanon's chief negotiator, Antoine Fattal, issued a statement calling the tentative accord "an honorable one for Lebanon," and Kimche said it was "a good and fair agreement for all parties." White House blasts Post story WASHINGTON-"It's wrong, dead wrong" to say that President Reagan has written off blacks or any other minority voters for the 1984 campaign, a White House spokesman said yesterday. "If the president decides to run again, he will neglect no voter in this coun- try," Larry Speakes said. "He has not written off any vote for black Republicans." A report in the Washington Post that the Reagan administration "has writ- ten off blacks politically for the 1914 campaign" stuck a nerve in the White House and evoked a testy rebuttal. The newspaper said unidentified black administration appointees "cited as one example the fact that the White House office of public liaison has had no one dealing with blacks for more than two months." Asked if Reagan were unhappy with the story, Speakes said: "Yes. So am I because it's wrong, dead wrong." Menopause believed unrelated to sex drive ATLANTA (AP)-The beginning of menopause should not bethe end of female sexual activity, say doctors who admit the main problem for older women may be finding willing and able partners. "Sexuality durng the post- menopausal years is extremely variable," said Dr. James Batts Jr., professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the Medical College of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. "A woman's interest in sex during the menopausal years and beyond will depend on the physiologic and psycho-emotional changes she experiences. Her sexual expression will depend on the availability of a sexual partner." THERE IS a general misconception that sexual interest and activity should end at about 50, around the time a woman reaches menopause, Batts said. But the aging process merely produces changes in a woman's sexual response cycle, not the end of it. Some of those changes may require education and treatment, Batts told a news con- ference at the annual meeting of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. In their later years men and women both slow down, but a woman has the ability to have sexual experiences throughout her life while a man's ac- tivity will decrease as he grows older, Batts said. HEART ATTACKS, strokes, hysterectomy or prostatectomy should not preclude an active sex life for anyone, says the National Institute on preserve sexual ability," the institute advises. And a recent study at the University of South Carolina said most sexual problems experienced by menopausal women are caused by the loss of lubricant in the vagina, which can result in painful tears in the vaginal wall during intercourse. The study found the problem was alleviated by small doses of the female hormone estrogen. "What we want is for people who are interested in sex to get proper coun- seling," Batts said. "If it is not there, they should certanly consider it, because it is a pleasurable part of life." T1HE DAILY - CLASSIFIEDS ARE A GREAT WAY TO GET FAST RESULTS CALL 764-0557