and endocrinologist. Sexual performance pro- blems in the later years, he says, may be caused by a variety of factors, with diabetes and hormonal diseases among the most com- mon. "The first thing we have to do in such cases is make sure there's nothing organical- ly wrong," he says. "A host of drugs produce im- potence," says the physician, who cites diuretics, beta blockers, ulcer medications and hypertension drugs, as well as alcohol and marijuana. The doctor says there Social Security benefits. Non-resident men sometimes have supper with female residents. Men and women sit together after din- ner in the dining room, holding hands, or go out for walks. "There are others who are always together," she says. Naimark notices, too, the older men in general seem healthier. "I have seen 80-year-olds who are like 70-year-olds used to be," Naimark says. When death ends a relation- ship, "It's a real separation. There is deep feeling and they Love, romance, or just plain companionship — you never outgrow the need, say members of Detroit's most senior singles community. Ida Olson and Nathan Williams enjoy bingo. In The Cards B RICHARD PEARL Staff Writer ingo! It's not only a game, it's a feeling. It comes when single people of the opposite sex meet and discover they are attracted to each other. And age doesn't diminish the power of the feel- ing, say members of Detroit's senior Jewish singles community. Whether widowed or divorc- ed, regardless of their economic position, single per- sons in their 60s, 70s and 80s are finding friendship, romance, love — sometimes even marriage — "right in their own backyard." A major reason is they have more time to nurture and cultivate relationships, because they are responsible only for themselves: their Children are grown and they are retirees. As with younger singles, seniors meet in their apart- ment complexes, through newspaper advertisements, collecting for charity, at social functions — wherever people gather and are friendly. There are drawbacks. For one thing, women outnumber men. For another, attrac- tiveness, availability and openness play a key role. And often, to the more aggressive among them -7 male or female — go the spoils. Those who enjoy these rela- tionships appear to share reasonably good health, in- dependent lifestyles and a con- tinuing interest in enjoying life. "Romantic feelings don't just stop just because a person gets older," says Miriam Sand- weiss, the Jewish Community Center's senior adult director at the Jimmy Prentis Morris Building."Many people feel they have to keep re- establishing relationships. "Age is not chronological at all," she says. "It has to do with energy, fitness, outlook, sociability, and so forth. To put an age on somebody and categorize them by it is really misleading." "Older people can find love, but death and illness hovers nearer,"- says Dr. Hershel Sandberg, Southfield internist "doesn't seem to be too much correlation" between increas- ing age and decreasing sexual activity" Men as old as 94 have induced pregnancy, he notes. As for women, he says, "Menopause would tend to decrease the hesitancy to have sex!" Upbringing, mood, partner, environment, stress and fitness all play roles in emo- tionally induced sexual pro- blems, according to Sandberg. "If all the proper checking is done and everything organic is normal," says the doctor, "then it has to be an emo- tional problem, such as with the partner, and we refer the patient to a sex therapist!' For many women, the main problem is "the men die off," says Helen Naimark, Federa- tion Apartments director. Beyond that, there is a tendency among eligible male apartment residents to join one of two groups, she says. "One group is open to women, the other will have nothing to do" with them. Women in the apartments tend to dress neater and have more concern about their makeup and hair. "The men are not quite the same, not quite as preened," she says. "When an attractive man moves in, a lot of interest is generated," Naimark says. Recently, of 275 residents in the two buildings now open in the Oak Park complex, 70 were men, which was a high proportion, Naimark says. "There's something nice about people finding others at- tractive," although many elderly are not marrying because they fear losing their will grieve as much as if it's a married situation," says Naimark. "It's a fragile time of life?' The world outside the apart- ments also has its stories. Ida Olson, widowed 19 years, met Nathan Williams, five years a widower, through the "People Connector" ads in The Jewish News. A publish- ed poet, Mrs. Olson brewed a clever, yet honest, bit of verse in her first-ever ad: If you're a fine gentleman past 65 And still alive, A note from you may do the trick If your loving companionship Will make it stick. "I got one response, but that was all I needed," says Mrs. Olson. "He was the guy. I couldn't have picked him any better!' Williams, a retired chemical engineer who loves to dance and who last month passed his 87th birthday, responded to her ad: "Your poetry struck a spark. Am ready for adventure. Can we meet for coffee first to see if we are compatible?" The two hit it off, as-both are active, outgoing people who maintain their own residences. Ida, a retired governmental worker, keeps busy by writing poetry, cooking — she created the winning "Jackie Mason Sandwich" in a recent Plaza Deli contest — dancing, going to concerts and bingo games and being with her- children and grandchildren. Since retiring from the auto industry and Ford Hospital's pharmaceutical department, Nathan has been active at the Jimmy Prentis Morris Jewish THE DFTIRDT .IFWISH NFINS inn