104 Friday, December 7, 1984 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS ' - • : Craig Terkowitz o • S 1•1111111111 ■ 1111111111111111=11111 ■ 11 Ben Ziv demonstrates his new trivia game. At last, a board game used on ewish trivia en Ziv's pursuit for excel- lence in Jewish education is hardly trivial. In fact he's so serious about - it that he invented and designed a board game, a "Trivial Pursuit"-like game called "Jewish Brain Teaser." The idea actually came to Ziv, a clinical psychologist and former Jewish day school principal from Cal- gary, Alberta, Canada, while he was playing a game of "Trivial Pursuit." In "Jewish Brain Teaser" the players have to fill a plastic menorah with seven different colored candles. Each hole in the menorah is filled when a player answers a category lo- cated in special triangles, or when the player accumulates 15 correct answers of any or all categories. After the menorah is filled with six candles, the remaining players decide on a cate- gory about which they ask a question. If the player answers the question cor- rectly, he puts a white candle in the middle hole and is declared the game winner. The game contains over 5,000 questions divided into six categories that include: history, Bible, text and biography, customs and laws, litera- ture and culture and geography. Card sets come in either adult level or children's questions. The adult set is also divided into beginner and advanced questions. 9 A 41 . t- '• ' 114 i A A • 4 ♦ ♦ ♦ • • • ♦ • , • BY PHIL JACOBS Special to The Jewish News An example of an adult level ad- vanced question would be: In the Diaspora, how many days are there between Passover and Shavuot?" Who doesn't know that the answer to that is 42? A beginner adult might be asked: "For how much money did Joseph's • • s • • • • S• • brothers sell him?" This reporter, who had trouble getting through Hebrew school, guessed $19.99 complete with a ginsu steak knife set. The children's questions also aren't that easy. For example, "to which prayer does the verse v-ne'emar, y'hava, Adonai belong?" We were ask- ing this the other day of our 10- month-old daughter. She smiled and bit her father on the nose. The answer is the Alenu. Ziv, a soft-spoken man with sort of a French-Israeli accent, designed the board and researched all of the ques- tions. All 2,500 of the game's first printing were bought in four months, mostly in.Canada. Ziv, who was born in Israel, and moved to Montreal to work in a Jewish day school in 1971, said he had no previous experience with art design or marketing. It only took him four months to come out with the first product. "I think you have to have a good knowledge of Judaism to win at this game," he said. "But even if you don't there are questions that the basic be- ginner can play with." The game coast $29.95 for the adult version and $26.95 for the chil- dren's version. It can be ordered from M.D.G. Israeli Imports, 51 Woodbrook Way S.W. Calgary, Alberta, Canada T2W 4E7. The company will pay for postage and handling as a special in- troductory offer. "I think it's the kind of game that youth groups and schools can use," Ziv commented. "It doesn't just have to be for private home use." ZiV said he couldn't offer any piece of advice on how to win at "Jewish Brain Teaser." But one piece of advice is obvious. Don't play Ziv. Just in case you think you know it all, here are a few more trivia ques- tions found in the game: • Who was the chief prosecutor in the trial of Adolf Eichmann? • Before becoming Israel's president, what diplomatic position was held by Chaim Herzog? • Which of Jacob's sons was corn- pared to a donkey? • How long were the Israelites in Egypt? Answers: • Gideon Hausner • Israel's Ambassador to the United Nations • Issachar • 430 years