I goille Health SINGLES page 15 EXCHANGE Working to keep You Healthy at Home • Personal Care • Nursing Certified Nurse Aide (CNA) Home Health Aide (HHA) Registered Nurses (RN) Licensed Practical Nurses (LPN) 3 Locations • SupportServices Companion / Sitter Respite Care Homemaker Post Natal and Newborn Care Bloomfield Hills Clinton Township Southfield (313)-443-1440 Lynda Giles smells the spice. cared for. Ms. Weiner said such game-players, mostly women, give away a part of themselves to be accepted by husbands, boyfriends, mothers and chil- dren. HomeHealth Exchange 1-800-70-NURSE CUSTOM WALL MIRROR SPECIALISTS LESLEY PEARL STAFF WRITER S TUB & SHOWER ENCLOSURES MIRRORED BIFOLD OR SLIDING DOORS MOBIL AUTO GULSS SERVICE • TABLE TOPS • STORM DOOMS & WINDOWS • PATIO DOOR WALLS REPLACED • STORMS & SCREENS REPAIRED for children's quality outgrown clothing, equipment, and toys. Call for an appointment Z OI:t7s7;:;c7 TIRES & ACCESSORIES GLASS & AUTO TRIM III IN CUSTOM WALL MIRRORS VISIT OUR SHOWROOM 'Suggested List Price Parents Learn About Talking About Sex SAVE FROM 20% TO 50%* MARV SAYS SOUTHFIELD: 24777 Telegraph 353-2500 Other locations: Wayne and Lincoln Park 313/626-0690 YOUR EXERCISE CONNECTION • TREADMILLS Electric/Manual • STAIR CLIMBERS • HEALTH BIKES Manual/Dual Action/Electric • ROWING MACHINES • MISC, GYM EQUIPMENT (ALL ITEMS DISCOUNTED) LARRY ARONOFF ACTON RENTAL & SALES 891-6500 540-5550 The perfection game implies that if an individual is strong, clever and de- termined enough, she can have it all. "It's bad enough to feel stressed out," Ms. Weiner said. "But we're taught by cul- ture that it is terrible to be stressed out. Ifs seen as a character weakness. It's the trap of stress." Ms. Weiner ended by offering the women a bit of advice: "Life is hard enough without you coming down on yourself. Know what you are doing. Know you have options. You do have choices." Women spent the remainder of the evening using the JPM facilities. 0 OLD ORCHARD MALL Orchard Lk. Rd. At Maple (Near Farmer Jack) M, T, W, r, Sat. 9:30 6 - Th 9:30-8 Sun. 124 CLASSIFIED GET RESULTS! Call The Jewish News 354-5959 ylvia Hacker calls herself a maven on sexuality; Rabbi Mitchel Cohen identifies himself more as an expert on issues young Jews explore. However, the two came to- gether in presence, and some theory, Dec. 1 at Hillel Day School. Dr. Hacker is a University of Michigan professor and author of What Every Teenager Really Wants To Know About Sex. Rabbi Cohen is the director of Camp Ramah in Canada. The two spoke to parents and teach- ers of children in grades 5-8 about talking about sex and love as part of the Jay and Dorothy Rosenthal Teacher Ed- ucation Institute held twice each year. "We have a big problem here," Rabbi Cohen said. "Tra- ditional Jewish law prohibits premarital sex. And we all en- courage our children not to marry too young. So what do we tell our kids about their urges and needs in the years be- tween?" Rabbi Cohen acknowledged that Halachah (Jewish law) was written when individuals married young. Sociology, he said, can have an effect on Ha- lachah. However, the laws of Halachah remain and can be viewed in a contemporary soci- ety. At Camp Ramah, Rabbi Co- hen has begun teaching sexual ethics to 17- and 18-year-old ju- Dr. Sylvia Hacker nior counselors, 19-23-year-old counselors, 16-year-old camp- ers, and adults attending fam- ily camp. He begins with a survey about sex and Judaism, and is shocked by the igno- rance. Young adults do not know that pleasure in sex is dis- cussed in the Talmud. And while unmarried men and women are directed to refrain from sexual relations, married couples should not remain celi- bate. Rabbi Cohen created a nine- point list for developing a mod- ern, Jewish sex ethic for teens. It includes statements like, "Sexuality plays such a key role. So if Judaism is important, Jewish values must play a role in decision making"; "Ethical decision making involves con- sistency. The heat of the mo- ment cannot cause one to give PARENTS page 18